Suggested Topics within your search.
Showing 101 - 110 results of 110 for search 'Play (theatre)', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
  1. 101

    Insurrection and Integration: The Indian “Mutiny” of 1857 and the Theatrical Renegotiation of Ethnic Alterities by Marty Gould

    Published 2007-12-01
    “…The following essay examines the culturally introspective nature of the “Mutiny plays” and their persistent exploration of British nationalism. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  2. 102

    Rise of Love and the People: French Matter and Manner in the Early Victorian Drama of Edward Bulwer-Lytton by Ana Fernández-Caparrós Turina

    Published 2017-11-01
    “…The article analyses the French influence in Bulwer’s first dramas that composed his cycle of French history plays, The Duchess de la Vallière (1837), The Lady of Lyons, or Love and Pride (1838) and Richelieu, or The Conspiracy (1839). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  3. 103
  4. 104

    Effect of Preoperative Antianxiety Medications on Blood Pressure and Blood Loss in Total Knee Arthroplasty: A Case-Control Study by Zuhdi O. Elifranji, Jihad M. Al-Ajlouni, Munther G. Al-Saber, Yazan S. Hammad, Basel A. Baniatta, Sara N. Alshoubaki, Mohammad S. Jabaiti, Ahmad M. Alkhatib, Abdelrahman M. Abu awad, Abdelrahman E. Altarazi, Aseel N. Abdin, Abdallah Al-Ani, Mohammad Ali Alshrouf

    Published 2023-01-01
    “…Preoperative oral antianxiety drugs (bromazepam) helps in controlling hemodynamic changes associated with anxiety, including maintaining BP in well-controlled hypertensive and healthy patients undergoing TKA, and it plays a role in decreasing the total blood loss.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  5. 105

    La peur du prolétaire et les paradoxes du socialisme shavien dans Widowers’ Houses by Stéphane Guy

    Published 2008-12-01
    “…Beyond the fear that is represented throughout and the dread of capitalism that it seeks to bring about among the Victorian public, the play builds up a dramaturgy of threat, breaking with the fashionable theatres of late nineteenth century London and paradoxically making the proletarian into both a victim and symptom of capitalist immorality.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 106

    De la mise au silence à la prise de parole : la voix féminine de Martin Crimp à Sarah Kane by Solange Ayache

    Published 2013-07-01
    “…This article looks at the importance of the voice in Crimp’s and Kane’s texts, focusing on the intervocal and transdramatic space created between their plays around the voice of a woman both central and spectral. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  7. 107

    Quais et ouvrages portuaires romains de Rouen/Rotomagus (Seine-Maritime) by Marie-Clotilde Lequoy

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…Without a doubt, the latter played an important role throughout the Roman period. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  8. 108

    Authority and Moral Conflicts in the Films of Adébáyọ Fálétí: Àfọ̀njá, Gáà, Ṣawo Ṣẹ̀gbẹ̀rì and the Yorùbá Cosmopolis by Olayinka Agbetuyi

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…He was one of the earliest organizers of a drama performing company in 1949 to produce his own plays. His career development can be divided into three phases: the formative traditional drama performance phase, the literary drama phase which dovetails into his career as a public servant in a symbiotic relationship and his post public service movie production phase which coincided with the efflorescence of the Nollywood. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  9. 109

    La Tentation de saint Antoine de Flaubert et Uspud d’Erik Satie : affinités secrètes et résonances en filigrane by Bruna Donatelli

    Published 2019-06-01
    “…Among the audacious artists who experimented new forms of hybrid art (magic shows, shadow plays, pantomimes, burlesque) in these cabarets, we count also Erik Satie, a great admirer of Flaubert and his works. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  10. 110

    Deníky Marie Jany hraběnky Harbuval von Chamaré (1722-1792) by Pavla Janáčková

    Published 2009-06-01
    “…Her everyday notes also inform us about her everyday activities, such as care about household and representation, accountig, travelling, typical aristocratic seasonal entertainmet (going out to theatres, balls, hunting, etc.) and everyday entertainment (visiting other noble persons, playing billiard, card games, chess, etc.). …”
    Get full text
    Article