Results for ' Dramatic monologues'

979 found
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  1.  72
    The Dramatic Monologue and Related Lyric Forms.Ralph W. Rader - 1976 - Critical Inquiry 3 (1):131-151.
    The most distinctive and highly valued poems of the modern era offer an image of a dramatized "I" acting in a concrete setting. The variety and importance of the poems which fall under this description are suggested simply by the mention of such names as "Elegy Written in a Country Courtyard," "Tintern Abbey," "Ode to a Nightingale," "Ulysses," "My Last Duchess," "Dover Beach," "The Windhover," "The Darkling Thrush," "Sailing to Byzantium," "Leda and the Swan," "The Love Song of J. Alfred (...)
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  2. We Met Jesus: Dramatic Monologue.Ray L. St. Clair - 1953
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  3. "The Ancient Mariner" as a Dramatic Monologue.Lionel Stevenson - 1949 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 30 (1):34.
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  4. Part 2. Craft and Confession. Joni Mitchell and the Literature of Confession / David R. Shumway ; Pop Star vs. Harvard Professor : The "Amateur" Poetry of Taylor Swift / Weishun Lu ; Personae Non Grata : Dramatic Monologue and Social Pathology in Select Randy Newman Songs. [REVIEW]John Kimsey - 2022 - In Ryan Hibbett (ed.), Lit-rock: literary capital in popular music. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  5. Part 2. Craft and Confession. Joni Mitchell and the Literature of Confession / David R. Shumway ; Pop Star vs. Harvard Professor : The "Amateur" Poetry of Taylor Swift / Weishun Lu ; Personae Non Grata : Dramatic Monologue and Social Pathology in Select Randy Newman Songs. [REVIEW]John Kimsey - 2022 - In Ryan Hibbett (ed.), Lit-rock: literary capital in popular music. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  6.  27
    The New Formalism.Alan Shapiro - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 14 (1):200-213.
    […] Open the pages of almost any national journal or magazine, and where ten years ago one found only one or another kind of free verse lyric, one now finds well rhymed quatrains, sestinas, villanelles, sonnets, and blank verse dramatic monologues or meditations.1 In a recent issue of the New Criterion, Robert Richman describes this rekindled interest in formal verse among younger poets as a return to the high seriousness, eloquence, and technical fluency that characterized the best achievements (...)
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  7.  26
    Literary Invention: The Illusion of the Individual Talent.Loy D. Martin - 1980 - Critical Inquiry 6 (4):649-667.
    In a paper presented at a symposium on structuralism at the Johns Hopkins University in 1968, the historian Charles Morazé analyzed the issue of invention largely with reference to mathematics and the theory of Henri Poincare.1 Poincare, along with the physiologist Hermann von Helmholtz, was the first to put forward a theory of scientific discovery as occurring in discrete phases. In 1926, Joseph Wallas generalized this theory to apply to all creativity, positing phrases which closely resemble those of Morazé. While (...)
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  8.  44
    The Literary Theoretical Contribution of Sheldon Sacks.Ralph W. Rader - 1979 - Critical Inquiry 6 (2):183-192.
    Behind all of Sheldon Sacks' writing and teaching lay an intense belief in the objectivity of literary experience and our capacity to achieve a shared conceptual understanding of the forms which underlie it. Literary criticism for him was not the critic's unique and unrepeatable performance but a serious inquiry—a critical inquiry—seeking explicit and precise explanatory concepts which others could grasp, test, and build upon. His effort was to show that we could in significant measure understand and explain literature and its (...)
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  9.  37
    Disastrologies.John Schad - 2017 - Derrida Today 10 (2):180-196.
    ‘Disastrologies’ explores Derrida's fascination with dates and how that fascination reveals a secret correspondence, in every sense of the word, with Walter Benjamin – a man who has the same birth-date as Derrida. It is, though, the date of Benjamin's death and indeed its infamous mise-en-scène, the cheap hotel on the Franco-Spanish border, that dominates this text which takes the form of a dramatic monologue delivered by the hotel manager, Juan Suñer, a man known to be both a manipulator (...)
