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Dream Sharing Forum

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Motif

A Wisdom Archive on Motif

Motif

A selection of articles related to Motif

We recommend this article: Motif - 1, and also this: Motif - 2.
motif, Motif

ARTICLES RELATED TO Motif

Motif: Encyclopedia II - Revolutionary Girl Utena - Characters

Names are written in Western order, with the surname after the given name. Revolutionary Girl Utena - Main characters. (天上ウテナ Tenjō Utena) (romanized as Tenjou in the English manga and Tenjo in the English anime) Enoki Films' name: Ursula In all versions of the story Utena is a tomboyish, slightly naïve character who lives to emulate the idealized prince figure from her childhood. She is forthright, honest, and ...

See also:

Revolutionary Girl Utena, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Composition, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Plot summary, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Student Council Saga, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Characters, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Main characters, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Student Council members, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Black Rose Duellists, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Minor characters, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Themes, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Visual motifs, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Inspirations, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Music

Read more here: » Revolutionary Girl Utena: Encyclopedia II - Revolutionary Girl Utena - Characters

Motif: Encyclopedia II - Revolutionary Girl Utena - Themes

A visual influence by Gnosticism can be found in both the anime and movie, with Ohtori Academy as the illusory world and Akio or (more likely) Anthy as the Demiurge. By its plays on such archetypal figures as the Prince, the Princess, or the Witch, and by the symbolist role carried out by such plot elements as coffins, thorns, or castles, Utena can be seen as the quintessence of the Postmodernist fairy tale. It should be noted that the series addresses sexual themes quite often, including yuri (lesbi ...

See also:

Revolutionary Girl Utena, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Composition, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Plot summary, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Student Council Saga, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Characters, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Main characters, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Student Council members, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Black Rose Duellists, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Minor characters, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Themes, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Visual motifs, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Inspirations, Revolutionary Girl Utena - Music

Read more here: » Revolutionary Girl Utena: Encyclopedia II - Revolutionary Girl Utena - Themes

Motif: Encyclopedia II - Iranian art - The Persian Fine Arts

Iranian art - The Persian Rug. See main article: Persian Rug The art of carpet weaving in Iran has its roots in the culture and customs of its people and their instinctive feelings. Weavers mix elegant patterns with a myriad of colors. The Iranian carpet is not unsimilar to the Persian garden: full of florae, birds, and beasts. The colors are usually made from wild flowers, and are rich in colors such as burgundy, navy blue, and accents of ivory. The proto-fabric is often washed in tea to sof ...

See also:

Iranian art, Iranian art - The Persian Fine Arts, Iranian art - The Persian Rug, Iranian art - Painting and miniature, Iranian art - Pottery and ceramics, Iranian art - Music, Iranian art - Literature, Iranian art - Architecture, Iranian art - Calligraphy, Iranian art - Tilework, Iranian art - Cinema, Iranian art - Motifs, Iranian art - Metalworks Qalam-zani, Iranian art - Khatam-kari, Iranian art - Relief and sculpture

Read more here: » Iranian art: Encyclopedia II - Iranian art - The Persian Fine Arts

Motif: Encyclopedia II - View Askewniverse - Media

View Askewniverse - Films. Clerks. Mallrats Chasing Amy Dogma Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back Clerks 2 The Flying Car, a short film produced for The Tonight Show with Jay Leno View Askewniverse - Comics. Clerks., a three-part comic book series published in the late '90s, continuing the adventures of the film's main characters. Chasin ...

