Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 12 of 12
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
P-13 El Laberinto Del Fauno: A Child’S Imagination And Coping With The Trauma Of War, Psychology And Spanish, Hannah Cruse
P-13 El Laberinto Del Fauno: A Child’S Imagination And Coping With The Trauma Of War, Psychology And Spanish, Hannah Cruse
Celebration of Research and Creative Scholarship
Abstract of “El laberinto del fauno: A Child’s Imagination and Coping with the Trauma of War”
Guillermo del Toro’s film El laberinto del fauno, known as Pan’s Labyrinth to English speaking audiences, opens up a fantastical world that is just a touch away from reality, but everyone believes this to be the imagination of one child, Ofelia. She tries to complete tasks and learns the truth of the land of post Civil War Spain that she currently resides in while she yearns for another. A child's imagination can be transported by a simple story; there seems to be a special …
A Man Not A Monster : Reimagining Disability In Hollow Crown's Richard Iii, Taylor E. Uphus
A Man Not A Monster : Reimagining Disability In Hollow Crown's Richard Iii, Taylor E. Uphus
Honors Theses
Traditional portrayals of William Shakespeare’s Richard III (1592) in film interpret Richard’s physical disability as an outward reflection of his evil. In recent years, disabilities studies scholars have reconsidered the historic association of Richard’s physical deformity with immorality. Unlike previous Richard III films, the BBC’s Hollow Crown: Richard III (Dominic Cooke, 2016) highlights Richard’s mental abuse and trauma. While the film does not shy away from Richard’s villainy, its more empathic depiction of Richard contests the one-dimensional stage and film representation of him as a conniving monster. Ultimately, this film presents Richard III to critique society’s treatment of disabled individuals.
The Role Of Nollywood Film In Combating Sexual Violence Among Female Adolescents In Selected Secondary Schools In Lagos State, Nigeria, Onyinyechi Nwaolikpe
The Role Of Nollywood Film In Combating Sexual Violence Among Female Adolescents In Selected Secondary Schools In Lagos State, Nigeria, Onyinyechi Nwaolikpe
Andrews Research Conference
Sexual violence which has a profound impact on the physical and mental health of women and girls, is one of the most wide spread abuses on women’s rights. It affects the social well being of victims and its effects may be long lasting. This descriptive cross-sectional study therefore, sought to determine the role of Nollywood film in combating sexual violence among secondary school female adolescents in Lagos State, Nigeria. Three hundred and fifty female adolescents between the ages of 12-17 years were selected in four secondary schools in Ikeja, Lagos State, Nigeria using multi-stage sampling. Data were collected using self-administered …
Sonscreen Film Festival Awards/Student Awarded Prestigious Scholarship, Andrews University
Sonscreen Film Festival Awards/Student Awarded Prestigious Scholarship, Andrews University
World Changers Made Here
No abstract provided.
Special Screening Of "A Place To Grow": Berrien Springs Documentary To Show Again In June, Becky St. Clair
Special Screening Of "A Place To Grow": Berrien Springs Documentary To Show Again In June, Becky St. Clair
Andrews Agenda: Campus News
No abstract provided.
A Place To Grow: A Production By The Berrien Film Project
A Place To Grow: A Production By The Berrien Film Project
Andrews Agenda: Campus News
No abstract provided.
"A Certain Kind Of Light": Adjunct Professor Keith Wakefield Produces Award-Winning Film, Samuel Fry
"A Certain Kind Of Light": Adjunct Professor Keith Wakefield Produces Award-Winning Film, Samuel Fry
Andrews Agenda: Campus News
No abstract provided.
P-22 Te Amo Mujer, Ivan Ruiz
P-22 Te Amo Mujer, Ivan Ruiz
Honors Scholars & Undergraduate Research Poster Symposium Programs
Te Amo Mujer is a documentary film project exploring the story of Don Gustavo Jiménez, an old man who lives in a small village in the south of Mexico, and the grandfather of the filmmaker. The film seeks to use the narrative of Don Gustavo to explore the question of why we live where we live. The thesis of the film, or more accurately the suggestion, as the film is a very personal work, is that we live where we do, and how we do, out of love for the people that are closest to us.
A Filmmaker's Journey, Paul Kim
Better Stewards, Paul Kim
A Journey To Embrace-God Doesn't Want To Let Go Of Us, Pieter Damsteegt
A Journey To Embrace-God Doesn't Want To Let Go Of Us, Pieter Damsteegt
Lake Union Herald
No abstract provided.
Locating The Bard: Adaptation And Authority In Michael Radford's The Merchant Of Venice
Locating The Bard: Adaptation And Authority In Michael Radford's The Merchant Of Venice
Faculty Publications
Michael Radford’s adaptation of The Merchant of Venice (2004) starring Al Pacino and Jeremy Irons returns feature film Shakespeare to period setting and costuming after roughly a decade of radicalized adaptative strategies such as those of Baz Luhrmann, Michael Almereyda, and Julie Taymor, strategies that threatened to overshadow the Kenneth Branagh approach to Shakespeare’s textual and cultural authority. Radford underscores this return to “authentic” Shakespeare with a heavy directorial hand that begins the film with superimposed text recounting the sixteenth-century Venetian context of the original play setting. The watery landscape of Venice, the brothels and courtesans that entertain the Christian …