4,929 research outputs found
The Prepared Piano Music of John Cage: Towards an Understanding of Sounds and Preparations
The subject for this thesis is the prepared piano music of John Cage with particular attention focussed on the preparations that create the varying sonic pallets in this music. The thesis is divided into six chapters, each chapter fulfilling one of two tasks. Firstly they will provide for pianists an examination of ways in which Cage‟s instructions in the scores for preparing the piano can be interpreted, and it will highlight the difficulties that become apparent (and should be considered) when performing Cage‟s prepared piano music. The second function to be fulfilled will be to musicologists who wish to trace the development of Cage‟s prepared piano music with relation to his later chance determined music.
Chapter one traces the historical and aesthetic influences that were relevant to Cage in the creation of the prepared piano, and places it in an historical context.
Chapter two looks at John Cage‟s compositions for prepared piano and provide a thorough inventory of John Cage‟s prepared piano pieces. Chapter two also examines the possibilities for making suggestions for the recreation of Cage‟s preparations.
Chapter three examines the physical relationships between piano, strings and preparations.
Chapter four analyses the solo prepared piano pieces and highlights the compositional techniques that Cage used in the composition of the prepared piano pieces.
Chapter five looks at the reasoning for performer choice in relation to ambiguity discussed in chapter three
Chapter six explores the six movement work The Perilous Night, and uses it as a case study to identify and explain all of the issues discussed within this thesis
Critical pedagogy in hard financial times
Peter Mayo takes issue with education financing not from an economic or technical
viewpoint, but from a philosophical and systemic one, drawing on critical pedagogy.
There is no sense, this article argues, to talk of higher education or its funding without
reference to the capitalist system which the mainstream education discourse reaffirms. The author concludes with an alternative vision of lifelong learning as a social act for the creation and enhancing of democratic spaces, reflected in the ongoing global “Occupy” protests for social equality.peer-reviewe
Author and Authority. John Gielgud's Prospero in Peter Greenway's "Prospero's Books"
In 1991, film director Peter Greenaway turned William Shakespeare’s "The Tempest" into an experimental and visually daring film called "Prospero’s Books", starring John Gielgud as Prospero. Shot on 35mm film and edited making extensive use of electronic image processing, "Prospero’s Books" is a technologically advanced phantasmagoria that reveals the multiple aspects of Shakespeare's meta-masque. In the film, Gielgud voices all the characters, thus turning "The Tempest" into a creative act that unravels inside Prospero’s own mind. This way, "Prospero’s Books" questions the roles of the author, the actor and the director, taking "The Tempest" as a pre-text to a meta-linguistic meditation
Zechariah 9-14 as the substructure of 1 Peter’s eschatological program
The principal aim of this study is to discern what has shaped the author of 1 Peter to regard Christian suffering as a necessary (1.6) and to-be-expected (4.12) component of faithful allegiance to Jesus Christ. Most research regarding suffering in 1 Peter has limited the scope of inquiry to two particular aspects—its cause and nature, and the strategies that the author of 1 Peter employs in order to enable his addressees to respond in faithfulness. There remains, however, the need for a comprehensive explanation for the source that has generated 1 Peter’s theology of Christian suffering. If Jesus truly is the Christ, God’s chosen redemptive agent who has come to restore God’s people, then how can it be that Christian suffering is a necessary part of discipleship after his coming, death and resurrection? What led the author of 1 Peter to such a startling conclusion, which seems to runs against the grain of the eschatological hopes and expectations of Jewish restoration ideology?
This thesis analyzes the appropriation of shepherd and fiery trials imagery,
and argues that the author of 1 Peter is dependent upon Zechariah 9-14 for his
theology of Christian suffering. Said in another way, the eschatological program of
Zechariah 9-14, read through the lens of the Gospel, functions as the substructure
for 1 Peter’s eschatology and thus its theology of Christian suffering.
In support of this hypothesis, this study highlights the fact that Zechariah 9-
14 was available and appropriated in early Christianity, in particular in the Passion
Narrative tradition; that the shepherd imagery of 1 Pet 2.25 is best understood
within the milieu of the Passion Narrative tradition, and that it alludes to the
eschatological program of Zechariah 9-14; that the fiery trials imagery found in 1
Peter 1.6-7 and 1 Pet 4.12 is distinct from that which we find in Greco-Roman and OT
wisdom sources, and that it shares exclusive parallels with some unique features of
the eschatological program of Zechariah 9-14; that Zechariah 9-14 offers a more
satisfying explanation for the modification of Isa 11.2 in 1 Pet 4.14, the transition
from 4.12-19 to 5.1-4, why Peter has oriented his letter with the term διασπορά,
and why he has described his addresses as οἶκος τοῦ θεοῦ; and finally that 1 Peter
contains an implicit foundational narrative that shares distinct parallels with the
eschatological program of Zechariah 9-14.