See also:

View Askewniverse, View Askewniverse - Media, View Askewniverse - Films, View Askewniverse - Comics, View Askewniverse - Television, View Askewniverse - Characters, View Askewniverse - Recurring Actors, View Askewniverse - Motifs, View Askewniverse - 37, View Askewniverse - Jay and Silent Bob, View Askewniverse - The late Julie Dwyer, View Askewniverse - The Hicks cousins, View Askewniverse - Hockey, View Askewniverse - Star Wars, View Askewniverse - Jaws, View Askewniverse - The Degrassi series

Read more here: » View Askewniverse: Encyclopedia II - View Askewniverse - Media

Motif: Encyclopedia II - View Askewniverse - Characters

View Askewniverse - Recurring Actors. Smith often casts the same actors for multiple characters in the universe, sometimes even in the same film. This is most notable in Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, in which several actors play multiple characters from earlier View Askewniverse films. Joey Lauren Adams (Gwen Stacy in Mallrats; Alyssa Jones in Chasing Amy and Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back) Ben Affleck (Shannon Hamilton in Mallrats; Holden M ...

See also:

View Askewniverse, View Askewniverse - Media, View Askewniverse - Films, View Askewniverse - Comics, View Askewniverse - Television, View Askewniverse - Characters, View Askewniverse - Recurring Actors, View Askewniverse - Motifs, View Askewniverse - 37, View Askewniverse - Jay and Silent Bob, View Askewniverse - The late Julie Dwyer, View Askewniverse - The Hicks cousins, View Askewniverse - Hockey, View Askewniverse - Star Wars, View Askewniverse - Jaws, View Askewniverse - The Degrassi series

Read more here: » View Askewniverse: Encyclopedia II - View Askewniverse - Characters

Motif: Encyclopedia II - Lost TV series - Story elements

There are several recurring story elements on Lost, which drive central plot points and the development of the survivors as they try to live on the island after the crash. Lost TV series - Themes. Most of the major characters have dysfunctional parents who are or were either absent, reluctant, or destructive. The troubling parental relationships of Locke, Jack, Sawyer, Walt, and Kate have been the most well explored, although almost every character on the show has had some problems with thei ...

See also:

Lost TV series, Lost TV series - Season synopses, Lost TV series - Season one: 2004-2005, Lost TV series - Season two: 2005-2006, Lost TV series - Cast and characters, Lost TV series - Story elements, Lost TV series - Themes, Lost TV series - Symbols and motifs, Lost TV series - Fan speculation, Lost TV series - Awards, Lost TV series - Wins, Lost TV series - Nominations

Read more here: » Lost TV series: Encyclopedia II - Lost TV series - Story elements

Motif: Encyclopedia II - Lost TV series - Awards

Note: Awards won are not listed under nominations. Lost TV series - Wins. Emmys: Outstanding Television Series - Drama (2005) Outstanding Director of a Television Series - Drama, Pilot Part 1 & 2 J.J. Abrams (2005) Outstanding Casting for a Drama Series - April Webster, Mandy Sherman, Alyssa Weisberg, Veronica Collins (2005) Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Drama Series - Mary Jo Markey (2005) Outstanding Music Composition for a Ser ...

See also:

Lost TV series, Lost TV series - Season synopses, Lost TV series - Season one: 2004-2005, Lost TV series - Season two: 2005-2006, Lost TV series - Cast and characters, Lost TV series - Story elements, Lost TV series - Themes, Lost TV series - Symbols and motifs, Lost TV series - Fan speculation, Lost TV series - Awards, Lost TV series - Wins, Lost TV series - Nominations

Read more here: » Lost TV series: Encyclopedia II - Lost TV series - Awards

Motif: Encyclopedia II - Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Media

The following performance of the Fifth Symphony is by the Fulda Symphonic Orchestra (Fuldaer Symphonisches Orchester) under the direction of Simon Schindler. The recording is from a concert of March 10, 2000, performed in the Orangerie in Fulda, Germany. ...

See also:

Symphony No. 5 Beethoven, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - History, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Composition, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Premiere, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Reception and influence, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The fate motif, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Form, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Key, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - First movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Second movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Third movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Fourth movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Textual questions, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The third movement repeat, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Reassigning bassoon notes to the horns, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Media, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The symphony in popular culture, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Notes and references, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Editions

Read more here: » Symphony No. 5 Beethoven: Encyclopedia II - Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Media

Motif: Encyclopedia II - Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - History

Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Composition. The first sketches for the Fifth Symphony date to back to 1800 and 1801.[2] Following the completion in 1804 of his 3rd Symphony (the Eroica), Beethoven began to write fragmentary sketches on the "C-minor symphony", which is today known as 'the Fifth'.[3] Work on it continued off and on during four years of tumultuous social and political strife in Vienna. During this time, he a ...

