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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

An inquiry approach to teaching about African studies for the middle school materials, ideas, and an annotated bibliography /

Boseker, Barbara Jean, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis--Wisconsin. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 226-415).
2

Indo-Nigerian economic relations: 1960-85

Singh, Deep Malvinder 04 1900 (has links)
Economic relations
3

Nationalist movement in Zambia

Virmani, K K January 1987 (has links)
Nationalist movement
4

Federalism of South Africa and India; A comparative study

Kumar, Suresh 01 1900 (has links)
Federalism of South Africa and India
5

Roman Africain Francophone et Ecriture du Corps Feminin

Hinderaker, Marie Elise 03 May 2018 (has links)
<p> Ma th&egrave;se s&rsquo;appuie sur des recherches existantes sur le f&eacute;minisme dans les litt&eacute;ratures africaines pour retracer le rapport entre les modes de repr&eacute;sentations du corps f&eacute;minin et ses implications aussi bien sociales que politiques. Allant au-del&agrave; d&rsquo;une simple repr&eacute;sentation du corps f&eacute;minin dans la litt&eacute;rature produite en fran&ccedil;ais par des &eacute;crivains africains (hommes et femmes), je soutiens que le corps de la femme est devenu l&rsquo;un des lieux de (r&eacute;sistance au) pouvoir &agrave; la fois pendant la colonisation et apr&egrave;s l&rsquo;ind&eacute;pendance de l&rsquo;Afrique francophone. Dans ma th&egrave;se, j&rsquo;utilise des critiques d&rsquo;Odile Cazenave, Pierre Bourdieu, Gayatri Spivak et Julia Kristeva pour montrer que le corps de la femme en Afrique est litt&eacute;ralement devenu une m&eacute;taphore de la nation enti&egrave;re. En fin de compte, ma th&egrave;se analyse la repr&eacute;sentation du corps f&eacute;minin noir dans son usage, ses fonctions, son espace et ses relations avec les pouvoirs sociaux et politiques. Je discute aussi des conditions mentales et structurales qui ont rendu possible les m&eacute;canismes qui ont facilite la construction d&rsquo;un imaginaire du corps f&eacute;minin noir. En m&rsquo;appuyant sur les p&eacute;r&eacute;grinations de la femme africaine plus connue sous le nom de Venus Hottentot, je soutiens en outre que les personnages f&eacute;minins noirs sont en perp&eacute;tuel combat pour r&eacute;clamer leur corps,ses usages, comme la manifestation ultime de leur droit d&rsquo;exister.</p><p>
6

Mourning and melancholy: a comparative study on Christopher Okigbo and Dambudzo Marechera

Akcay, Ahmet Sait 22 December 2020 (has links)
This study explores the modernist subjectivity in Africa by revisiting two major poets, Christopher Okigbo and Dambudzo Marechera. It argues that the modernist self is created in the form of melancholy and mourning. The main question is to see how the African modernist subjectivity is constructed through poetry. As subjects of colonialism, both Okigbo and Marechera sought to establish new links combining them with the mainstream Euromodernist movement along with their own spiritual roots. In the sense of the construction of a modernist self, the main predicament they have to challenge is the Western knowledge system which infiltrated into mindsets through colonial dominion. Thus, Okigbo and Marechera enact a certain type of positionality strategy to claim their own poetic utterance. By invoking natural and spiritual images the poets demonstrate their affiliation to their roots. The process of mourning, here, becomes a passage through which the poets claim their strong allegiances to their roots. The sense of absence leads the poets to mourn their remote past or culture. The poets' relation with the past determines the dynamics of subjectivity. The idea of the past is so tempting and tantalising in many ways.
7

Hungry for the other: representation of HIV/AIDS in the South African media

Wallis, R Ewan January 2008 (has links)
Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 61-69).
8

Archaeology education in South Africa : developing curriculum programmes in three Cape Town schools