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  10.  31
    Fact, Theory, and Literary Explanation.Ralph W. Rader - 1974 - Critical Inquiry 1 (2):245-272.
    We are free to get our theories where we will. As Einstein said, the emergence of a theory is like an egg laid by a chicken, "auf einmal ist es da.1" In practice theories are usually derived as improvements on earlier theories, as better tools are refinements of earlier, cruder ones; and they are directed explanatorily not at the facts of their own construction but at independently specifiable facts which, left unexplained by earlier theories, have therefore refuted them. A new (...)
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  11.  49
    Pornography and Art: The Case of "Jenny".Robin Sheets - 1988 - Critical Inquiry 14 (2):315-334.
    In contrast to [Susan] Sontag, who used the tools of literary criticism to evaluate sexually explicit fiction, I will use the conventions of pornography to interpret a dramatic monologue in which an expected sexual encounter fails to take place. In analyzing Rossetti’s “Jenny,” I will employ an interpretive model based on the work of [Steven] Marcus, [Susan] Griffin, and [Andrea] Dworkin. Despite different assumptions about sexuality—Marcus is a Freudian, Griffin believes in a mystical eros residing in the psyche and (...)
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  12.  16
    The New Criticism and Eighteenth-Century Poetry.Phillip Harth - 1981 - Critical Inquiry 7 (3):521-537.
    It is easy to overlook the fact that the kind of personalist criticism Brower, Wimsatt, and other New Critics were reacting against was a method of interpretation bequeathed by the nineteenth century which most of us would now regard as naïve, simplistic, and sometimes absurd. With the exception of a few poems such as Browning's dramatic monologues, which provided the speaker with an explicit identity as unmistakable as that of a character in a play—"I am poor brother Lippo, (...)
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  13.  40
    Explaining Our Literary Understanding: A Response to Jay Schleusener and Stanley Fish.Ralph W. Rader - 1975 - Critical Inquiry 1 (4):901-911.
    In replying to Jay Schleusener, I have also answered many of the objections put less abstractly, though often more sharply, by Stanley Fish. For instance, Fish's assertion that my category of unintended negative consequences "will be filled by whatever does not accord with what Rader has decreed to be the positive constructive intention" is essentially the same charge brought by Schleusener and requires no further substantive answer than I have already offered here and, for that matter, in my original essay. (...)
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  14.  51
    The Logic of "Ulysses"; Or, Why Molly Had to Live in Gibraltar.Ralph W. Rader - 1984 - Critical Inquiry 10 (4):567-578.
    “O, rocks!” Molly exclaims in impatience with Bloom’s first definition of metempsychosis, “tell us in plain words” . Looking forward, then, we remember that Bloom asks Murphy if he has seen the Rock of Gibraltar and asks further what year that would have been and if Murphy remembers the boats that plied the strait. “I’m tired of all them rocks in the sea,” replies Murphy . Bloom’s interest derives from Molly’s connection with Gibraltar, and Molly herself in her monologue remembers (...)
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  15.  23
    Text and Process in Poetry and Philosophy.Francis Sparshott - 1985 - Philosophy and Literature 9 (1):1-20.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Francis Sparshott TEXT AND PROCESS IN POETRY AND PHILOSOPHY Ir. H. Bradley in an optimistic moment described philosophy as an • unusually intense and sustained attempt to think clearly.1 If that is what it is, it is clearly a process; and, if it is a process, one does not see what a philosophical text could be. A text is surely not a process, though it may be the product (...)
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  16.  7
    Diderot, dialogue & debate.David J. Adams - 1986 - Liverpool, Great Britain: F. Cairns.
    Diderot is widely praised as a master of lively, dramatic and original dialogue. This book studies the developing role of dialogue in his early writings (1745 to 1754). Diderot's earlier experiments with the dialogue form, meticulously charted and analysed by D. J. Adams, opened the way to the exploration of human communication and cooperation which lies at the heart of the Encyclopédie. At first for Diderot dialogue ended in the triumph of monologue, with one speaker reducing another to silence. (...)