See also:

Symphony No. 5 Beethoven, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - History, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Composition, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Premiere, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Reception and influence, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The fate motif, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Form, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Key, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - First movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Second movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Third movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Fourth movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Textual questions, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The third movement repeat, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Reassigning bassoon notes to the horns, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Media, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The symphony in popular culture, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Notes and references, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Editions

Read more here: » Symphony No. 5 Beethoven: Encyclopedia II - Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - History

Motif: Encyclopedia II - Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Form

The work is in four movements: I. Allegro con brio II. Andante con moto III. Scherzo. Allegro IV. Allegro The first three movements are scored for two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, timpani, and the usual string section of first and second violins, violas, cellos, and double basses. In the fourth movement, a piccolo, a contrabassoon and three trombones (alto, tenor and bass) are added.[18] A performance of the work lasts about 35 minutes. ...

See also:

Symphony No. 5 Beethoven, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - History, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Composition, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Premiere, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Reception and influence, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The fate motif, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Form, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Key, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - First movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Second movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Third movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Fourth movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Textual questions, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The third movement repeat, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Reassigning bassoon notes to the horns, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Media, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The symphony in popular culture, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Notes and references, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Editions

Read more here: » Symphony No. 5 Beethoven: Encyclopedia II - Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Form

Motif: Encyclopedia II - Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Textual questions

Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The third movement repeat. In the autograph score (that is, the original version from Beethoven's hand), the third (scherzo) movement contains a repeat mark: when the main scherzo and the trio section have been played through, the performers are directed to return to the very beginning and play the two sections again. Then comes a third rendering of the scherzo, this time notated differently for pizzicato strings and transitioning directly to the finale (see description above). Most mod ...

See also:

Symphony No. 5 Beethoven, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - History, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Composition, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Premiere, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Reception and influence, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The fate motif, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Form, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Key, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - First movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Second movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Third movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Fourth movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Textual questions, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The third movement repeat, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Reassigning bassoon notes to the horns, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Media, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The symphony in popular culture, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Notes and references, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Editions

Read more here: » Symphony No. 5 Beethoven: Encyclopedia II - Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Textual questions

Motif: Encyclopedia II - Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The symphony in popular culture

The Symphony, especially its opening, is familiar to audiences around the world. Not surprisingly given its fame, the Fifth Symphony has appeared frequently in popular culture. The 5th Symphony has often been re-rendered into other genres of music—disco, techno, Rock and roll, and even a heavy metal rendition by Swedish guitarist Yngwie Malmsteen. The rock band Electric Light Orchestra included the opening bars of the symphony as an introduction to their cover of Chuck Berry's "Roll Over Beethoven." During the disco era of the 1970s ...

See also:

Symphony No. 5 Beethoven, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - History, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Composition, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Premiere, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Reception and influence, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The fate motif, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Form, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Key, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - First movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Second movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Third movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Fourth movement, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Textual questions, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The third movement repeat, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Reassigning bassoon notes to the horns, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Media, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The symphony in popular culture, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Notes and references, Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - Editions

Read more here: » Symphony No. 5 Beethoven: Encyclopedia II - Symphony No. 5 Beethoven - The symphony in popular culture

Motif: Encyclopedia II - Banknote - Paper Money Collecting as a Hobby in the U.S.

Banknote collecting is a somewhat small, specialized pastime practiced mostly in America. Although generally not as widespread as coin and stamp collecting, the hobby is growing. Prior to the 1990s currency collecting was a relatively small adjunct to coin collecting, but the practice of currency auctions, combined with larger public awareness of paper money (owing to the redesigning of larger denominations ...

