999 resultados para Anne Ubersfeld


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Les images qui représentent le Mexicain le montrent habituellement sous les traits d’un être extrêmement mélancolique qui fait face à un destin tragique. Les nombreux mythes entourant le Mexicain, issus de la culture même, sont effectivement reliés de près ou de loin à la peur et la tristesse, soit deux composantes essentielles de la mélancolie. L’anthropologue Roger Bartra dans La jaula de la melancolía: identidad y metamorfosis del mexicano analyse ces éléments clés qui constitueraient la personnalité du Mexicain. L’objectif de cette recherche est de démontrer que Atlántida d’Oscar Villegas est l’œuvre par excellence qui représente cette mélancolie toute mexicaine. Dans sa pièce de théâtre, Villegas raconte l’histoire d’une jeune artiste de cabaret qui vit de nombreuses désillusions dans un monde vulgaire et pervers où les valeurs humaines font défaut. Le dramaturge met en scène le Mexico urbain des années quarante et montre le désespoir et l’impossibilité pour les habitants de ses quartiers pauvres de changer le cours de leur vie. En plus d’être une pièce de théâtre qui, tant au niveau de son contenu que de sa forme, porte en elle les marques de la mélancolie, Atlántida met en relief ces caractéristiques devenues au fil du temps représentatives de l’image nationale du Mexicain. L’étude de cette œuvre s’appuie sur les théories d’analyse du texte théâtral d’Anne Ubersfeld qui propose une approche centrée sur l’action et les conditions de communication contenues dans les dialogues. Faire le pont entre la pièce de théâtre de Villegas et l’essai de Bartra permet d’explorer le lien intrinsèque qui semble s’établir entre Mexicain et mélancolie.

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In this thesis, the main male characters in three of the plays written by Federico García Lorca are analysed with the aim of seeingthe role they play in the frustration of desire. After two chapters dedicated to a review of published critical studies on Lorca and tocertain theoretical considerations, Chapter Three examines desire drawing on Ubersfeld's actancial model and observes that thesemale characters can be divided into two groups: those who are desired and those who are undesired.In Chapter Four this classification is linked to an analysis of absence, prohibition and lack. Absence is here defined not asrelated to their non-appearance on stage but rather to their non-presence in the lives of the desiring female protagonists. It isobserved that a number of male characters are absent in the plays mainly due to death or a journey. As far as prohibition isconcerned, in two of the works, there is a moral code associated with concepts such as "honour" and "decency", which blocks thefemale characters' access to the males they desire. Chapter Four also shows how several characters can be considered as lacking inthe sense that they do not possess the ideal male qualities contained in the plays. This chapter reaches the conclusion that desiredmale characters are either absent or forbidden in the world of the desiring female, whereas undesired male characters are lacking inthe sense that they fail to live up to the ideal highlighted in the plays.Chapter Five analyses the female characters' perception of the male figures, making use of René Girard's notion of"transfiguration", which alludes to a process of idealisation of the object of desire. Our analysis reveals a connection betweendesire, denied access to the object of desire and transfiguration in the main subjects of desire. The phenomenon of "transfiguration"has several functions in the play: firstly, the creation of hyperbolical male characters; secondly, that of transmitting the intensity ofthe desire experienced and, finally, the highlighting of the lack of certain qualities in several male characters.We thus observe that, in these three plays written by García Lorca, Girard's pessimistic view of desire is confirmed, since desireneeds a series of obstacles, such as absence or prohibition, to survive. However, this is not the only explanation for the frustrationof desire: other factors, like the actions of certain male characters or destiny, also play a decisive role.