We can conclude that 1 Peter offers a unique vista into the way in which at
least one early Christian witness came to understand and to communicate the fact
that Christian suffering was a necessary feature of faithful allegiance to Jesus Christ
Nostalgia piece on the publication\u27s 30th anniversary recalling how the author,
Nostalgia piece on the publication\u27s 30th anniversary recalling how the author, John Cole, and Peter Cox co-founded the Maine Times amid the events that were commanding the public\u27s attention in the late 1960s and early 1970s
Tales of the Hoy [electronic resource] : interspersed with song, ode, and dialogue. By Peter Pindar, Esq.
Peter Pindar = John Wolcot.Verse.On p. 64: "End of Part I.".Price from imprint: price three shillings. N. B. An clegant Engraving of the Author is prefixed to each Number, (entered at Stationers-Hall.At foot of titlepage: "N.B. An elegant engraving of the author is prefixed to each number"Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from British Library
Beyond Peter Rabbit : the private life of Beatrix Potter
Michigan State University Humanities Librarian Agnes Haigh Widder delivers a talk entitled, "Beyond Peter Rabbit: The Private Life of Beatrix Potter." Showing examples of Potter's work, Widder discusses the personality and life of Potter and says that she was much more than the storied, brilliant and eccentric author. Widder explains that Potter was a naturalist, farmer, scientific illustrator, stockbreeder, and influential conservationist in England's Lake District, then comments on Potter's coded diary, her life, work, and legacy. She answers questions from the audience. Widder is introduced by John D. Shaw from the G. Robert Vincent Voice Library. Part of the Michigan State University Libraries' Colloquia Series. Held at the MSU Main Library
December 1990
Editor: Nigel Peterson, Literary Editor: Kylie Cicolini, Layout Editor: Peter Rayner, Sales Manager: Richard Hutchinson, Photographer: John Wilson, Staff Adviser: Martin Willishttps://research.avondale.edu.au/jacaranda/1034/thumbnail.jp
Single channel nonstationary signal separation using linear time-varying filters
Separability of signal mixtures given only one mixture observation is defined as the identification of the accuracy to which the signals can be separated. The paper shows that when signals are separated using the generalized Wiener filter, the degree of separability can be deduced from the signal structure. To identify this structure, the processes are represented on an general spectral domain, and a sufficient solution to the Wiener filter is obtained. The filter is composed of a term independent of the signal values, corresponding to regions in the spectral domain where the desired signal components are not distorted by interfering noise components, and a term dependent on the signal correlations, corresponding to the region where components overlap. An example of determining perfect separability of modulated random signals is given with application in radar and speech processin
Natural products chemistry of lilium longiflorum: structural elucidation, quantification, biological activity and fungal metabolism of steroidal glycosides
The Easter lily (Lilium longiflorum Thunb., Liliaceae) has beautiful white flowers and a delicate aroma and is appreciated worldwide as an attractive ornamental plant. In addition to its economic importance and popularity in horticulture, lily bulbs are regularly consumed in Asia, as both food and medicine. The Easter lily is a rich source of steroidal glycosides, a group of compounds that may be responsible for some of the traditional medicinal uses of lilies and may play a role in the pant-pathogen interaction. This research project was designed to: 1) Isolate and characterize new steroidal glycosides from the bulbs of L. longiflorum, 2) quantify their contents in all of the organs of L. longiflorum, and 3) perform studies on the antifungal activity and fungal metabolism of the compounds. A phytochemical investigation conducted on the bulbs resulted in the discovery of several novel steroidal glycosides. A novel acetylated steroidal glycoalkaloid and two novel steroidal furostanol saponins, along with three other steroidal glycosides were isolated from the bulbs of L. longiflorum for the first time. A LC-MS/MS method performed in multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mode was developed for the simultaneous quantitative analysis of the five steroidal glycosides in the different organs of L. longiflorum. The highest concentrations of total steroidal glycosides were detected in flower buds, lower stems, and leaves. The steroidal glycoalkaloids were detected in higher concentrations as compared to the furostanol saponins in all of the plant organs except for the fibrous and fleshy roots. The proportions of steroidal glycoalkaloids to furostanol saponins were higher in the plant organs exposed to light and decreased in proportion from the aboveground organs to the underground organs. The highest concentrations of the steroidal glycoalkaloids were detected in flower buds, leaves, and bulbs. Purified steroidal glycosides were evaluated for fungal growth inhibition activity against the plant pathogenic fungus, Botrytis cinerea. All of the compounds showed weak fungal growth inhibition activity; however, the natural acetylation of C-6′′′ of the terminal glucose in the acetylated steroidal glycoalkaloid, increased the antifungal activity by inhibiting the rate of metabolism of the compound by the fungus. A model system was developed to generate fungal metabolites of the steroidal glycoalkaloids and this system led to the discovery of several new fungal metabolites. The fungal metabolites characterized from the model system were subsequently identified by LC-MS and found to naturally occur in Easter lily tissues infected with the fungus.Ph.D.Includes bibliographical referencesIncludes vitaby John Peter Munafo, J
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