957 resultados para PERSONAS DESAPARECIDAS - DRAMA - MÉXICO
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Participan: Dra. Gina Zabludovsky, Dra. Eugenia Meyer, Dra. Tatiana Sule, Dra. Anamari Gomís, Dra. Juliana González, Dra. Estela Morales, Dra. Mari Carmen Serra-Puche, Mtra. Claudia Llanos, Dra. Aurora Diez-Canedo, Dr. Ramón Xirau, Dr. Adolfo Sánchez Vázquez, Dr. Federico Álvarez, Dr. Federico Patán, Dr. Arturo Souto, Dr. Fernando Serrano Migallón, Dr. José Antonio Matesanz, Dr. Pablo Mora, Dr. Enrique del Val, Dr. Josu Landa, Dra. Angelina Muñiz Huberman, Dra. Carmen Rovira, Dra. Julieta Lizaola, Dra. Josefina Macgregor, Dr. Ernesto Guevara Fefer, Dra. Ascensión Hernández Treviño, Dr. Luis Villoro, Dr. Juan Ramón de la Fuente, Dra. María de Lourdes Pastor Pérez, Dra. María Luisa Capella, Dr. James Valender, Dr. Javier Garciadiego, Dra. Dolores Pla, Dra. Enriqueta Tuñon, Dr. Enrique López Aguilar, Belen Santos, Leonor Sarmiento, Dr. José Luis Abellán, Dra. Alicia Alted, Dr. Abdón Mateos, Dr. Javier Muguerza, Dr. Mariano Peset, Dr. María Fernanda Mancebo, Dra. Yolanda Blasco, Dr. Jorge Correa, Dr. Salvador Albiñana.
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Participan: José Enrique Covarrubias, Angelina Muñiz-Huberman, Vicente Quirarte, Friedhelm Schmidt-Welle, Cecilia Tercero, Renata von Hanffstengel
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Dissertação mest., Literatura, Universidade do Algarve, 2006
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Tese de doutoramento, Estudos da Literatura e da Cultura (Teoria da Literatura), Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Letras, 2014
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ABSTRACT - I will explore and present the portrayal of violence in some British plays that were staged between 1951 and 1965, in order to discuss the role, impact and aim of its representation. Thus, I will consider John Whiting’s Saint’s Day (1951), Ann Jelicoe’s The Sport of my Mad Mother (1956), Arnold Wesker (Chicken Soup with Barley (1958), Harold Pinter’s Birthday Party (1958), David Rudkin’s Afore Night Come (1962) and Edward Bond’s Saved (1965). My aim is to discuss the way how theatre in the post WWII changed the traditional ways of representing violence. On one hand, violence and reality became more and more familiar and domestic, permitting a representation of multiple and non-agonic violence; and, on the other hand, the violence that was depicted often changed the way one perceived reality itself, being part of a socially engaged artistic attitude.
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Trabalho de Projeto submetido à Escola Superior de Teatro e Cinema para cumprimento dos requisitos necessários à obtenção do grau de Mestre em Teatro - especialização em Teatro e Comunidade.
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Innovative and unconventional, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Suzan-Lori Parks belongs to the continuum of African American playwrights who have contributed to the quest/ion – the quest for and question – of identities for African Americans. Her plays are sites in which the quest/ion of identities for African Americans is pursued, raised and enacted. She makes use of both page and stage to emphasize the exigency of reshaping African Americans’ identities through questioning the dominant ideologies and metanarratives, delegitimizing some of the prevailing stereotypes imposed on them, drawing out the complicity of the media in perpetuating racism, evoking slavery, lynching and their aftereffects, rehistoricizing African American history, catalyzing reflections on the various intersections of sex, race, class and gender orientations, and proffering alternative perspectives to help readers think more critically about issues facing African Americans. In my dissertation, I approach three plays by Parks – The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World (1990), Venus (1996) and Fucking A (2000) – from the standpoints of postmodern drama and African American feminism with a focus on the terrains that reflect the quest/ion of identities for African Americans, especially African American women. I argue that postmodern drama and African American feminism provide the ground for Parks to promote the development of a political agenda in order to call into question a number of dominant ideologies and metanarratives with regard to African Americans and draw upon the roles of those metanarratives as a powerful apparatus of racial and sexual oppressions. I also explore how Parks engages with postmodern drama and African American feminism to incorporate her own mininarratives in the dominant discourses. I argue that Parks in these plays uses postmodern drama and African American feminism to encourage reflections on intersectionality in order to reveal the concerns of African Americans, particularly African American women. Her plays challenge the dominant order of hierarchy and patriarchy, while in some cases urging unity and solidarity between African American men and women by showing how unity and solidarity can help them confront race, class and gender oppressions. Furthermore, I discuss how the utilization of postmodern techniques and devices helps Parks to transform the conventional features of playwriting, to create incredulity toward the dominant systems of oppression and to incorporate her mininarratives within the context of dominant discourses.
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Gestión del conocimiento
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Gestión del conocimiento
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Gestión del conocimiento
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Gestión del conocimiento
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Gestión del conocimiento
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Gestión del conocimiento