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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Female representation in contemporary feminist performance : Most Women do not Creep by Daylight

McCudden, Catherine Marie January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
2

'Non-normative' forms of female embodiment in Northern Irish women's dramatic writing and theatre practice

Mooney, Anne Marie January 2016 (has links)
This study explores the nature of female embodiment within Northern Irish women's dramatic writing and theatre practice. I suggest that the prevalence of 'non-normative' forms of female embodiment within this repertory; by virtue of illness, aging, disability and sexual violation, both speaks too and challenges the traditional disembodiment that characterises female presence on the Northern Irish stage, and, woman's attendant reconfiguration as image or symbol. By foregrounding the female body, I argue that women playwrights and performers re-negotiate Northern Irish drama's preoccupation with nationalist, masculinist, and colonial explorations of identity, and, the cultural privilege afforded the 'literary' over an awareness of physicality, performativity and female subjectivity. My central thesis, therefore, is that by emphasizing the materiality of the female body, through the axis of embodied differentiation, women playwrights and theatre practitioners challenge the web of social discourses and cultural codas that repeatedly define 'woman' in relation to her body.
3

The explicit performing female body and the knowing smile

Wilson, Jacki January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
4

The portrayal of the historical Muslim female on screen

Shah, Sabina January 2017 (has links)
Representations of the Muslim female are value-laden synonymous with the act of veiling. Veiling has fuelled political, social and academic debates and this study contributes to the ongoing conversation alongside identity formation by examining the image of the Muslim female on-screen with due attention given to animation. The image of the Muslim female is drawn in all manner of directions from that of the belly-dancing beauty to the 'bundle in black', the latter often associated with terrorism, particularly post-9/11 and the consequent 'War on Terror'. There is another direction that proffers an idealised image of the good daughter and dutiful wife against that of the fallen woman. Such constructs I argue tend to rid the Muslim female of her agency. This thesis examines how and why various representations of the Muslim female have emerged and changed, whilst some aspects have remained stagnant over time, thus positioning on-screen representations within their historical context. This project goes beyond traditional academic methods of critical analysis in reading film. The hybridised role of the researcher-animator enables the study to offer a critique from that of the spectator, but with the added vantage point of the practitioner with a set focus on the making of meaning. The interdisciplinary approach incorporates film theory, specifically concerned with representations of race and gender. The work of Muslim women scholar-activists informs and inspires the practice in reclaiming the status of the Muslim woman. Their approach lies within three trajectories being gender-sensitive interpretations of the Qur'an, a recovery of Muslim women's history and a critique on representation. Their approaches fall in line with the aim of this project to reclaim the historical Muslim figure on screen, whereas animation provides an attractive yet versatile mode of production to carry out such a task. Key questions guiding this study are: why are current and existing portrayals of the historical Muslim female problematic? Why do these portrayals need to be addressed? Why does an alternative approach to the portrayal of the historical Muslim female need to be devised and put into practice? Finding the answers to these questions lie in the undertaking of the practice. The practice consists of the first two episodes of a five-part series titled 'Sultan Razia', and as the title suggests the animation is based upon a legendary historical Muslim female figure, who ruled the Sultanate of Delhi between 634-638 Hejira/1236-1240CE. This project is an example of how theory works in practice and vice-versa to determine an audio-visual practice that re-inserts the Muslim female into a history that breaks away from established cliches.

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