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Academic literature on the topic 'Théâtre (genre littéraire) – 16e siècle'
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Journal articles on the topic "Théâtre (genre littéraire) – 16e siècle"
Cellard, Karine. "Un genre à part. Le théâtre dans les manuels d’histoire de la littérature québécoise, ou l’histoire d’un revirement spectaculaire." Dossier — Histoire du théâtre et théâtre de l’Histoire, no. 39 (May 6, 2010): 47–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/041633ar.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Théâtre (genre littéraire) – 16e siècle"
Lochert, Véronique. "L'écriture du spectacle : formes et fonctions des didascalies dans le théâtre européen des XVIe et XVIIe siècles." Paris 4, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004PA040201.
Full textThis study investigates the modes of writing and reading performance in the dramatic text through the forms and functions of stage directions and through their variations in France, Italy, Spain and England, from the sixteenth to the seventeenth century. It analyses the development of a specific notation of performance in the practices of playwrights, actors and editors, which are brought into light by the theory of theatre. Stage direction is approached in its double function, serving both performance and reading, in relation with style and typography which ensure its efficiency for actors as well as for readers. Whether redundant or complementary, stage direction plays an essential role in the economy of dramatic dialogue and the diversity of its uses in Europe reveals the status of dramatic text in the different national aesthetics
Fandi, Siham. "Le théâtre syro-libanais et les influences françaises (1847-1914)." Aix-Marseille 1, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992AIX10017.
Full textThe first part of this study deals with the genesis of the syrian-libanese theatre. The first theatrical work written and played in arabic, largely influenced by moliere and italian farce, is that of marun al-naqqach. The syrian libanese theatre reached its climax in egypt through the works of salim al-naq qach, qabbani and qirdahi. Our study extends from the first religious presentations until the appearance of the first written arabic play which is a product of arabic islamic heritage, modern arabic renaissance and western drama. The second part of our study deals with foreign influences mostly french, like racine, corneille, moliere and hugo who were the major source of inspiration for syrian-libanese dramatists. These dramatists relied on the greek-roman and spannish histories for their subjects. The work of qabbin and its influences are presented in a separate chapter. And the problem of translation and production of technical terms and words are also studied in detail
Louvat-Molozay, Bénédicte. "Poétique de l'introduction musicale : le statut de la musique dans le théâtre français entre 1550 et 1680." Paris 4, 1996. http://www.theses.fr/1996PA040400.
Full textThis dissertation aims at articulating a theoretical reflection on the status of music in French theatre with an analysis of the practices of musical insertion in drama from the renaissance to the creation of the Comédie-Francaise. Because it depends on the definition of theatre as a spectacle and concerns all dramatic genres, the question of music is marginalized by the theoreticians. The second part of this study propounds therefore a poetics of musical introduction in relation to a poetics of the dramatic genres : in the renaissance and throughout the first third of the seventeenth century, the presence of music in humanist tragedies, protestant drama and dramatic pastorals is linked to the conception of a lyrical theatre, which postulates a kind of union between theatre and poetry. From the 1630s, music is submitted to the requirements of action. The second half of the seventeenth century is then characterized by a reflection on the conditions of possibility for a theatre in music to exist, and by a resistance to the Italian model: against it, the “tragédie à machines” and the “comédie-ballet” offer a model of total spectacle, which favors alternation over simultaneity. The dramatic pastoral evolves towards an operatic pastoral, while sacred drama and the comedy remain faithful to the pattern of theatre with music
Triau, Christophe. "Dramaturgies du monologue dans le théâtre du XVIIe siècle." Paris 10, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA100097.
Full textThis study is about the status and the dramaturgical uses of the monologue in French seventeenth century theatre, from 1616 to 1677. It first analyses its numerical evolution, how theory talks about it, and its specificities on the stage (performance, metadramaticity). It studies it through the works of Racan, Viau, Corneille (from Mélite to Rodogune), Molière and Racine (and, sometimes : Mainfray, Mairet, Rotrou). The monologue appears as a problematical element of the dramatic mimesis, a base of the game on the internal points of view and their contradictions : in the pastoral defile, by constructing singular commentaries of the comic fiction, or inside the tragic perspective it makes more complex ; it also appears as a privileged way of the exposition of the persona, and, so, of the relation the audience can build with her, wether it “imposes” her in a tautological and hyperbolic way or, in these times of split between public and particulier, it plays with making her uncertain
Goursolas, Marie-Hélène. "« La société des idolâtres ». L’idolâtrie dans la polémique contre le théâtre en France et en Angleterre, XVIe-XVIIe siècles." Thesis, Sorbonne université, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020SORUL108.