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¿De qué se componen los sistemas semióticos propios de cada lenguaje, el dramático y el cinematográfico? ¿Cuáles son los complejos procesos de transformación por los que un texto dramático se convierte en una función teatral o bien en una obra fílmica? ¿Qué diferencia esencialmente la recepción de ambas obras? Y, finalmente, ¿existe la posibilidad de una teoría que estudie sistemáticamente el fenómeno de la adaptación? Estas son las preguntas que voy a tratar de responder en este trabajo, que llevarán a elaborar un esbozo de teoría de la adaptación del modo dramático al cinematográfico. Como cimientos previos a la elaboración de esta investigación, planteo un acercamiento a las teorías dramáticas y cinematográficas. Las fuentes que utilizo son, en primer lugar, los estudios sobre ambos sistemas semióticos. Para el estudio del drama utilizo el método de análisis dramatológico perfectamente sistematizado de José Luis García Barrientos en Cómo se comenta una obra de teatro (2001) y en Análisis de la dramaturgia. Nueve obras y un método (2007), complementándolo con las teorías de José Luis Alonso de Santos, Antonin Artaud, Ian Bernard, Keir Elam, John Gielgud, Roger Manvell, Vsévolod Emílievich Meyerhold, Konstantin Stanislavki y Anne Ubersfeld entre otros. Para el estudio de la teoría cinematográfica me apoyo en los estudios, principalmente, de Rudolph Arnheim, Henri Agel, Andrew Dudley, Daniel Arijon, Jacques Aumont y Michel Marie, Béla Balázs, André Bazin, David Bordwell y Kristin Thompson, Fernando Canet y Josep Prósper, Francesco Casetti, Sergei Eisenstein, Joaquín de Entrambasaguas, Jean Epstein, Susan Hayward, Siegfried Kracauer, Yuri Lotman, Marcel Martin, Christian Metz, Jean Mitry, Vsevolod Pudovkin, Vicente Sánchez Biosca y Robert Stam entre otros, quienes, en conjunto ofrecen un compendio muy amplio y dan una idea bastante completa y sistematizada del arte y lenguaje cinematográfico...

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The term ’public discourses’ describes a range of texts or signifiers that inform the conditions of audience reception. Public discourses include myriad written, visual, spatial, auditory and sensory texts experienced by an audience at a particular theatrical event. Ric Knowles first introduced this term in his recent work Reading the Material Theatre. Whereas Knowles was interested in how public discourses modified the conditions of reception, my broader research is to explore how these public discourses become texts in themselves. This paper will discuss one public discourse, the theatre programme, as it related to a staging of Maxwell Anderson’s Anne of the Thousand Days at the Brisbane Powerhouse in June 2006. The significance of the programme was explored at symposiums held after the performances. Audiences generally view programmes before a performance and after a performance and its significance as a written text changes. The program became a sign vehicle that worked to expound and explicate the meaning of the play for the audience. This public discourse became a significant written text contributing to the textual whole of the theatrical event.

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Described as 'The Lucky Country' over forty-years ago, Australia continues to play on and onward with a fervent belief in luck, her people often described, usually by themselvess, as 'graced' or as living in 'God's Own'. With our comfortable lifestyle and isolated location, white sands and soft mangoes, it is easy to see why we embraced the term so eagerly. Where else could you win the lottery twice? While these national stereotypes are an essential part of the romance that drives and defines us, the idea that luck is the central motif of Australian culture has become a cliche, and a dangerous, almost disastrous one at that. In On Luck, Anne Summers observes, "You hear it everywhere: in all sorts of conversations, in Qantas ads, from the mouths of travellers returning from overseas trips full of complaints about the climate, the crowds, the uncivility of other places".

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In 2005, Stephen Abram, vice president of Innovation at SirsiDynix, challenged library and information science (LIS) professionals to start becoming “librarian 2.0.” In the last few years, discussion and debate about the “core competencies” needed by librarian 2.0 have appeared in the “biblioblogosphere” (blogs written by LIS professionals). However, beyond these informal blog discussions few systematic and empirically based studies have taken place. A project funded by the Australian Learning and Teaching Council fills this gap. The project identifies the key skills, knowledge, and attributes required by “librarian 2.0.” Eighty-one members of the Australian LIS profession participated in a series of focus groups. Eight themes emerged as being critical to “librarian 2.0”: technology, communication, teamwork, user focus, business savvy, evidence based practice, learning and education, and personal traits. Guided by these findings interviews with 36 LIS educators explored the current approaches used within contemporary LIS education to prepare graduates to become “librarian 2.0”. This video presents an example of ‘great practice’ in current LIS education as it strives to foster web 2.0 professionals.

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The family was in Hannover, Germany, for the dedication of the memorial to the Holocaust, the Mahnmal am Opernplatz; from left to right: Anne Godshaw nee Pick, Donald Godshaw, Molly Godshaw nee Peck, Freddy Godshaw, Jan Godshaw nee McKay, and Hal (Hans Ludwig Gottschalk) Godshaw.

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The family was in Hannover, Germany, for the dedication of the memorial to the Holocaust, the Mahnmal am Opernplatz; from left to right: Anne Godshaw nee Pick, Donald Godshaw, Molly Godshaw nee Peck, Freddy Godshaw, Jan Godshaw nee McKay, and Hal (Hans Ludwig Gottschalk) Godshaw.

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