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  17.  62
    Socrates and Timaeus.Catherine Zuckert - 2011 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 15 (2):331-360.
    Plato’s Timaeus is usually taken to be a sequel to the Republic which shows the cosmological basis of Plato’s politics. In this article I challenge the traditional understanding by arguing that neither Critias’s nor Timaeus’s speech performs the assigned function. The contrast between Timaeus’s monologue and the silently listening Socrates dramatizes the philosophical differences between investigations of “the human things,” like those conducted by Socrates, and attempts to demonstrate the intelligible, mathematically calculable order of the sensible natural world, like that (...)
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  18. Why Is the Gorgias so Bitter?Alessandra Fussi - 2000 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 33 (1):39 - 58.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Why Is the Gorgias so Bitter?1Alessandra FussiMihi in oratoribus irridendis ipse esse orator summus videbatur.-Cicero, De Oratore 1.471. The hand of an apprentice?Commentators have often responded with uneasiness to Plato's Gorgias. E. R. Dodds speaks of the "disillusioned bitterness" of the criticisms leveled against Athenian politics and politicians and of the tragic tone of the dialogue's last part, which culminates in a prediction of Socrates' condemnation (1959, 19). F. (...)
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  19.  17
    Teleology and Tutelage in Plato's Republic.David Johnston - 2011 - In A Brief History of Justice. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 38–62.
    This chapter contains sections titled: I II III IV V.
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  20.  15
    In heroides 11.Ovid'S. Canace & Dramatic Irony - 1992 - Classical Quarterly 42 (1):201-209.
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  21. A Monologue, a Dialogue and the Attention Paid to Ego.Vlastimil Zuska - 2009 - Filozofia 64 (5):436-442.
    The study analyses a narrative monologue, an inner monologue, and a monologue which includes a dialogue between the author and the reader/spectator, from the point of view of the recipient’s participation in the narrative. It employs Muka?ovský’s analysis of to what extent a monologue is present in every dialogue as well as latent and sometimes manifest dialogue features present in every monologue, along with the side-participation of hearer/spectator. The notion of side-participation is expanded on the triangular model of attention with (...)
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  22.  27
    Building monologue.Chris Reed - unknown
    To build an argument--and particularly an argument presented as a monologue--a writer must assemble and marshal a battery of supports for a claim. Some of those supports will be arranged in convergent structures, some as linked; some will be expressed, some will be left implicit; sometimes a support will need further support of its own--and sometimes, not. This paper explores the factors which lead a writer to make particular choices, the interactions between those factors, and the constraints on a w (...)
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  23.  23
    Persuasion Monologue.Chris Reed & Derek Long - unknown
    The emphasis in most process-oriented models of argumentation is placed heavily upon analysis of dialogue. The current work puts forward an account which examines the argumentation involved in persuasive monologue, drawing upon commitment-based theories of dialogue. The various differences between monologue and dialogue are discussed, with particular reference to the possibility of designing a monologue game in which commitments are dynamically incurred and updated as the monologue is created. Finally, the computational advantages of adopting such an approach are explored in (...)
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  24.  7
    “Monologue" ou "Les Miasmes" de la vie intérieure.Françoise Arnaud Hibbs - 1989 - Simone de Beauvoir Studies 6 (1):31-38.
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  25. Od monologu do wspólnoty. Rozważania metafenomenologiczne.Witold Płotka - 2010 - Ruch Filozoficzny 67 (4).
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  26.  60
    Dream Monologues of Autonomy.William Desmond - 1998 - Ethical Perspectives 5 (4):305-321.
    The writer of the below thought he would do something clever and out of the way. I tried to dissuade him, but without success. I told him that readers would prefer a more sober scholarly approach. I tried to appeal to his other work and his systematic proclivities. Why not try like Schelling to produce a system of freedom? He looked at me queerly. I was a bit taken aback when he burst out laughing in my face, and blurted out: (...)
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  27.  32
    The Silent Monologue by Khady Sylla and Charlie Van Damme: Some (not so New) Gendered Stories of Globalization.Odile Cazenave - 2015 - Diogenes 62 (1):48-56.
