Results for 'Dramatic Rehearsal'

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  1.  65
    The Dialogues as Dramatic Rehearsal: Plato’s Republic and the Moral Accounting Metaphor.Albert R. Spencer - 2013 - The Pluralist 8 (2):26-35.
    In John Dewey & Moral Imagination, Steven Fesmire blames "Plato's low estimation of imagination in the Republic and Ion" for the denigration of imagination's role in moral deliberation (61). He argues that John Dewey's dramatic rehearsal better integrates imagination into the process of moral deliberation. His treatment of Plato represents a habit among pragmatists to reduce Dewey's reading of Plato to the polemics present in major works, such as The Quest for Certainty. In fact, Plato was Dewey's favorite (...)
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  2.  53
    Constructing Good Decisions in Ethically Charged Situations: The Role of Dramatic Rehearsal.John F. McVea - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 70 (4):375-390.
    This paper develops a pragmatist approach to ethical business decision-making. It draws primarily on the work of John Dewey and applies his deliberative approach to ethics to the challenges of business practitioners. In particular the paper proposes the value of Dewey’s concept of dramatic rehearsal in emphasizing the task of “constructing the good” in ethical decision-making. The contribution of the paper is, first, to build on recent foundational work to bring American pragmatism into the mainstream business ethics literature; (...)
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  3.  42
    Educating the moral artist: Dramatic rehearsal in moral education.Steven A. Fesmire - 1995 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 13 (3):213-227.
    Recent sociological studies, like Robert Bellah’s Habits of the Heart, support the claim that Americans retain an ideal of isolated self-sufficiency. Yet the material conditions of our culture require ideals that shun exclusiveness and encourage associated living. The result of this dissonance is that Americans tend to approach their own and others’ values in a way that boils down to irrational personal preference. …Such is the cultural predicament that a theory of moral education must ultimately confront. In this essay I (...)
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  4. Dewey and Sartre on ethical decisions: Dramatic rehearsal versus radical choice.William R. Caspary - 2006 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 42 (3):367-393.
    : A highly detailed application of Dewey's "dramatic rehearsal" to a particular ethical dilemma situation is developed here. This illustrates the role of moral imagination and creativity, and of self-discovery and self-transformation, within dramatic rehearsal. A primary concern is to show how decisions emerge through unification; what sorts of decisions emerge; how they can be evaluated; and whether the choices and evaluations accord with what is generally taken to be ethical/moral. Sartre's dilemma of a French student (...)
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  5.  4
    Moral Education and the Dangers of Dramatic Rehearsal.Kathy Hytten - 2010 - Philosophy of Education 66:129-132.
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  6.  4
    Care Ethics, John Dewey’s “Dramatic Rehearsal,” and Moral Education.Maurice Hamington - 2010 - Philosophy of Education 66:121-128.
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  7.  6
    Memorizing and rehearsing: the exercise in the construction of the Art of the Actor in Paris in the second eighteenth century.Suzanne Rochefort - 2021 - Methodos 21.
    Cet article propose un regard historique sur la notion d’exercice en art, à travers le cas du métier de comédien dans la seconde moitié du XVIIIe siècle. Alors qu’une véritable théâtromanie s’empare de la société française, les acteurs et les actrices doivent répondre aux exigences d’un public friand de nouveautés à l’affiche. L’article met en lumière des pratiques peu visibles du travail artistique, comme l’effort de mémorisation des rôles, ou les modalités d’organisation des exercices au sein de la première école (...)
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  8.  4
    The Classroom Drama: Teaching as Endless Rehearsal and Cultural Elaboration.Chris Higgins - 2011 - In The Good Life of Teaching. Oxford, UK: Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 205–239.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Education as the drama of cultural renewal A false lead Teaching as labour, work, and action Education, shelter, and mediation Teaching as endless rehearsal Teaching as cultural elaboration.
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  9.  6
    Overcoming Blanking: Verbal and Visual Features of Prompting in Theatre Rehearsals.Maximilian Krug - 2023 - Human Studies 46 (2):221-246.