See also:

Banknote, Banknote - History, Banknote - Paper Money Collecting as a Hobby in the U.S.

Read more here: » Banknote: Encyclopedia II - Banknote - Paper Money Collecting as a Hobby in the U.S.

Motif: Pagan Paganism Dictionary II on Motif

Motif:

A common pattern running through stories, folktales or myths.

 

(See also: Motif, Pagan, Paganism, Pagan Dictionary)

 

Motif: Dreams Interpretation Dictionary - Death

Death/Dying

Also See Dream Motifs-Death

 

Death or dying in a dream seldom refers to an actual death. Death refers to changes in one's life, or attitudes toward certain persons, or fears of dying. Here are some possibilities of what death, dying or a dead person may represent in a dream. Death is a motif and may be the central motif of the dream.

 

Basic meaning: The old is dying; make way for new beginnings.

 

(1) The dead person may be you, even though its image within the dream takes on characteristics of other persons or other things. The message may be that your old self needs to be left behind. This may mean you must stop carrying around with you the crippling burden of your past (irrational guilt-feelings or other negative self programming); and, instead, you must open yourself to what the present moment is offering. Alternatively, the "old self" may be old attachments, habits, ambitions, values, goals; in which case the dream is telling you that the only way forward for you lies through giving these up and looking deeper within yourself for better values, etc. (where better means more in tune with your real self).

 

(2) What is being expressed in the dream may be your own anxiety about dying. Death is inevitable, and facing up to that fact may bring great rewards: self-acceptance; new values; a broadening of one's personality, compensating for past omissions or lopsidedness and utilizing hitherto neglected personal resources. This would be especially applicable if you are in the second half of life.

 

(3) If the dead person in the dream is actually a living person - and especially if that person is your partner or parent or sibling - the dream may be expressing unconscious resentment towards that person, or a desire to be independent of that person. Feelings toward someone close are often ambivalent (conflicting): love or respect mixed with fear or hatred or resentment or jealousy.

 

(4) Does the dream contain a dead person you actually knew? If so, the dream may mean you should take notice of what he or she said or did, or of what happened to him or her. The dead person is "coming back", not to haunt you but to advise and help you (the dead person actually represents parts of your unconscious self that is wiser than your waking ego).

 

There's really nothing 'spooky" about meeting dead people in dreams. Such encounters may help you fulfill a long-desired deep relationship, or to put something right. For example, you may learn to forgive the person and as a consequence get peace and healing for yourself.

 

(5) If the gender of the dead person is stressed, the meaning may be that your masculinity/femininity or your anima/animus needs reviving.

 

(6) A dead animal in a dream almost certainly refers to some part of you - an instinctive force, perhaps - and the dream will be telling you either that this part of you (e.g. guilt-feelings or inferiority complex) ought to die, because its effects are wholly negative; or that it is a valuable but repressed part of yourself that you must now bring to life, to rectify an imbalance in your personality.

 

Reference: Eric Ackroyd

 

(Source: Myths - Dreams - Symbols)

 

Related pages: Dream Symbols, Dream Interpretation, Dream Symbol Death, Dream Dictionary Death, Meaning of dreams about Death, Dream Interpretation Death, Dream Analysis Death, Dreaming of Death

 

Death, Dying, Ded, Fears of dying, Fear, Fears, Dream motif, Dead person, Message, Old self, Guilt-feelings, Guilt, Guilty, Negative self programming, Attachments, Habits, Ambitions, Values, Goals, Attachment, Habit, Ambition, Value, Goal, Real self, Anxiety about dying, Great rewards, Self-acceptance, New values, Living person, Partner, Parent, Sibling, Resentment, Independent, Independency, Haunt, Haunting, Advise, Help, Dead people, Relationship, Forgive, Forgiveness, Peace, Healing, Masculinity, Femininity, Anima animus, Anima, Animus, Dead animal, Animal, Animals, Instinctive force, Inferiority complex, Inferiority, Imbalance, Repressed part of yourself, Imbalance in personality

 




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