    This paper examines how, building on earlier filmic representations such as Ousmane Sembene’s La Noire de… and Abderrahmane Sissako’s Bamako, Khady Sylla’s Le Monologue de la muette traces a continuum of women’s exploitation, from slavery to colonization to globalization.
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  28.  44
    Dialogue, Monologue, and the Social: A Reply to Ken Hirschkop.Gary Saul Morson - 1985 - Critical Inquiry 11 (4):679-686.
    One particularly interesting aspect of Hirschkop’s essay is the repertoire of “double-voiced words” it displays. I will enumerate just three of them:1. The Misaddressed Word. Apparently, Hirschkop has been arguing these points with someone else, whose voice has drowned out what was actually said by myself and the other contributors to the Forum on Bakhtin. In a number of cases, Hirschkop objects that we failed to say things that were, in fact, explicitly stated and attributes to us a different, phantom (...)
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  29.  22
    The monologue of the double: Allocentric reduplication of the own voice alters bodily self-perception.Marte Roel Lesur, Elena Bolt, Gianluca Saetta & Bigna Lenggenhager - 2021 - Consciousness and Cognition 95:103223.
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  30.  60
    Le Monologue de la muette de Khady Sylla et Charlie Van Damme.Odile Cazenave - 2015 - Diogène 245 (1):68-79.
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  31.  43
    Revisiting Dialogues and Monologues.Tone Kvernbekk - 2012 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 44 (9):966-978.
    In educational discourse dialogue tends to be viewed as being (morally) superior to monologue. When we look at them as basic forms of communication, we find that dialogue is a two-way, one-to-one form and monologue is a one-way, one-to-many form. In this paper I revisit the alleged (moral) superiority of dialogue. First, I problematize certain normative features of dialogue, most notably reciprocity. Here I use Socrates as my example (the Phaedrus). Second, I discuss monologue, using Jesus as my example (St. (...)
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  32.  67
    Dramatic Prefiguration in Plato's Republic.George Rudebusch - 2002 - Philosophy and Literature 26 (1):75-83.
    After defining dramatic prefiguration, I show how (1) the initial meeting between Polemarchus's party and the smaller group of Socrates and Glaucon prefigures the Republic's theme of how to install the philosophical element in its proper place as ruler in the soul; (2) the relay race of torches carried on horseback prefigures the theory of the soul as tripartite, containing reason, spirit, and appetite; and (3) the opening image of Socrates descending to the Piraeus prefigures the descent of the (...)
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  33.  49
    Dramatic Form and Philosophical Content in Plato's Dialogues.Arthur A. Krentz - 1983 - Philosophy and Literature 7 (1):32-47.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Arthur A. Krentz DRAMATIC FORM AND PHILOSOPHICAL CONTENT IN PLATO'S DIALOGUES AN intriguing innovation in the history of philosophical discourse is Plato's employment ofdramatic dialogues as his deliberately chosen means ofcommunication. Throughout the history of philosophy scant attention has been focused on this feature of Plato's works. Recently, however, some students of Plato's writings contend that it is crucial for interpreters to give careful attention to the dialogue (...)
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  34.  34
    Examining the Impact of Dramatization Simulation on Nursing Students’ Ethical Attitudes: A Mixed-Method Study.Yadigar Ordu & Sakine Yılmaz - 2024 - Journal of Academic Ethics 22 (4):701-713.
    This research investigated how dramatization simulation affected nursing students' ethical attitudes. Most nurses and nursing students encounter ethical issues in their healthcare practices. Students who receive an education in ethics are better equipped to solve ethical problems, develop ethical sensitivity, and adopt an ethical attitude. Dramatization simulation, which has recently been applied in nursing education, is said to be an effective teaching method. A mixed-method approach was employed in the research. The sample consisted of 60 students enrolled in the final (...)
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  35.  70
    Dramatic intervention: Human rights from a buddhist perspective.Peter D. Hershock - 2000 - Philosophy East and West 50 (1):9-33.
