6 research outputs found

    Culture and the creative imagination: The genesis of Gustav Mahler\u27s Third Symphony. (Volumes I and II)

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    For Gustav Mahler (1860-1911) composing endowed the creative mind with privileged insight into the profound questions of human existence. Thus, in pursuing his artistic vision, Mahler felt compelled to confront the philosophical issues that captured the imagination of his day. The dissertation examines Mahler\u27s Third Symphony from this fundamental perspective by relating the composer\u27s ideas about the work to the thinking and artistic endeavors of his contemporaries. The aim is not to attribute Mahler\u27s ideas to any particular source, but to demonstrate how programmatic tendencies and musical gestures in the work reflect concerns common to a generation of thinkers at the turn of the century. The first section of the dissertation provides a background on Mahler as intellectual: his readings of thinkers he greatly admired (Schopenhauer, Wagner, Nietzsche) and his views on some of the debates of his day (the role of art, the philosophy of science, the nature of religion). Part Two relates the musical procedures of the Third Symphony to four central topics drawn from the work\u27s program: (1) Pan, Dionysus, and the utilization of Greek mythology in artistic expression; (2) the ominous side of nature; (3) the image of the night; and (4) the sensual and spiritual conceptions of love. These themes are also examined in other compositions by Mahler and compared with some of the literature, poetry, and visual arts of Mahler\u27s time (works by Hauptmann, Dehmel, Klinger, and the Vienna Secession). The third and last part of the dissertation provides a full chronology and discussion of the various extant manuscripts related to the Third (including a newly discovered source). In so connecting Mahler\u27s symphony to the background of beliefs and ideas in which it was fostered, I present the creation and conception of music as a phenomenon inextricably bound to its cultural setting. Such a perspective enriches our understanding of the many dimensions of Mahler\u27s work and suggests a musical-historical method that enables the past to regain a voice in the critical thinking of today

    Reporting interhospital neonatal intensive care transport: international five-step Delphi-based template

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    Objective To develop a general and internationally applicable template of data variables for reporting interhospital neonatal intensive care transports.Design A five-step Delphi method.Setting A group of experts was guided through a formal consensus process using email.Subjects 12 experts in neonatal intensive care transports from Canada, Denmark, Norway, the UK and the USA. Four women and eight men. The experts were neonatologists, anaesthesiologists, intensive care nurse, anaesthetic nurse, medical leaders, researchers and a parent representative.Main outcome measures 37 data variables were included in the final template.Results Consensus was achieved on a template of 37 data variables with definitions. 30 variables to be registered for each transport and 7 for annual registration of the system of the transport service. 11 data variables under the category structure, 20 under process and 6 under outcome.Conclusions We developed a template with a set of data variables to be registered for neonatal intensive care transports. To register the same data will enable larger datasets and comparing services
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