    In theatre rehearsals, actors can occasionally be seen getting stuck in the play text, which is called blanking. To overcome such textual difficulties and continue with the given text, a prompter can verbalize the line in question, thus contributing to an actor’s word search by prompting. The paper focuses on interactional practices by which prompters and actors interactionally resolve blanking situations. This study’s data comprises a case collection of 67 prompting situations, which are taken from a 200-h video corpus of (...)
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  10.  35
    Deliberating Intergenerational Environmental Equity: A Pragmatic, Future Studies Approach.Matthew Cotton - 2013 - Environmental Values 22 (3):317-337.
    Across the applied ethics literatures are a growing number of ethical tools: decision-support methodologies that encourage multi-stakeholder deliberative engagement with the social and moral issues arising from technology assessment and environmental management processes. This article presents a novel ethical tool for deliberation on the issue of environmental justice between current and future generations over long time frames. This ethical tool combines two approaches, linking John Dewey's concept of dramatic rehearsal - an empathetic and imaginative ethical deliberation process; with (...)
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  11.  6
    In heroides 11.Ovid'S. Canace & Dramatic Irony - 1992 - Classical Quarterly 42 (1):201-209.
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  12. John Dewey and Moral Imagination: Pragmatism in Ethics [brief sample].Steven Fesmire - 2003 - Indiana University Press.
    While examining the important role of imagination in making moral judgments, John Dewey and Moral Imagination focuses new attention on the relationship between American pragmatism and ethics. Steven Fesmire takes up threads of Dewey's thought that have been largely unexplored and elaborates pragmatism's distinctive contribution to understandings of moral experience, inquiry, and judgment. Building on two Deweyan notions—that moral character, belief, and reasoning are part of a social and historical context and that moral deliberation is an imaginative, dramatic (...) of possibilities—Fesmire shows that moral imagination can be conceived as a process of aesthetic perception and artistic creativity. Fesmire's original readings of Dewey shed new light on the imaginative process, human emotional make-up and expression, and the nature of moral judgment. This original book presents a robust and distinctly pragmatic approach to ethics, politics, moral education, and moral conduct. [The downloadable sample is Chapter Seven, "The Moral Artist."]. (shrink)
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  13. Toward A Deweyan Theory of Ethical and Aesthetic Performing Arts Practice.Aili Bresnahan - 2014 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 1 (2):133-148.
    This paper formulates a Deweyan theory of performing arts practice that relies for its support on two main things: The unity Dewey ascribed to all intelligent practices (including artistic practice) and The observation that many aspects of the work of performing artists of Dewey’s time include features (“dramatic rehearsal,” action, interaction and habit development) that are part of Dewey’s characterization of the moral life. This does not deny the deep import that Dewey ascribed to aesthetic experience (both in (...)
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  14.  51
    Tympan Alley: Posthumanist Performatives in Dancer in the Dark.Lynn Turner - 2013 - Derrida Today 6 (2):222-239.
    ‘Tympaniser’, Alan Bass tells us, is an ‘archaic verb meaning to ridicule publicly’ or to decry. In the essay fronting Margins of Philosophy called ‘Tympan’ Derrida decries the philosophy that would own its limits, absorbing ‘the margin of its own volume’. While it is Derrida’s late work on the ‘animal question’ that has brought his insistence on the nourishment of the limits between species as limitrophy to wider attention, it is also named as the general condition of the interface of (...)
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  15.  44
    Virtual Reality, Empathy and Ethics.Matthew Cotton - 2021 - Springer Verlag.
    This book examines the ethics of virtual reality technologies. New forms of virtual reality are emerging in society, not just from low-cost gaming headsets, or augmented reality apps on phones, but from simulated “deep fake” images and videos on social media. This book subjects the new VR technological landscape to ethical scrutiny: assessing the benefits, risks and regulatory practices that shape it. Though often associated with gaming, education and therapy, VR can also be used for moral enhancement. Journalists, artists, philanthropic (...)