Full textThis thesis considers the meaning and scope of idolatry in the french and english polemics against the stage in the 16th and 17th centuries. Because the condemnations of the early Church Fathers were aimed at spectacles closely related to pagan worship, the argument of idolatry is discussed in debates on the status of these authorities in the modern controversy. It questions the evolution of the stage and the possibility of its "conversion" to Christianity. Idolatry also supports the assimilation of the theatre to a "devil's church", as it has been understood as a deviation of divine worship to its benefit. It echoes the religious controversies of the time: the Puritan or Calvinist association of theatre and papism, as well as the Augustinian condemnation of passions, find in the idea of idolatry a significant rhetorical motif. Articulating discourse analysis and the history of ideas, this study follows the ramifications of a grievance that combines the Platonic disqualification of illusion with the Biblical condemnation of vanity. It illustrates the propensity of polemics to redirect arguments that it seems to repeat. An examination of plays that stage idolatry (whether amorous or religious) also shows the dramatic interest of this theme, whereby theatre can face the attacks launched toward it
Niayesh, Ladan. "Aux frontières de l'humain : figures du cannibalisme dans le théâtre anglais de la Renaissance." Montpellier 3, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000MON30014.
Full textMarchand, Sophie. "Théâtre et pathétique au dix-huitième siècle : pour une esthétique de l'effet dramatique." Paris 4, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA040111.
Full textThe taste for tears and the ethics of sensibility deeply influence the theatrical practice and theory of the Enlightenment. An original dramatic model elaborates itself from the efficiency of pathos considered as a sentimental adhesion. The analysis of theoretical texts allows a description of this homogenous and coherent system's constitutive elements. The disruptions induced in the dramatic thought by the pathetic expectations are considered first : the promotion of the effect to the rank of a decisive criterion of value, the change from a pœtics of beauty to an aesthetics of pleasure, the effects of the lacrymomania on the genres. Then, the examination of dramatic texts sheds light on the emergence of a rhetoric and a dramaturgy spécifique to the pathos. Finally, the beholder's viewpoint is analysed and the pathetic experience considered, in order to understand how the drama gets integrated into the philosophical system of the Enlightenmnent
Jaëcklé-Plunian, Claude. "L'historiographie du théâtre au XVIIIe siècle : la venue du théâtre à l'histoire." Paris 3, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA030091.
Full textThe 18th century historiography of French theatre opens with a series of ecclesiastical works which make this history an instrument against dance and theatre, though there are some sharp retorts. Beginning in 1730 several theatre histories appear. Authors such as Brumoy, Riccoboni, Maupoint and Beauchamps, who are mainly not scholars but often have ties to professionnal theatre, engage in research in both public and private libraries, using collections of wealthy theatre lovers as well as the medium of press and the erudition of private individuals. Fontenelle had opened the door with his History of French Theatre which served as a beacon for its sources, framework, literary style and above all his intelligent reading of the past, whitch ruptured the thread of those publications that were either for or against the theatre. Empowered, our historians organize their material according to known models : Renaissance bibliographies give them the matrix for lists of authors of plays. Previously unseen original material as well as extracts and analyses are published. They create a virtual history of drama and theatre. This history offers them a new space where they can reflect on cultural relevance regarding the relationship of dominant moral and religious values. The essays of academicians accompany this mouvement. Their disciples are journalists, encyclopaedists or 'literay bohemians'. Publications of almanachs and dictionaries which chronicle the history of the times multiply, amassing materiel that will be left to succeeding generations to sort out. Solicited by the misomimes, they invest their energy in reforming a theatre which for them is an engrossing utopia , a place where they sometimes display astonishing ingenuity. They are called Mouhy, Du Coudray, Rétif or Nougaret. With the passing of the century, Suard returns to Fontenelle's History of French Theatre, paving the way for Sainte-Beuve
Gutierrez, Laffond Aurore. "Théâtre et magie dans la littérature dramatique du XVIIè siècle." Toulouse 2, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998TOU20067.
