Raymond Carver’s “Cathedral” and Tess Gallagher’s “Rain Flooding your Campfire” are good examples of intertextual dialogue between two writers. These two stories show us how two writers can grow and develop short stories differently from the same experience. There are similarities between the stories‚ such as the use of a first person narrator‚ the plot‚ setting‚ and also there is an interchange between the narrator and the blind man in both stories. But within these similarities there are also
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T.S.ELIOT is one of the great drametists in English literary worlde. From his literature‚ we can feel the great aesthetic pleasure. I have studied various plays included in my course. But “murder in cathedral” really different in them. It has its own greatness and the literary heights. Poetic form Eliot felt‚ is the most apt form of expression in the theatre. In his view‚ Ibsen‚ Stirnberg‚ and Chekhov were the limits of prose. In contrast to them are Yeats and Hofmannsthal who kept
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‘Murder in the Cathedral.’ Due to the stylised and naturalistic style of writing by Bolt and Eliot‚ ‘Murder in the Cathedral’ and ‘A Man for All Seasons’ differ in their accessibility as historical dramas. The language and variation in tone in ‘A Man for All Seasons’ arguably adds to the play’s accessibility. The language and variation in tone in ‘Murder in the Cathedral’ could also be considered accessible but in very different ways from the latter novel. Eliot’s ‘Murder in the Cathedral’ was written
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Christian presence in architectural monuments during the Romanesque and Gothic periods‚ which lead to a great cathedral construction boom across Europe. The Gothic architectural styles were distinctive in not only the large windows and use of stain glass but they were known for their use of flying buttresses and they were built to be more vertical as if they were reaching out to the heavens. It is also known for the introduction of art within the Cathedrals including the stained glass‚ the use of gargoyles
Free Gothic architecture
In the year 1137 Abbot Suger of St. Denis‚ France envisioned something different for his church. The churches which had been built with Romanesque architectural style were very difficult to light because of the structure of the churches. The nave walls needed support from without so the windows of the churches had to be eliminated. Suger wanted to rebuild the choir of the abbey church of St. Denis with light that would flood the church as if the light came directly from Heaven‚ so he began painting
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period of innovative buildings‚ using the Romanesque architecture‚ which gave rise to the architecture of the Romanesque period. Many works of art were constructed in France during this period such as Gothic style cathedrals‚ an example of which is Chartres Cathedral‚ St. Sernin‚ Toulouse and Ste-Madeleine Church Vézelay. The term Romanesque comes from the buildings of the Roman Empire. The Romanesque style incorporates elements of Byzantine and
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decorative material. The distinctive traits of Italian Gothic are best understood by referring to the Italian Romanesque and its likewise exceptional position. The basilica pattern and timber ceiling were very common in Italy‚ especially in Tuscany‚ through the Romanesque period and that the Romanesque character was mainly apparent in decorative traits. It was not till the close of the Romanesque period that vaulted churches became widespread throughout Italy‚ with ornamental traits which reflected some
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Introduction The Historical Timeline of Architecture Egyptian Byzantine Pre-Historic NEAR EAST EGYPTIAN Greek Roman Early Christian Romanesque Gothic Renaissance GREEK ROMAN EARLY CHRISTIAN history of architecture PRE-HISTORIC 18th-19th C: Revival 20th C: Modern Near East Islamic BYZANTINE ROMANESQUE GOTHIC RENAISSANCE 18TH-19TH C REVIVAL 20TH C MODERN ISLAMIC INDIAN Indian Chinese &
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cylindrical and the capital is tapered. These zigzag patterns are also commonly known as chevron patterns[7]. According to the Penguin Dictionary of Architecture[8]‚ chevron molding is a common characteristic of Romanesque architecture‚ likewise is the dominant use of semicircular arches[9]. Romanesque architecture designs a building in a way that it communicates glory and might to the society through height‚ light‚ and mass[10]. These are features that complement the court considering that it deals with
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Art Class Gothic Art Professor: Adriana García García Enrique González Pinal Classroom: 311 ID: 1582569 Was a style of medieval art that developed in Northern France out of Romanesque art in 12th century‚ led by the concurrent development of Gothic architecture. It spread to all of Western Europe‚ never quite effacing more classical styles in Italy. In the late 14th century‚ the sophisticated court style of International Gothic developed‚ which continued to evolve
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