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  16.  11
    The Person Vanishes: John Dewey's Philosophy of Experience and the Self.Yoram Lubling - 2011 - Peter Lang.
    The Person Vanishes argues that despite John Dewey's failure to articulate «an adequate theory of personality», his writings provide at least a theory-sketch of human personality consistent with the assumptions that framed his philosophical outlook. Recognizing the new developments in society, science, and the arts, Dewey argues for the necessity of a Copernican revolution in our understanding of the human self; from the monadic and minimalist self of the Cartesian-Newtonian modernist tradition to a relational and processual model of selfhood consonant (...)
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  17.  27
    Rawls on Dewey before the Dewey Lectures.Daniele Botti - 2017 - Journal of the History of Ideas 78 (2):287-298.
    This article sheds light on John Rawls’s views on John Dewey’s philosophical temperament by investigating unpublished papers and lectures that Rawls wrote and delivered across the late 1940s, the 1950s, the 1960s, and the early 1970s. Moreover, the article shows that Rawls’s rejection of Kant’s dualisms predates by at least three decades the “Dewey Lectures” (1980) and that Dewey’s notion of deliberation as “dramatic rehearsal in imagination” might have had an impact on Rawls’s development of the notion of (...)
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  18. Ecological Imagination.Steven Fesmire - 2010 - Environmental Ethics 32 (2):183-203.
    Environmental thinkers recognize that ecological thinking has a vital role to play in many wise choices and policies; yet, little theoretical attention has been given to developing an adequate philosophical psychology of the imaginative nature of such thinking. Ecological imagination is an outgrowth of our more general deliberative capacity to perceive, in light of possibilities for thinking and acting, the relationships that constitute any object. Such imagination is of a specifically ecological sort when key metaphors, images, symbols, and the like (...)
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  19.  21
    The Role of Moral Imagination in Patients' Decision-Making.K. Rommetveit, J. L. Scully & R. Porz - 2013 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 38 (2):160-172.
    This article reviews recent developments within a number of academic disciplines pointing toward an increasing importance of imagination for understanding morality and cognition. Using elements from hermeneutics and metaphor theory, it works toward a framework for a more context-sensitive understanding of human agency, especially focusing on moral deliberation and change. The analytic framework is used to analyze the story of a patient making tough decisions in the context of prenatal diagnosis. We show how a relatively stable outlook on the world, (...)
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  20.  26
    Ethical Review as a Tool for Enhancing Postgraduate Supervision and Research Outcomes in the Creative Arts.Angela Romano - 2016 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 48 (13).
    This article outlines the potential for Research Higher Degree supervisors at universities and similar institutions to use ethical review as a constructive, dynamic tool in guiding RHD students in the timely completion of effective, innovative research projects. Ethical review involves a bureaucratized process for checking that researchers apply risk management strategies when dealing with human participants. Ethical review can also be a powerful instrument for RHD supervisors in the creative arts if they use it to lead students through processes of (...)
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  21. The Art of Moral Imagination: Ethics in the Practice of Architecture. [REVIEW]Jane Collier - 2006 - Journal of Business Ethics 66 (2/3):307 - 317.
    This paper addresses questions of ethics in the professional practice of architecture. It begins by discussing possible relationships between ethics and aesthetics. It then theorises ethics within concepts of 'practice', and argues for the importance of the context in architecture where narrative can be used to learn and to integrate past and present experience. Narrative reflection also takes in the future, and in the case of architecture there is a positive but not yet well accepted move (particularly within the 'academy') (...)
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  22.  22
    Exemplars Embodied: Can Acting Form Moral Character?Ann Phelps & Dylan Brown - 2023 - Educational Theory 73 (5):728-748.
    Theatre practitioners use empathy formation techniques within their acting methodology to develop particular characters for the stage. Here, Ann Phelps and Dylan Brown argue that, when Constantin Stanislavski's seminal dramatic method is placed in conversation with exemplarist moral theory, acting can become a tool for moral formation. To illustrate this claim, they describe their work with the Program for Leadership and Character at Wake Forest University, where a neo-Aristotelian virtue ethics framework is embodied and expanded using this dramatic (...)