Full textThe purpose of this study, "theatre and magic in the dramatic literature of the 17th century" is to show how and why the theatre of that century reflected the different forms of the irrational. It is meant to shed light on a subject often left in the shade, perhaps on account of the prevailing image of French classicism yearning for order, reason and clarity. Pre-scientific thinking in the early 17th century remained indeed highly dependent on the learned magic of the renaissance. Kepler and Galilee were as many astrologers as astronomers and the passing of a comet, seriously interpreted as an ill-fated foreboding still in 1680, spread terror among the population. Medicine was still astrophile and influenced by Paracelsus's theory of marks. The most enlightened minds remained under the spell of the marvelous, kept alive and renewed by emblematic. Royal mystic under Louis XIV took on a magic dimension, magnified by the solar emblem. Awe of the devil and of woman assumed the form of witch hunting until after 1650 through the affairs of possession of Loudun, Louviers, and Aix. . . Etc. The Affair of the Poisons in 1679 was also a resurgence of the magic spells and black masses. The first part of the study analyses the reality of this magic. How this magic mentality was depicted varied with the literary genres. Such serious genres as tragedy, musical tragedy and to a lesser extent tragi-comedy - in the second part of the study - reveal the constant fascination of the 17th century for the magic marvelous, both veiled and sublimated by myths. Armida's gardens were the symbol of the dream of love just as the destruction of the enchanted palace was the symbol of its impossibility. Magic in comedy, developed in the third part, reflects more directly the reality of magic and of its avatar, witchcraft. The theme showed a great variety of registers in the pre-Moliere productions, in pastorals, tragi-comedies and comedies. Sometimes a lofty poetry is inspired by the baroque themes of the illusion, of the mirror, of the metamorphosis of the self and of the world, of the dead-alive, while the theme of the devil, the witch and the satire played upon the whole spectrum of laughter. From Moliere onwards comedy stressed the denunciation of imposture previously initiated with a determination that testified to the long-lasting survival of superstition and the ancient magic mentality
Chiari-Lasserre, Sophie. "L'image du labyrinthe dans la culture et la littérature de la Renaissance anglaise : origines, diffusion, appropriations et interprétations." Montpellier 3, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003MON30086.
Full textIn the Elizabethan period, the image of the labyrinth was being re-appropriated in several ways, all based on an ideal first championed by Horace : discordia concors. Throughout Antiquity, the story related to Theseus and the Minotaur had been retold many times, by authors such as Pliny, Ovid, Plutarch, whose texts were to be digested by translators. Renaissance England could boast, too, of an impressive medieval heritage, which favoured the didactic transmission of the myth : the influence of clerical writings linked to the idea of the unicursal maze, one way leading to God, contributed to the popularization of the legend. Gradually, the symbol was secularized during the sixteenth century. Although mythic multicursal paths proliferated in gardens, representations, danse and poetry, they reached their climax on stage. As an obsessional motif, the labyrinth is a hermeneutic key revealing new interpretative tracks exploring a multisemic theatre, whose possibilities remain to be exploited
Books on the topic "Théâtre (genre littéraire) – 16e siècle"
Badir, Magdy Gabriel. Eighteenth-Century French Theatre : aspects and contexts: Studies presented to E.J.H. Greene. Alberta: Depts of Romance Languages and Comparative Literature of the University of Alberta, 1986.
Find full textBerthier, Patrick. Le théâtre au XIXe siècle. Paris: Presses universitaires de France, 1986.
Find full textLe théâtre au XIXe siècle: Du romantisme au symbolisme. Rosny-sous-Bois: Bréal éditions, 2001.
Find full textRougemont, Martine de. La vie théâtrale en France au XVIIIe siècle. Paris: Champion-Slatkine, 1988.
Find full textMicheline, Chevrier, Playwrights' Workshop Montreal, Boisvert Nathalie 1965-, and Centre des auteurs dramatiques, eds. Dialogues : pratiques d'écriture contemporaines du Québec et du Canada: Langue et traduction théâtrale = Contemporary writing practices from Quebec and Canada : language and theatre translation. Montréal: Centre des auteurs dramatiques, 2002.
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