Results 111 to 120 of about 78,445 (164)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Don Quixote and Don Quixotism

The Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 1937
(1937). Don Quixote and Don Quixotism. The Psychoanalytic Quarterly: Vol. 6, No. 2, pp. 215-222.
openaire   +1 more source

Quixote Corp.

Mergent's Dividend Achievers, 2006
AbstractConstruction — Public Infrastructure (MIC: 3.1 SIC: 1611 NAIC: 237310)Quixote and its subsidiaries develop, manufacture and market, to both domestic and international markets, energy‐absorbing highway crash cushions, flexible post delineators, electronic wireless measuring and sensing devices, computerized highway advisory radio transmitting ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Charlotte Lennox’s Female Quixote and Orthodox Quixotism

2006
Chapters 3 through 6 focus on texts that deploy the quixote trope in ways that subvert its orthodox use. But before investigating these texts, I will use this chapter to flesh out my argument about orthodox quixote narratives that reject the practice of quixotism.
openaire   +1 more source

Dressing Don Quijote: of Quixotes and Quixotes

Cervantes, 2004
Se sabe que el nombre de nuestro héroe se deriva de la palabra neo-latina quixote ‘muslera,’ que lleva una carga importante de simbolismo en torno al mundo y los valores europeo-cristiano-caballerescos. Resulta que el nombre del personaje encierra otro quixote, otra prenda de vestir, pero que remite al mundo y órbita cultural arábigo-islámico.
openaire   +1 more source

Historicizing Quixote and the Scandal of Quixotism

2006
The scandal of quixotism is the quixote’s claim to valid perception. A quixote’s “consciousness,” as Susan Staves writes, is “formed by the reading of some particular kind of literature” and he “then goes forth into the world, assuming the world’s reality will match the literary reality he knows.”1 We need to broaden this definition beyond the ...
openaire   +1 more source

Quixote (1947)

Res Severa Verum Gaudium, 2018
Quixote (1947)[1] Silvio Duncan[2]Raymundo Faoro[3]Paulo Hecker Filho[4][1] Originalmente publicado em: DUNCAN, Silvio; FAORO, Raymundo; HECKER FILHO, Paulo. Quixote. Revista Quixote, Porto Alegre, v. 1, p. 1, 1947. Trata-se do Editorial da primeira edição da Revista Quixote (1947-1952).
Duncan, Silvio   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Epilogue: Beyond Quixotism?: Quixotism and Contemporary Theory

2006
Recent critical thinking bears an ambiguous relationship to the legacy of quixotism that this study has traced. Much theoretical discourse is deeply suspicious of the Enlightenment “appeal” to “Reason, conceived of as a transcultural human ability to correspond to reality,” on which the quixote trope so thoroughly depends.1 Georg Lukacs, for instance ...
openaire   +1 more source

Quixotic Communication

Knowledge, 1987
When social science knowledge is passed from the frame of reference of social scientist to the frame of reference of the problem-solving professional, a transformation in meaning of the knowledge occurs. The specific instance this article investigates involves the attempt to communicate social science knowledge, in the form of expert witness testimony,
openaire   +1 more source

Female Quixotism

1992
Abstract First published in 1801, Female Quixotism is a boisterous anti-romance and literary satire, in which Dorcas Sheldon (`Dorcasina’) sets out to discover for herself the kind of passionate love affair portrayed in her favourite novels.
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy