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Showing 1 to 15 of 83 results Save | Export
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Asia, Daniel – Academic Questions, 2010
A few articles have appeared recently regarding the subject of the health of classical music (or more broadly, the fine arts) in America. These include "Classical Music's New Golden Age," by Heather Mac Donald, in the "City Journal" and "The Decline of the Audience," by Terry Teachout, in "Commentary." These articles appeared around the time of…
Descriptors: Classical Music, Fine Arts, Audiences, Music Education
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Bernard-Donals, Michael – College English, 2012
On the third floor of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM), in Washington, D.C., inside a glass case, lie thousands of shoes. Old and mismatched, moldering after sixty years, they are what remains of countless Jews who were told to disrobe and who were subsequently murdered at Majdanek, Poland, during the final years of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Clothing, Figurative Language, Museums
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Hamilton, James R. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2009
In "The Art of Theater," the author proposes and explains a claim that many theater people hold true in some form but have defended in a manner that has had almost no success outside discussions among themselves. The claim proposed is that, in an unqualified way, theater is a form of art. By that the author means theatrical performances are "what…
Descriptors: Drama, Theaters, Art, Aesthetics
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Tice, Kathleen C. – Journal of Children's Literature, 2008
In this article, the author shares a current analysis of data that complements findings from earlier, related research that confirms the emotional aspects of reading experiences. The data from the earlier study is based upon comments by graduate students in online discussion groups, where they share their thoughts about the professional readings…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Discussion Groups, Data Analysis, Literature
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Farber, Jerry – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2007
With a clearer understanding of the way humor works, individuals might be better able to give it the attention it deserves when they study and teach the arts. But where do they turn to find a theoretical framework for the study of humor--one that will help them clarify the role that humor plays in the arts and that will help them as well to…
Descriptors: Theories, Role, Humor, Cognitive Structures
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Josephs, Caroline – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2008
The paper focuses on oral storytelling and transformation through the significance of the liminal zone as thresholding. Involving the reader-listener in an experiential and performative approach, the article draws on all of the senses, using a wide range of data such as dreams, drawing, writing, as well as the act of (sacred) oral storytelling and…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Educational Research, Oral Interpretation, Doctoral Dissertations
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Klein, Jeanne – Youth Theatre Journal, 1992
Describes a production of Barry Kornhauser's play "This Is Not a Pipe Dream" that was intended to support increased audience engagement in the production both emotionally and aesthetically. (SR)
Descriptors: Audience Response, Children, Drama, Elementary Education
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Milman, Estera; Foster, Stephen C. – Visible Language, 1992
Presents a conversation that ranges from discussion of the overt questioning of understanding, meaning, and the validity of the art situation to the conscious, recurrent renewal of "crisis" as a catalyst for the arts. (RS)
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Expression, Art History, Audience Response
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Sholle, David – Journal of Film and Video, 1991
Argues that, before accepting the "reading as resistance" approach of contemporary cultural studies, "resistance" should be clearly articulated and coherently theorized. Asserts that doing so will avoid banal and repetitive analyses. Considers problems with audience-centered cultural studies and attempts to retheorize the…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Audience Response, Popular Culture, Resistance (Psychology)
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Bush, Max – Stage of the Art, 1996
Uses a dialogue between two aspects of the same person (playwright/director) to answer the question posed in the title. States that initial productions of a new play are important for rewriting and reshaping the material and that performance confirms what is healthy and alive about the play. Concludes that the time for enjoying the performance…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Playwriting, Revision (Written Composition), Theater Arts
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Smith, Greg M. – Journal of Film and Video, 1996
Explores silent film actress Norma Talmadge's "star persona" in the 1920s. Focuses on the public discourses that provide the background for Talmadge's departure from the screen. Analyzes why her two "talkies" failed commercially and critically. Concentrates on promotional and publicity materials and on the films themselves. (PA)
Descriptors: Acting, Audience Response, Ethnicity, Females
Roth, Lane – 1983
The film "Raiders of the Lost Ark," a timeless story about the heroic quest for a sacred object and the conflict between good and evil, employs cross-cultural, durable symbols to establish quickly a locus of motives with a large, differentiated movie audience. The archetypes of the quest and of shadow are at the core of this film; they…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Content Analysis, Film Criticism, Films
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McOmber, James B. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1996
States that, in "The Etiology of Hysteria," Sigmund Freud's "seduction theory" asserted that child sexual abuse was the single cause of adult hysteria. Argues that Freud's failure to persuade his audience can be attributed not only to their denial of sexual abuse but also to his failure to clarify how pschyoanalysis could…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Females, Individual Development, Persuasive Discourse
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Obbink, Laura Apol – New Advocate, 1990
Discusses the importance of the spoken word and the tradition of nursery verse and other forms of poetry. Encourages teachers and students to never abandon the rhythm, balance, and pleasurable taste of language as it was first learned through oral chants, jingles, and rhymes of early childhood. (MG)
Descriptors: Audience Response, Language Rhythm, Listening, Oral Language
Ellis, Carolyn – 1997
An educator, an "old timer" in sociology but new in the field of communication, sees her work as a "calling," a "mission." She wants the audience to feel the emotion of autoethnography. To bring research to life, she chooses three autoethnographic vignettes to show scenes in which a different kind of stigma is felt:…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Communication (Thought Transfer), Ethnography, Higher Education
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