Showing 1 - 20 results of 29 for search 'Naturalism (theatre)', query time: 0.06s Refine Results
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    Chien, chèvre, taureau, couvée, ou le personnage de théâtre à l’épreuve du bestiaire johnstonien by Virginie Girel-Pietka

    Published 2016-07-01
    “…I argue that becoming outstanding theatrical performers allows them to make sense of their respective stories and therefore to redefine human nature by reconfiguring the poetics of theatre.…”
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    Du Bestiaire dans le théâtre de W.B. Yeats by Pierre Longuenesse

    Published 2016-07-01
    “…In fact, poet and dancer are fascinated by this particular bird because of the hawk’s power to surpass the hero, as the bear triumphs of the swordsman in Kleist’s On the marionnette theatre : in At the Hawk’s Well, the bird overcomes the man because it has a grace that the man will never find. …”
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    Traum-A-Rhythmia On Debbie Tucker Green’s In-Yer-Ear Stage by Lea Sawyers

    Published 2018-11-01
    “…Her texts, which draw simultaneously from poetry, song lyric writing and musical score, question the nature of theatre. As a black woman, writing black characters for a mainly white audience, the strategies of dramatic composition which she resorts to rely on a poetics of absence and create a theatre immune to accusations of didacticism of which her forbearers were often taxed. …”
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    Geomatics and metaverse for lost heritage sites documentation and dissemination: the case study of Palmyra Roman Theatre (Syria) by Anna Forte, Yara Jamil Alkhatib, Gabriele Bitelli, Eva Savina Malinverni, Roberto Pierdicca

    Published 2024-11-01
    “…Highlights: • Geomaticsthree-dimensional (3D)reconstruction of lost Syrian heritage (PalmyraRoman Theatre)with spherical photogrammetry, recreating the monument’s conditions before its destruction…”
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    ‘What a perennial delight is in hearing the French language spoken!’: Class, Language and Taste in the Maison de Molière’s French Performances in London (1871–1893) by Ignacio Ramos Gay

    Published 2017-11-01
    “…In 1879, theatre critic Augustin Filon stated on account of the French company’s second visit to London that year, ‘les voyages de la Comédie-Française sont regardés en Angleterre comme des dates’. …”
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    Pirandello’s Spatial Use in the Odescalchi Theatre: The Architectural Representation of <i>Henry IV</i> and <i>Six Characters in Search of an Author</i> by Manuel Iglesias-Vázquez

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…The interdisciplinary nature of theatre studies often results in research that places greater emphasis on literary analysis than on architectural considerations. …”
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    Mechanisms of co-presence in repetitive drama studio performances by Željka Flegar, Grozdana Lajić Horvat

    Published 2024-12-01
    “… When working with older children (ages 9-12) in a drama studio environment (extracurricular theatre and drama education with performative outcomes), keeping everyone present is both an exciting and challenging task. …”
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    Tempering Feydeau: Twisting and Guilty Pleasures on the London Stage (1893-1897) by Violaine Heyraud

    Published 2017-11-01
    “…Beginning in 1892, Feydeau established himself in France as the new master of vaudeville comedy. London theatres surrendered to his infectious laughter, producing a number of his plays between 1892 and 1897, though admittedly, carefully selected: The Sportsman, adapted from Monsieur chasse! …”
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    Why Rights are Wrong in ASEAN and Beyond: A Critique of the Foundations of Universal Human Rights by D. Brian Scarnecchia

    Published 2020-05-01
    “…Part Three contends that aspects of the public trust doctrine, i.e., the natural use principle and the precautionary principle, are analogous to natural law principles and, because ‘the book of nature is one”, these environmental law principles may help jurists to recognise a theory of natural law liability in order to promote and defend authentic human rights. …”
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    ”If you don't care you’ll die” : The Concept of “Liveness” in Arnold Wesker’s Chicken Soup with Barley and John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger by Sarah-jane Coyle

    Published 2023-09-01
    “…The phenomenological concept of “liveness” has a long-standing relationship with theatre and performance studies. This relationship has primarily been limited to questions of ontology; namely, what constitutes the ephemeral nature of theatre and what counts as “liveness” in performance in an increasingly digitised age. …”
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    Doubleness on the New York Contemporary Experimental Stage: Bodies and Technology by Emeline Jouve

    Published 2018-11-01
    “…A “place for viewing,” theatre, theatron, is turned by artists into a showcase displaying post-human bodies. …”
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    Gardens of the Bible as a Place of Encounter between Man and God by Justyna Wawrzyniak

    Published 2022-07-01
    “…The introduction presents the role of nature and the garden as the theatre of God’s Glory (mentioned by Calvin). …”
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