    In light of such basic Buddhist teachings as karma and interdependence, the conceptions of "rights" and "human being" presupposed by the dominant currents in contemporary human rights discourse are critically evaluated here. The negative recusiveness of such a discourse and its promotion of minimum standards for secure coexistence is examined, and a Buddhist perspective on human rights forwarded in which realizing our dramatic interdependence and social virtuosity are held paramount.
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  36.  33
    A Monologue on the Emotions.Frithjof Bergmann - 1979 - Bowling Green Studies in Applied Philosophy 1:1-17.
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  37.  23
    A Dramatic Approach to the Self-Concept: Intelligibility and the Second Person.Mercedes Rivero-Obra - 2021 - Human Studies 44 (1):87-102.
    Recent works on narrative self-concept still do not pay enough attention to how a person’s actions influence her narration. Narrative structures may enable the subject to give meaning and continuity over time to her experience. But also, a person’s behavior can make sense of her self-concept. From this perspective, the Narrative Identity Theory might be insufficient for addressing the challenge of making sense of the subject’s actions during the interaction itself. The Dramatic Identity Theory's proposal can complement the Narrative (...)
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  38.  43
    Dramatic frame and philosophic idea in Plato.William A. Johnson - 1998 - American Journal of Philology 119 (4):577-598.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Dramatic Frame and Philosophic Idea in PlatoWilliam A. JohnsonIn a minority of plato's dialogues the central philosophic discourse is presented indirectly, refracted through the lens of a dramatic frame of more or less complexity.1 Scholars typically divorce the question of the dramatic frame from the philosophy of the dialogues: the frame is often simply set to one side by analytic philosophers, and tends to be considered (...)
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  39.  34
    Dramatizing The SUBJECT's Identity.Mercedes Rivero-Obra - 2019 - Philosophia 47 (4):1227-1245.
    One of major branches of philosophical research is the self, which, in particular, tries to find out how a subject creates her identity. In this work, I will just focus on two kinds of identity approaches: the narrative self-concept and the dramatic self-concept. I will argue that, although the Narrative identity approach especially helpful for the subject being able to give continuity to her actions, the Dramatic identity is which achieves to give meaning to the subject’s actions as (...)
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  40.  44
    The Dramatic Power of Events: The Function of Method in Deleuze's Philosophy.Didier Debaise - 2016 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 10 (1):5-18.
    Deleuze's text on dramatization has a peculiar place in his philosophy. In this text, he attributes, for the first time in his own name, a singular function to philosophy. I aim to show that all the notions developed in ‘The Method of Dramatization’ – such as the transformation of the status of Ideas, the first development of a theory of individuation, the decentring of subjectivity, the critique of representation – are part of one general function: to grant events the importance (...)
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  41.  27
    Referential processing in monologue and dialogue with and without access to real world referents.S. C. Garrod - 2011 - In Edward Gibson & Neal J. Pearlmutter (eds.), The Processing and Acquisition of Reference. MIT Press. pp. 273--294.
    This chapter examines the role of the situation model in referential processing and how it can link what appear to be incompatible results from studies of monologue and dialogue as well as studies of reading and visual-world eye tracking. It shows that data from experiments on pronoun resolution in reading indicate a two-step model, in which candidate antecedents for an anaphor are first identified on the basis of gender matching and number matching, then evaluated with respect to the overall situation (...)
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  42.  60
    Dramatic Mimesis and Civic Education in Aristotle, Cicero and Renaissance Humanism.Hörcher Ferenc - 2017 - Aisthesis: Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 10 (1):87-96.
    This paper wants to address the Aristotelian analysis of the concept of mimesis from a social and cultural angle. It is going to show that mimesis is crucial if we want to understand why the institution of the theatre played such a crucial role in the civic educational programme of classical Athens. The paper’s argument is that the magic spell of theatrical imitation, its aesthetic machinery was exploited by the city for civic educational function. Dramas, and in particular tragedies helped (...)
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  43.  12
    The Dramatism of Realism.Steve Smith - 2024 - Southwest Philosophy Review 40 (1):255-263.
