poets used, for example, the areas of science, travel, medicine, alchemy and philosophy to create original imagery. This is in stark contrast with much of Elizabethan poetry which used the stock imagery of the period (birds, flowers, sun, moon, stars); · The use of wit: wit in the 17th c. referred to the ability to relate dissimilar ideas, and implied intellectual genius. The Metaphysical poets displayed this form of genius in the use of paradoxes, conceits and puns. Thus, Donne's work was characterised by the use of paradoxes, conceits, epigrams and puns, i.e. striking images that associate dissimilar ideas. Much of the poetry written in the period in which he lived was musical, ornate and respectful: he rejected these standards and wrote poems which were original, striking and irreverent.
TARTU KÕRGEM KUNSTIKOOL Fotograafia osakond Kristin Hansen FEMINISMI ARENG KIVIAJAST TÄNAPÄEVANI Essee Juhendaja: Kristina Tamm Tartu 2017 Feminismi eesmärk on juba 19.sajandi klassikalisest realismist saati olnud luua võrdsus kõikide inimeste õigustele ning vabadusele. Mina aga panen selle fakti kahtluse alla ning küsin, kas feminismi eesmärk on tõesti koguaeg olnud luua võrdseid õiguseid meeste ja naiste vahel või on see läbi aja transformeerunud? Miks feminism üldse tekkis? Kas see võis tekkida naiste ning meeste suure erinevuse tõttu või on siin ka muud põhjused? Seda on küsinud ka ajaloolane Joan Scott. ,,Kas naised on samasugused kui mehed? ...
Fire change, light, life, God. · He is a philosopher of the unity of opposites. The Eleatic School · Xenophanes 570-475 BC Nothing comes from nothing. Unchanging Being. - Against anthropomorphisms · Parmenides fl. Fifth Century BC Being beings - Thinking and Being are the same - One cannot think not-Being · Zeno of Elea 490-439 BC Student of Parmenides - Paradoxes We tend to interpret the moving in terms of the static (living/dead) Being/beings. Dialectics Reductio and absurdum. Showing that a proposition when taken to its logical conclusion is results in and absurdity. Empedocles 490-430 BC Four Classical Elements: Fire, Earth, Air, Water · Bound together by Love, kept apart by Strife. · Claimed to remember past lives. Anaxagoras 500-428 BC A philosopher of Athens.
welfare state Finland. Scandinavian Journal of Social Welfare 4, 127 Kinnunen, U., Loikkanen, E. & Mauno, S. (1995). Työn ja perheen vuorovaikutus: ongelmien yleisyys, syyt ja seuraukset. Jyväskylän yliopiston perhetutkimusyksikön julkaisuja 1995, 5. Leinsalu, M., Denny Vågerö, D. and Kunst, A. E. (2004). Increasing ethnic differences in mortality in Estonia after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 2004;58, 583589. Lorber, J. (1994). Paradoxes of Gender. Yale University Press. Orazem, P. F., M. Vodopivec (2000). MaleFemale Differences in Labor Market Outcomes during the Early Transition to Market: The Case of Estonia and Slovenia. The World Bank Working Paper Vöörmann (2000). Sooline segregatsioon. Helemäe J, Saar, Vöörmann. Kas haridusse tasus investeerida. Tallinn: Eesti Teaduste Akadeemia Kirjastus Heikki Sariola.Älkäämme lyökö lapsia historiallinen asennemuutos etenee Haaste (2006) nr. 3, lk. 911. Kristi Maanas
Paintings by Aubrey Beardsley; literature by Oscar Wilde. Celebration of decadence (decay of standards, morals, dignity), paganism, perversity and the bizarre. No real theory behind it, deals more with feelings and tastes. Beauty in the perversity of form and matter; deformed language and paradoxes. Literature reflects the perversity of the world around, while the language used is highly polished. Authors: Algernon Swinburne, Walter Pater, Oscar Wilde. Took influence from France. Stressed the artificial and hedonistic (seeking pleasure as the primary goal). Art as an
each case and reaches the peak of intensity in the end. NT: It was a mistake, a blunder, a lunacy. (creates gradation) NT: He wanted to weep, to vomit, to die. There is also a logical climax the way the author sees the things happened. The function of climax is to show the significance of things as the author sees them. ANTICLIMAX ANTICLIMAX means a comic, satiric effect by arranging sentences in such a way that the aroused expectations are disappointed. (paradoxes are often based on anticlimax). NT: Women have a wonderful instinct of things. They can discover everything except the obvious. NT: I know two things about the horses. And on of them is rather coarse. SUSPENSE SUSPENSE means holding the reader in a tense anticipation. This is achieved by special construction of the sentence in which the main part of information comes at the end of the sentence. The sentence must be long. NT:
moods (cynicism and profound dedication) The First Anniversary. An Anatomy of the World; The Flea; Love’s Alchemy; Elegy XIX To His Mistress Going To Bed; Holy Sonnets (9, X, XIV); Hymn To God My God, in My Sickness. Francis Quarles: emblem poems Canticle George Herbert: courtly urbanity of language, certain neatness and point, his wit „homely” (simple), sometimes queer, conceits in title. The Dawning; The Altar; The Collar; The Pilgrimage Richard Crashaw: paradoxes, sensuous warmth, conceit as isolated ornament rather than integral part of poem’s meaning To the Noblest & best of Ladyes, the Countesse of Denbigh Henry Vaughan: many obvious borrowings, striking opening lines. The World Andrew Marvell: many strands of 17thC thought, feeling and style, created the tradition of garden poems The Definition of Love, To His Coy Mistress, The Garden Ben Jonson: IX: Song: To Celia, II: To Penshurst; Hymn to Cynthia. 4. The arrival of classicism in England
Supporting European Practices for Good Governance (2003). CD-ROM. Paris: SIGMA/OECD. van Mierlo, Hans (1998). "Lessons from the Experience of OECD Countries." In Verheijen, Tony and David Coombes, eds. Innovations in Public Management. Perspectives from East and West Europe. Cheltenham Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar: 388-403. Weber, Max (1922). Grundriß der Sozialökonomie 3: Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. Wright, Vincent (1997). "The Paradoxes of Administrative Reform." In Kickert, Walter J.M., ed. Public Management and Administrative Reform in Western Europe. Cheltenham Northampton, MA: Elgar: 7-13.
a) quantitative climax is based on words whose choice is logical (e.g. "An hour, a day, a week, a month, a year passed."). Numerals appear here. b) qualitative climax reflects the individual way the author views an event happening, etc. (e.g. "He wanted to weep, to vomit, to die."). 5. Anticlimax creates a comic, satiric effect by arranging sentence so that the aroused expectations are disappointed. Paradoxes are often based on anticlimax. 6. Suspense is a specific structure of the longer sentence that keeps the reader in tense participation, because the important part of information comes last. Less important descriptive parts are introduced in the beginning. Information is withheld and only later we have a subject and a predicate, or they are separated and predicate comes last. 7
g. "An hour, a day, a week, a month, a year passed."). Numerals appear here. b) qualitative climax reflects the individual way the author views an event happening, etc. (e.g. "He wanted to weep, to vomit, to die."). 5. Anticlimax creates a comic, satiric effect by arranging sentence in such a way that the aroused expectations are disappointed. Paradoxes are often based on anticlimax (e.g. O. Wilde "Women have a wonderful instinct about things. They can discover everything except the obvious."; "In the drinking well / which the Plummer built her, / aunt Elisa fell- / we must buy a filter.") 6. Suspense a specific structure of the longer sentence that keeps the reader in tense participation, because the important part of information comes last. Less important