879 resultados para Greek fiction


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Debato la permanencia de la cultura clásica en Italo Calvino, considerando la producción crítica del propio autor sobre el "clásico" (y los Clásicos) y la relación de su obra ficcional con la épica, la comedia y la tragedia griegas. Más específicamente, comento: 1) en relación con la crítica, las nociones de clásico utilizadas por el autor en el análisis tanto de obras Antiguas como de subsiguientes de estas (y a ellas relacionadas); 2) en relación con la ficción de Calvino, elementos persistentes en la literatura como I) el ideal heroico, II) el pastiche y la crítica mediante figuras fantasiosas e inusitadas y III) el uso de una cultura popular fabulosa como base para la formación de una literatura y para el debate de cuestiones contemporáneas al literato - como un teatrólogo griego. Acredito que la reflexión, aunque sea breve, colabora con el pensamiento de la modernidad no como disociada de una tradición, sino como lugar de debate y uso de esa tradición

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El uso de imágenes ubica al Satiricón de Petronio como una obra de intersección (canón, cardo) entre la literatura antigua precedente griega y latina, y las composiciones posteriores de gran importancia en el surgimiento de la ficción en prosa moderna en el Renacimiento. Las imágenes visuales y de color en Petronio contribuyen notablemente a esa configuración, mientras que un estudio del léxico correspondiente, a partir en especial de las ediciones humanísticas de la obra, pueden sin duda arrojar luz sobre aspectos textuales aún no resueltos en esa obra maestra de la literatura latina

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Validity and reliability of AMPET Greek versión: a first examination of learning motivation in Greek PE settings

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Peer reviewed

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This thesis examines three different kinds of socio-political rewritings of Greek and Roman tragedies – Sarah Kane’s “Phaedra’s Love”, Tony Harrison’s “Prometheus”, and Martin Crimp’s “Cruel and Tender” – written, staged or screened in Britain (and, more precisely, England) between 1996 and 2004. Offering close readings of these re-visionary appropriations, this dissertation analyses some of the innumerable and unexpected forms that ancient tragedy can assume today. In particular, it explores how three talented British authors have subverted the conventions of the noblest literary and dramatic genre in order to (re)write contemporaneity in ways that oscillate between the personal and the public, the local and the global, the national and the transnational.

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The representation of women in crime fiction has traditionally been a complicated one. Consistently forced into secondary characters (assistants, girlfriends, or damsels in distress) the most active role a female character could aspire to was that of the femme fatale, a pit of perdition, an unwelcome distraction for a man looking for truth and justice. This traditional approach to the genre has been challenged in the last decades by women acting as detectives, trusted with solving their cases in a hostile male world. Similarly, the traditional white male protagonist has been contested by fictions where ethnic minorities are not just consigned to the criminal world, but where detectives are members of ethnic groups, and can use their knowledge of the community to solve the case. This essay focuses on the crossroads of ethnic and women’s detective fiction, specifically the Gloria Damasco series by Chicana writer Lucha Corpi and the graphic novel Chicanos (Trillo and Risso, 1996). Both protagonists (Gloria Damasco, a Chicana clairvoyant detective, and “poor, ugly, and a detective” Alejandrina Yolanda Jalisco) must face both the dangers of investigating criminal cases and discrimination in their professional surroundings due to their gender and ethnicity. By contrasting these texts, the essay elucidates the importance of specific cultural products, their connection to (and defiance of) canonical forms of the genre, and their rejection of generic and gender expectations.

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Samurai Son is a story that captures the beauty, wonder and imagination of Japanese legends and mythology with some modern-day sensibilities and morals against the backdrop of medieval Japan. The story blends Shinto religion and stories about the tengu, bird-like wind spirits with a modern plotline in a Japanese fantasy universe. This world is filled with magic, demons, kami (magical spirits), gods and goddesses, samurai, ninja and martial arts.