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  23.  16
    Der demonstrierte Wahnsinn – Die Klinik als Bühne.Rainer Herrn & Alexander Friedland - 2014 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 37 (4):309-331.
    Performing Madness: The Clinic as Stage. In the second half of the nineteenth century, clinical demonstrations became the dominant teaching method in psychiatry, playing a key role in medical‐professional disputes, as well. This paper traces this widely used though historiographically neglected practice of knowledge implementation and mediation, as demonstrated in the psychiatric clinic of the Berlin Charité (Psychiatrische und Nervenklinik der Berliner Charité) from 1881 to 1927. Documentation of this practice, found within individual medical records, forms the basis of this (...)
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  24. Motion and Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet.Daryl W. Palmer - 2006 - Philosophy and Literature 30 (2):540-554.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Motion and Mercutio in Romeo and JulietDaryl W. PalmerThere is nothing permanent that is not true, what can be true that is uncertaine? How can that be certaine, that stands upon uncertain grounds? 1It is by now a commonplace in modern scholarship that drama, particularly Tudor drama, poses questions, rehearses familiar debates, and even speculates about mere possibilities. 2 In 1954, Madeleine Doran spelled out some of the ways (...)
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  25.  14
    Does Philosophy Need Literature?Hugh Mercer Curtler - 1978 - Philosophy and Literature 2 (1):110-116.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Response and Rejoinder DOES PHILOSOPHY NEED LITERATURE? a critical response by Hugh Mercer Curtler In the second issue of this journal,1 Jesse Kalin argues most provocatively that "philosophy needs literature" because the latter is capable of "rehearsing and exhibiting," as philosophy is not, "the moral construction of one's own life, namely that part of it in which concern and value" are involved (p. 182). Two of John Barth's novels— (...)
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  26.  12
    Motion and mercutio in.Daryl W. Palmer - 2006 - Philosophy and Literature 30 (2):540-554.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Motion and Mercutio in Romeo and JulietDaryl W. PalmerThere is nothing permanent that is not true, what can be true that is uncertaine? How can that be certaine, that stands upon uncertain grounds? 1It is by now a commonplace in modern scholarship that drama, particularly Tudor drama, poses questions, rehearses familiar debates, and even speculates about mere possibilities. 2 In 1954, Madeleine Doran spelled out some of the ways (...)
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  27. Euripides' Hippolytus.Sean Gurd - 2012 - Continent 2 (3):202-207.
    The following is excerpted from Sean Gurd’s translation of Euripides’ Hippolytus published with Uitgeverij this year. Though he was judged “most tragic” in the generation after his death, though more copies and fragments of his plays have survived than of any other tragedian, and though his Orestes became the most widely performed tragedy in Greco-Roman Antiquity, during his lifetime his success was only moderate, and to him his career may have felt more like a failure. He was regularly selected to (...)
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  28.  50
    Replies to criticisms.James R. Hamilton - 2009 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 43 (3):pp. 80-106.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Replies to CriticismsJames R. HamiltonI am grateful to Noël Carroll, David Davies, Sherri Irvin, Aaron Meskin, and Paul Thom for stimulating discussions of The Art of Theater over the past year, culminating in these carefully crafted critical comments on various aspects of the book.1 I especially appreciate the efforts of Sherri Irvin, who edited this special issue and without whose encouragement, enthusiasm, and careful editing this would not have (...)
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  29.  30
    What Looking Backward Doesn't See: Utopian Discourse and the Mass Media.Adam Seth Lowenstein - 2011 - Utopian Studies 22 (1):143-166.
    ABSTRACT Edward Bellamy's influential utopian novel Looking Backward dramatizes the epistemological impact of an increasingly media-saturated urban environment on turn-of-the-century American culture and identity. Bellamy's fanciful adaptation of the telephone receives particularly careful analysis in this essay. Deprived of its transmitting function, this denatured instrument both disrupts Bellamy's utopian project and, more subtly, registers the effect of mass media technologies on the construction and coherence of subjectivity. Lowenstein ultimately argues that Bellamy's novel rehearses the displacement of an epistemology rooted in (...)