Sealy, Emma Georgina January 2002 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references. / The history of educational archaeology in South Africa and the intersection of the discipline and the South African school curriculum informed the choice of the research question for this project. This question is "What happens when an archaeologist develops educational programmes and curriculum materials for schools in order that the teachers' and learners have access to the archaeological knowledge and archaeological research skills?" The following assumptions were made at the beginning of the project and it was investigated whether they were valid or not, during the research process: 1. That the curriculum materials produced for an archaeological education programme should be able to be used by teachers without the intervention of an archaeologist. 2. That the teachers could be relied on to develop assessment exercises, which would satisfactorily test whether the learners had achieved the outcomes of the particular programme. 3. That the teachers would be willing to participate as critical partners throughout the research process by providing evaluations of the educational material and the particular programme in general. Three Cape Town schools were selected to participate in the project, which follows an action research paradigm, with each programme at each school being one action research cycle. Reflections on each programme informed the decisions made in the following one. Educational materials were developed for each school, with the assistance of educational editors and trialled in schools with assistance of teachers. Attention was paid to lesson structure, the pitching of questions and the sources of information used. The materials and the three programmes in general were evaluated with the use of questionnaires, which comprised open-ended and direct questions, formal interviews with teachers, which were recorded and transcribed, observation of classes and detailed note taking. The knowledge and skills learners developed as a result of their participation in the programmes was assessed in a variety of ways. Personal Meaning Maps (PMMs) were used by the researcher at Schools B and C in order to develop an understanding of the breadth of the learners' knowledge and opinion on the subjects of slavery and history. The teachers designed assessment exercises in the form of creative writing essays, a comprehension test and an assessment essay. It was found that the teachers at the three schools needed guidance in order to use the curriculum materials in their classrooms for the main aim of this research project to be achieved. The teachers understood the archaeological knowledge but not the archaeological research methods that were used to produce it, because of this it was also found that the teachers could not be relied on to produce satisfactory methods of assessment. In the process of undertaking research in the three schools in question, the teachers were willing to participate as critical partners if they felt that they were well informed enough about the discipline of archaeology.
9

Decolonial Daydreams │Taba Aiboli An exploration of the construction of female power Amongst the Lozi people

Matakala, Chaze 12 February 2021 (has links)
This thesis offers an exploration of the construction of female power amongst the Lozi people of the western province of Zambia, also known as Barotseland. Colonial empirical texts, contemporary literature on Lozi social history, heritage and public culture gloss over the matriarchal roots of Lozi society, leading to the collective, individual and intellectual imperative of this study. Insights necessary for engagement point to the dynamic role of gender in the origin, enactment and preservation of the Lozi royal kinship structure. Building on existing work on the origins of the Lozi royal kinship and the shifts of power through the (post)colonial political periods, the main objective of this research project is to conduct qualitative research into the dynamic role of gender in Lozi society. Data was based on a review of literature on the Lozi people and semi-structured interviews with nine Key Informants in Barotseland who bear embodied knowledge on the ideology of the Lozi royal kinship structure and the sociocultural systems apparent in Lozi society. A qualitative thematic network data analysis demonstrated political motherhood as a mechanism to act as a balancing check on the patrilineal system. The cross-cutting theme of political motherhood across generations and gender is manifested in the roles of Natamoyo and Mukwae Ngula, who are the respective male and female Ministers of Justice. In addition to these roles which emerge from an operative ethic of communalism are the council of women known as Anatambumu. The findings of this research indicate that there are cohesive interacting sociocultural systems that are focused on the mother figure (matrifocal) and also endorsing descent through the male line (patrilineal). Moreover, analysis of the responses shows that there is a strong correlation between the physical geography of Barotseland and the divine ancestresses, Mbuyu and her mother Mwambwa. On this basis it is recommend that the effects of the integration of Barotseland into the postcolonial state of Zambia be studied further, especially as it pertains to political motherhood, marriage and systems of descent amongst the Lozi.
10

Constructing social reality in conversation : a generic and transitivity analysis of life history texts

Rowe, Joy January 2003 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 75-78. / Language is a primary medium through which members of society construct a social reality in which they may meaningfully conduct day-to-day lives. The choices speakers make in language encode experiences and notions of the world in particular ways but may be constrained by context. In this study, I analyze the life history interviews of two gay black HIV-positive South African men to explore how speakers use contextually-available linguistic resources to negotiate meaning. Linguistic resources of speech genre, story type, and transitivity offer structural options to speakers but also introduce constraints. Using Fairclough's Foucauldian conception of 'orders of discourse', I establish that life history interviews are a unique hybrid of genre types that draw on conventions of casual conversation and interview genres, providing speakers with new resources for articulating their social world. Generic analysis, incorporating insights from Fairclough (1995), Eggins and Slade (1997), and systemic functionalism, is used to examine the story types that speakers may draw upon to structure their experiences. Given structural and functional constraints within story types, I look at the transitivity choices that speakers make to represent their social realities. Transitivity analysis, also based on systemic functionalism, is used to investigate choices of process (verbs) and their associated participants (nouns) that encode speakers' experiential meanings. The purpose of this study is threefold: to establish that the genre of life history interviews offers speakers opportunities to negotiate power relations and influence genre conventions; to demonstrate that generic analysis may be usefully applied to oral texts to understand speakers' deeper systems of life order; and to describe through generic and transitivity analysis the individual social realities of two gay HIV -positive men. Results include a structural analysis of life history interviews, a structural argument for including Observation and Reminiscence texts within the 'story' typology, and an in-depth analysis of two unrepresented voices of South Africa's HIV/AIDS epidemic.

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