OAR@UM Collection:
/library/oar/handle/123456789/11620
2025-11-07T05:36:42ZJohann Sebastian Bach : aria with 30 variations : an insight into its style, structure and interpretation
/library/oar/handle/123456789/104040
Title: Johann Sebastian Bach : aria with 30 variations : an insight into its style, structure and interpretation
Abstract: Considered to be the embodiment of eighteenth-century music, Johann Sebastian Bach’s
compositional output, uses genres that had already been established, so that his
influence lies in the way he inventively reinvigorated existing forms, moulding their
structures to produce new original works. The Aria with thirty variations, popularly
known today as the Goldberg Variations are significant from various perspectives.
They are the largest set of variations to date and their scale was to remain unsurpassed
until Beethoven’s Diabelli set. Structurally, they are perhaps the clearest example of
Bach’s meticulous compositional methodology whereby every element can be seen to
link to another, forming a complex whole. The canons too have their own particular
development, as they progress from imitation at the unison through to the interval of a
ninth. In addition, the all-important, though understated bass-line heard in the opening
Aria is the underlying overall unifying factor of the whole work. While such patterns
give these Variations unifying factors, Bach still maintains variety through a number of
subtle techniques such as time-signatures, different characters, the irregular placing of
minor-mode movements, as well as the number of contrapuntal voices employed in each
movement. This work is also a unique example of eighteenth-century practices, moving
away from convention by specifying a particular instrument. From a technical
viewpoint, the Variations can be described as the highpoint of eighteenth-century
virtuosity, whose technical demands are still regarded as challenging.
From the circumstances of its composition, through to its standing in today’s
mainstream repertoire, the researcher will examine what influenced Bach’s
compositional method and how this work in turn influenced works by later
composers. The core of the thesis will be an in-depth study on the structure of the
Variations, where both its internal constitution as well as its overall architectonic
structure will be examined. Different interpretations relating to the execution of
ornamentation, rhythm and articulation employed through the centuries will be
discussed with reference to various editions. Other performance issues relating to
repeats, and tempos as well as choice of instrument will also be examined.
Furthermore, these will be supported by examples from selected recordings by different
artists who have performed the Goldberg Variations.
Description: PH.D.2011-01-01T00:00:00ZInfertility in science fiction
/library/oar/handle/123456789/102225
Title: Infertility in science fiction
Abstract: This dissertation attempts a comprehensive and historical poetics of infertility in
science fiction through a process of thematic and narratological typologisation, cross
verifying various aspects of science in the genre with current and possible future
trends. This work is particularly opportune in the contemporary critical climate, with
an upsurge of critical attention in the genre in the midst of a renewed interest in
interdisciplinarity, and with science fiction studies becoming increasingly present on
the academic curriculum.
The intersection of science fiction and medicine is vast and therefore an inescapably
narrowing approach has been adopted, focussing almost exclusively on aspects of the
genre that commingle infertility with science fiction, using thematic and
narratological approaches. This methodology is indicative in obtaining a
representative sample of the many attributes that are almost universally represented
in the wider genre: the postulation of a novum and the resulting threat (such as
infertility in the case of this dissertation, on an individual or racial scope) or
adventure that is successfully dealt with by dint of team effort, loyalty, courage and
leadership. While some of these fictional tropes and recycled devices may appear
trite and cliched, authors continue to create innovative, intertextual and invigorating
stories that challenge the reader's very ability to suspend disbelief. That much was
never in doubt but the dissertation attempts to draw attention also to the further
implications of this in literary studies generally and science fiction studies more
particularly.
The commonest trope that emerges from these narratives is that of the cautionary
tale, and of how the excessive and Frankensteinian desire to wrest nature's secrets,
suggests that hubris must meet tragedy. Yet another trope that has emerged is that of
the almost fairy tale happy ending. Both of these tropes are expected by habitual SF
readers in this inherently interdisciplinary genre which routinely and debonairly goes
where no man has gone before.