    Theoretical conceptions of realness can indicate what is fundamental or invariant in our experience of the world but are bound to miss a main point of realism due to the practical detachment of theoretical world modeling. The central sense in recognizing beings we encounter as real is accepting that we are or might be sharing existence with them, partnering with them in some significant way in the development of the world. This stance of engagement belongs to our modeling of how (...)
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  44.  31
    Monologues from "Four Intruders Plus Alarm Systems" and "Safe".Adrian Piper - 1995 - In Peg Zeglin Brand Weiser & Carolyn Korsmeyer (eds.), Feminism and Tradition in Aesthetics. Pennsylvania State University Press. pp. 235-244.
    Editor's note: Adrian Piper is a conceptual artist whose work from the past twenty-five years has included performances, graphic art, and installation pieces. Always provocative, Piper seeks to challenge viewers' assumptions about the nature of art, aesthetic response, and modes of evaluating by creating art that involves issues of gender and race. Piper uses political art to confront viewers with emotionally charged environments that preclude our maintaining a safe, aesthetically distanced stance toward the subject matter. being forced to confront our (...)
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  45.  61
    The Dramatic Aspect of Plato's Phaedo.Kenneth Dorter - 1970 - Dialogue 8 (4):564-580.
    It has often been remarked that the dramatic element of the Platonic writings is unique in philosophy, and there have been many attempts to account for its presence. Recently there has been a greater tendency to see it as more than mere ornamentation or naturalism, as an essential element in understanding the philosophy of the dialogue. The one unquestionably authentic statement by Plato on philosophical writing is in the Phaedrus where Socrates, who wrote no philosophy, is made to criticize (...)
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  46.  14
    The dramatic and its issues in the Anthropological Structures of the Imaginary by Gilbert Durand.Catarina Sant’Anna - forthcoming - Iris.
    This paper aims to examine the place of the dramatic in the Anthropological Structures of the Imaginary, through a comparative approach between this work and two others : Les Concepts fondamentaux de poétique and Les Deux cent mille situations dramatiques, in order to consider another possible order for the sequence of the structures proposed by Gilbert Durand, although the author declared in a note that he did not choose to follow « the ontogenetic plane of the emergence of dominant (...)
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  47.  22
    Monologue, dilogue or polylogue: Which model for public deliberation?Marcin Lewinski & J. Anthony Blair - unknown
    “Reasonable hostility” is a norm of communicative conduct initially developed by studying public exchanges in education governance meetings in local U.S. communities. In this paper I consider the norm’s usefulness for and applicability to a U.S. state-level public hearing about a bill to legalize civil unions. Following an explication of reasonable hostility and grounded practical theory, the approach to inquiry that guides my work, I describe Hawaii’s 2009, 18-hour public hearing and analyze selected seg-ments of it. I show that this (...)
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  48.  62
    Dramatic structure and cultural context in Plato's Laches.C. Emlyn-Jones - 1999 - Classical Quarterly 49 (1):123-138.
    The characters in Plato's Socratic Dialogues and the sociocultural beliefs and assumptions they present have a historical dramatic setting which ranges over the last quarter of the fifth centuryb.c.—the period of activity of the historical Socrates. That this context is to an extent fictional is undeniable; yet this leaves open the question what the dramatic interplay of (mostly) dead politicians, sophists, and other Socratic associates—not forgetting Socrates himself—signifies for the overall meaning and purpose of individual Dialogues. Are we (...)
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  49.  8
    Etyka: dramat życia moralnego.Piotr Jaroszyński - 1996 - Warszawa: "Gutenberg-Print".
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  50.  53
    The Dramatization of Absolute Idealism: Gabriel Marcel and F. H. Bradley.Joseph Gamache - 2023 - The Pluralist 18 (3):17-36.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Dramatization of Absolute Idealism:Gabriel Marcel and F. H. BradleyJoseph GamacheI. IntroductionThis paper consists of an observation, a suggestion, and an illustration. First, the observation: in the English-language literature on the philosophy of Gabriel Marcel, there is, so far as I have discovered, a lack of attention paid to the relationship between Marcel and the British philosopher F. H. Bradley (1846–1924).1 Why might be this be? I speculate (this (...)
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