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Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

L' Homme Robbe-Grilletien: Une Vision Subconsciente Du Monde, Monica E. Nahm Dec 1972

L' Homme Robbe-Grilletien: Une Vision Subconsciente Du Monde, Monica E. Nahm

Masters Theses

No abstract provided.


A Study Of Personal Naming Customs In Medieval Poitou, Eleanor Louise Krawutschke Dec 1972

A Study Of Personal Naming Customs In Medieval Poitou, Eleanor Louise Krawutschke

Masters Theses

No abstract provided.


A Bibliographical Survey Of The West Indian Novel, Ruta Mara Sani Dec 1972

A Bibliographical Survey Of The West Indian Novel, Ruta Mara Sani

Masters Theses

No abstract provided.


A Composition (Untitled), Donald J. Para Aug 1972

A Composition (Untitled), Donald J. Para

Masters Theses

No abstract provided.


The Application Of Eric Berne's Theory Of Structural And Transactional Analysis To Five Novels By Andre Gidé, Marcia Lynn Mead Aug 1972

The Application Of Eric Berne's Theory Of Structural And Transactional Analysis To Five Novels By Andre Gidé, Marcia Lynn Mead

Masters Theses

No abstract provided.


The Life And Songs Of John Danyel, Sally J. Wylie Jan 1972

The Life And Songs Of John Danyel, Sally J. Wylie

Masters Theses

The lute song or "ayre" as it was usually spelled by its Elizabethan and early Jacobean composers was a type of English song whose melody was predominant and its accompaniment carefully composed. It was usually accompanied by the lute and often the viol doubled the bass line. The term "ayre" or "aire" was used by English writers of the seventeenth century in the sense of key or mode. The texture of the lute song was generally homophonic and much simpler than that of the polyphonic madrigal. Of course, lutenist-song composers like John Dowland and John Danyel often used all of …