Description: PH.D.ENGLISH2011-01-01T00:00:00ZThe mystery of things : a Girardian reading of Shakespearean tragedy
/library/oar/handle/123456789/101269
Title: The mystery of things : a Girardian reading of Shakespearean tragedy
Abstract: Amongst the many recent and conflicting approaches to Shakespeare's works which one critic has aptly
characterized as the 'balkanization' of Shakespearean studies, the still though hardly small voice of Rene
Girard and his approach to Shakespeare's works have largely and unfairly gone unnoticed. His own most
extensive exploration of the plays, contained in the book A Theatre of Envy, has not been taken up and
elaborated in mainstream Shakespearean scholarship and remains strangely neglected if not studiously
ignored by most critics. Indeed Girard's self-styled 'neo-mimetic' approach to Shakespeare's texts,
barring his own book, still remains a largely 'undiscovered country' which few have ventured into, much
less returned from to celebrate or complain. There have been some isolated cases of critics like Harry
Berger Jr., James Calderwood and Naomi Conn Liebler who have utilized Girardian insights in their
meta-theatrical speculations about Shakespearean drama and their interpretation of individual plays, yet
no one has so far attempted a rigorous and systematic application of the Girardian theoretical model to
the plays, in particular to the major tragedies. Girard himself was self-confessedly selective in his choice
of the plays he treated, claiming it was largely dictated by illustrative, utilitarian and logistic reasons:
Another problem was choosing the plays and specific scenes that would illustrate my discussion. This was an
embarrass de richesse. I selected not the richest texts necessarily, but the most straightforward for my purpose. As
a rule they are the first dramatization of whichever mimetic configuration they illustrate. This mode of selection
explains why the plays about which I say little or nothing are often located at the end of the period in which the
author cultivated the particular genre to which they belong ...
In effect, except for a quite extensive treatment of Julius Caesar, a single chapter on Hamlet and a few
scattered pages on some of the other tragedies, most of the tragedies are almost totally ignored. This is
what inspired and gave impetus to the idea behind this thesis, which attempts to fill this lacuna in recent
criticism by attempting to apply systematically and rigorously Girard's neo-mimetic approach to
Shakespearean tragedy, focusing in particular on the classical four major ones: King Lear, Hamlet, Othello
and Macbeth. Why tragedy and why these four? Aside from the more prosaic reason of limitations of
length imposed by a doctoral thesis, there 1s their obvious 'canonical' status as being perhaps
Shakespeare's supreme achievements in the genre conferred on them not just by Bradley but by most
critics. Another strategically convenient explanation is that, with the exception of the single chapter on
Hamlet, Girard himself has commented too briefly or not at all on the other three tragedies; they belong
to the middle or_ 'the end of the period in which the author cultivated the particular genre' of tragedy
that he programmatically underplayed. A more critically cogent reason is that the two major pillars of
Girardian theory, namely mimetic desire and the scapegoat mechanism, together with the central role
they play in the genesis and dynamics of human culture, arguably lend themselves more readily to the
tragic genre, with its intense focus on the exploration of interpersonal and social conflicts and their
devastating consequences that are often dramatically 'resolved' through some violent form of explicit or
implicit victimage. A further reason is that in these later 'tragedies of consciousness' the arena of
inwardness and subjectivity, starting with Hamlet, is infinitely richer and more complex and yields
greater scope to the subtle exploration of mimetic desire and its conflictual aftermaths, within and
around the hero, than in the earlier tragedies.
Description: PH.D.2011-01-01T00:00:00ZPerceptions of teenagers on media images of women
/library/oar/handle/123456789/100794
Title: Perceptions of teenagers on media images of women
Abstract: This assignments looks into the perceptions of media images of women with an
emphasis on how these perception may objectify women. This overview was
carried out by the use of various websites, books and other reports and printed
material available on the subject.
A qualitative small-scale design is used as data is gathered by the use of
unstructured interviews with women within the media field, together with focus
groups held with teenagers. A thematic analysis is made after all the data had
been gathered.
Description: DIP.SOC.STUD.2011-01-01T00:00:00Z