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  30.  25
    Theaters of Justice: Arendt in Jerusalem, the Eichmann Trial, and the Redefinition of Legal Meaning in the Wake of the Holocaust.Shoshana Felman - 2000 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 1 (2).
    This paper explores the Eichmann trial in its dimension as a living, powerful event, whose impact is defined and measured by the fact that it is "not the same for all." I examine this legal event from two perspectives: Hannah Arendt's and my own. I pledge my reading against Arendt's, in espousing the State's vision of the trial, but in interpreting the legal meaning of this vision us one that exceeds its own deliberateness and distinct from the State's ideology. I (...)
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  31.  25
    Rhetorical Investigations: Studies in Ordinary Language Criticism (review).Jeffrey Walker - 2006 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 39 (2):178-180.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Rhetorical Investigations: Studies in Ordinary Language CriticismJeffrey WalkerRhetorical Investigations: Studies in Ordinary Language Criticism. Walter Jost. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2004. Pp. xiii + 346. $55.00, hardcover.As the sixth-century BCE poet Theognis once wrote, "Hearken to me, child, and discipline your wits; I'll tell / a tale not unpersuasive nor uncharming to your heart; / but set your mind to gather what I say; there's no necessity (...)
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  32.  48
    Tristram Shandy, David Hume, and Epistemological Fiction.Christina Lupton - 2003 - Philosophy and Literature 27 (1):98-115.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Literature 27.1 (2003) 98-115 [Access article in PDF] Tristram Shandy, David Hume and Epistemological Fiction Christina Lupton I LAURENCE STERNE's Tristram Shandy, the nine-volume novel which dominated London's literary marketplace during the years of its publication between 1759 and 1767, has served over the course of its reception as a case in point for reading literature and philosophy side by side. Yet even in this lengthy and (...)
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  33.  3
    The influence of the first productions of S. S. Prokofiev's opera "War and Peace" on the composition. Birth of new versions of the work. (To the history of the production of "War and Peace" on the stage of the Maly Opera House, 1946-1947). [REVIEW]Nadezhda Sergeevna Ivanova - forthcoming - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal).
    The subject of the study is the peculiarities of the formation of the canonical two-evening edition of S. S. Prokofiev's opera "War and Peace" and the influence on this process of the authors of the first production of the composition at the Maly Opera House in 1946 - the musical and stage version of conductor S. A. Samosud, director B. A. Pokrovsky and artist V. V. Dmitriev. The main purpose of the work is to identify the key aspects of the (...)
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  34.  31
    Rehearsal in animal conditioning.Allan R. Wagner, Jerry W. Rudy & Jesse W. Whitlow - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 97 (3):407.
  35.  12
    Controlled rehearsal and recall order in serial list retention.Herman Buschke & James V. Hinrichs - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 78 (3p1):502.
  36.  16
    Rehearsal in serial recall: An unworkable solution to the nonexistent problem of decay.Stephan Lewandowsky & Klaus Oberauer - 2015 - Psychological Review 122 (4):674-699.
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  37.  16
    Rehearsal and storage of visual information.William Shaffer & Richard M. Shiffrin - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 92 (2):292.
  38.  4
    The Rehearsal Transpros'd and the Rehearsal Transpros'd the Second Part.Andrew Marvell - 1971 - Oxford University Press UK.
    A scholarly edition of Rehearsal Transpros'd by Donal Ian Brice Smith. The edition presents an authoritative text, together with an introduction, commentary notes, and scholarly apparatus.
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  39.  35
    Overt rehearsal and long-term retention.Gary F. Meunier, Jane Kestner, Jo A. Meunier & Douglas Ritz - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 102 (5):913.
