School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 61
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    Master Class, by David Pownall
    TRIGG, STEPHANIE (Coghill, 1987)
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    Three Sisters, by Anton Chekhov
    TRIGG, STEPHANIE (Coghill, 1988)
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    The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne, by Brian Moore
    TRIGG, STEPHANIE (Coghill, 1987)
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    Amy’s Children, by Olga Masters
    TRIGG, STEPHANIE (Coghill, 1989)
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    Fair exchange in Measure for Measure
    TRIGG, STEPHANIE (Deakin University Press, 1990)
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    Speaking with the dead
    TRIGG, STEPHANIE (English Department, University College, Australian Defence Force Academy, 1990)
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    Wynnere and Wastoure
    Trigg, Stephanie (editor) (Oxford University Press, 1990)
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    lntertextuality and ontology
    FROW, JOHN (Manchester University Press, 1990)
    The concept of intertextuality requires that we understand the concept of text not as a self-contained structure but as differential and historical. Texts are shaped not by an immanent time but by the play of divergent temporalities. Texts are therefore not structures of presence but traces and tracings of otherness. They are shaped by the repetition and the transformation of other textual structures. These absent textual structures at once constrain the text and are represented by and within it; they are at once preconditions and moments of the text.
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    Carpaccio, Saint Stephen, and the topography of Jerusalem
    Marshall, David R. ( 1984)
    Those buildings and topographical motifs in Jerusalem represented by Carpaccio in his Saint Stephen cycle are discussed, as are the ways in which they were represented by artists before Carpaccio. It can be deduced that Carpaccio's sole source for his renderings was in the woodcuts by Reuwich in the 1486 book by Breydenbach on the Holy Land. Suggestions of other sources and of a visit by Carpaccio may be discarded. Conclusions can be drawn about Carpaccio's approach to the representation of real landscape.