984 resultados para Fairchild, J. H. (Joy Hamlet), 1790-1859.
Resumo:
von Chr. Schmidt. Hrsg. von J. Kahn
Resumo:
von L. M. Bauer
Resumo:
hrsg. von [Joseph Samuel] Bloch, red. von David Kaufmann
Resumo:
von I. J. Benjamin
Resumo:
[Pînḥas hal-Lēwî B.- Hurwîtz] [[Elektronische Ressource]]
Resumo:
Das Singspiel stelle eine heute fast ausgerottete musiktheatralische Gattung dar. Einzig Mozarts deutschsprachige Bühnenwerke haben sich auf der Opernbühne erhalten. Eine Rekonstruktion der Präsenz des Singspiels im 18. Jahrhundert offenbart dessen Unentbehrlichkeit im Gefüge des deutschsprachigen Theaters und seine enorme dramaturgische Dynamik. Dieser Popularität steht eine immerwährende ästhetische Ablehnung gegenüber, die sich sowohl auf die musikalische Substanz, als auch auf deren fast ausschliessliche Zugehörigekeit zum komischen Fach bezieht.
Resumo:
Based on Heider’s (1958) balance theory we hypothesize that emotional responses to other persons’ outcomes depend on attitudes towards these persons. Positive attitudes towards others lead to empathic responses to their outcomes– joy after a success and sorrow after a failure. Negative attitudes result in paradoxical responses – negative to a success (resentment) and positive to a failure (schadenfreude). These emotions function as responses restoring balance within cognitive units consisting of the perceiver, other persons and their outcomes. Three studies supported these hypotheses and showed that deservingness considerations play a weaker role in shaping emotional responses of joy and sorrow to others’ outcomes when strong interpersonal attitudes are involved. However, deservingness plays an independent role in shaping the emotional response of resentment.
Resumo:
This essay presents a comprehensive study of how Hamlet figures in North American fiction. Gabriele Rippl takes her cue from Stephen Greenblatt’s notion of Shakespeare’s ‘theatrical mobility’ (Greenblatt, Cultural Mobility. Cambridge University Press, 2010). This initial mobility, based on the playwright’s own borrowings, appears to facilitate, or even instigate further migrations. Rippl proceeds to give an overview of adaptations of Shakespeare’s Hamlet in the USA and Canada, thus providing an insight into the historical and cultural uses to which the play has been put by authors such as John Updike or Margaret Atwood. Phenomena such as the ‘republicanization’ of Shakespeare (James Fenimore Cooper), or his appropriation for a feminist counter-discourse in Canada circumscribe a space for the negotiation of cultural and political identities.
Resumo:
Leopold Bernard Bernstamm
Resumo:
Scan von Monochrom-Mikroform