  40. Rehearsal for a different reading+ response to article by Ludwig, kh on Gunther, gotthard theory of non-aristotelian logic-diagram of a reconstruction of Gunther theory of negative languages.J. Ditterich & R. Kaehr - 1979 - Philosophisches Jahrbuch 86 (2):385-408.
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  41.  10
    Imagery Rehearsal Based Art Therapy: Treatment of Post-traumatic Nightmares in Art Therapy.Suzanne Haeyen & Merel Staal - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Imagery Rehearsal Therapy is effective for trauma-related nightmares and is also a challenge to patients in finding access to their traumatic memories, because these are saved in non-verbal, visual, or audiovisual language. Art therapy is an experiential treatment that addresses images rather than words. This study investigates the possibility of an IRT-AT combination. Systematic literature review and field research was conducted, and the integration of theoretical and practice-based knowledge resulted in a framework for Imagery Rehearsal-based Art Therapy. The (...)
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  42.  14
    Pronounceability, rehearsal time, and the primacy effect of free recall.Gary F. Meunier, Robert F. Stanners & Jo A. Meunier - 1971 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 88 (1):123.
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  43.  17
    Rehearsal of individual items in short-term memory.Gary F. Meunier, Douglas Ritz & Jo A. Meunier - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 95 (2):465.
  44.  28
    Rehearsing for confrontation.RandallK Stutman & SaraE Newell - 1990 - Argumentation 4 (2):185-198.
    Social confrontation is a particular kind of communication episode which may be initiated when one actor signals another actor that his or her behavior has violated (or is violating) a rule or expectation for appropriate conduct within the relationship or situation (Newell & Stutman, 1988). This paper explores the decision, structure and process of rehearsing for confrontation. Intensive interviews with 75 actors followed by a questionnaire administered to 99 others revealed that confronters maintain two strands of confrontative goals: strategic and (...)
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  45.  6
    Rehearsing Justice: Theatre, Sexuality and the Sacred.Victoria Rue - 2017 - Feminist Theology 25 (2):170-181.
    The theatre actor’s process in a rehearsal hall is reality and metaphor. It can be a rehearsal for justice, where we can live freely. In this laboratory the actor becomes all of us. Like the actor, we inhabit our bodies and our sexualities, sometimes as spiritual practice, or as sacred and creative, even as incarnations. In particular, women’s bodies remember what it is like to be no-body and what it is like to be a some-body. The texts of (...)
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  46.  38
    Rehearsal and Hamilton’s “Ingredients Model” of Theatrical Performance.David Davies - 2009 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 43 (3):pp. 23-36.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Rehearsal and Hamilton’s “Ingredients Model” of Theatrical PerformanceDavid Davies (bio)IArtistic performances can be thought of as “doings”—things that are done—that share the following features of performances in general: they involve actions aimed at achieving some result; they are open, at least in principle, to public scrutiny and assessment; and they are usually presented to a relevantly informed public with the intention that they be appreciated and assessed, and (...)
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  47.  12
    Dramatization and argumentation in African oral societies.Mawusse Kpakpo Akue Adotevi - 2020 - Revista de Humanidades de Valparaíso 16 (16):277-290.
    African traditional societies are oral societies. Orality, in these societies, is the effect as much as the cause of the particular mode of social being of the African man. An African man is socially configured by orality. It is therefore a cultural formatting whose main issue is preservation and transmission, from age to age, of traditions, social norms and practices that determine the relationship of man of orality with the world. Moreover, according to Diagne, the process by which this cultural (...)
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  48.  17
    Rehearsal and organization in intentional forgetting.Amos Spector, Kenneth R. Laughery & David G. Finkelman - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 98 (1):169.
  49.  13
    Narrative Rehearsal, Expression, and Goethe's ''Wandrers Nachtlied II''.Richard Eldridge - 2011 - In Noel Carroll & John Gibson (eds.), Narrative, Emotion, and Insight. Penn State University. pp. 109.
  50. Brief Rehearsal for a New Psychology.Joseph Margolis - 1985 - Behavior and Philosophy 13 (2):197.
     
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