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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.
91

A poética da esperança: sentidos políticos nas memórias de Nelson Mandela / The poetics of hope: political senses in Nelson Mandela memories

Silva, Cristiane Mare da 18 March 2016 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-04-27T19:31:16Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Cristiane Mare da Silva.pdf: 2889132 bytes, checksum: 94991bb4be740ab4219748ab11e7ffd4 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2016-03-18 / Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico / The present study was developed at the Postgraduate Program in History, of the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo and has as object biographical and autobiographical texts of the South African Nelson Mandela, that allows us to seize moments and statements, guiders of the struggle for equality, the exercise of tolerance and human rights, not only in South Africa, but everywhere where there are conflicts inside a population, especially in the Western Hemisphere. Interests me, particularly, identify strategies and discursive paths built in biographical narratives in the representations of Nelson Mandela, the works presented will be, Mandela Struggle is my life, organized by the The International Defence and Aid Fund of 1989, first published in 1978 in English. Mandela: The Authorized Portrait 2007. Mandela's Way: Lessons on Life, Love, and Courage, of 2010, whose author is Richard Stengel. Mandela: Conversations With Myself, of 2010, Nelson Mandela Foundation. Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom (2012) (autobiography), seeking how Mandela is seized in these pages. Through the reading of authors such as Frantz Fanon, Achille Mbembe, Hampaté Ba, Anibal Quijano, Jeanne Marie Gagnebin and Sabina Loriga, I sought to understand how Madiba, through a rereading of his traditions, invented a policy making which made possible the transition from the Apartheid Regime to democracy in South Africa. The problem that I developed as structuring to the work: what Africa has to teach us in the production of decolonial policy pathways, especially the experience of South African leader Nelson Mandela in his government practice / O estudo que ora apresento desenvolveu-se no Programa de Pós-Graduação em História, da Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo e tem por objeto textos biográficos e autobiográficos do sul africano Nelson Mandela, que nos permitem apreender momentos e enunciados, orientadores da luta pela igualdade, do exercício da tolerância e a defesa dos direitos humanos, não apenas na África do Sul, mas por toda parte onde existam conflitos raciais e coloniais inerentes à enxpansão do Hemisfério Ocidental. Interessa-me, particularmente, identificar as táticas e caminhos discursivos construídos nas narrativas biográficas nas representações de Nelson Mandela. As obras apresentadas são: Mandela A luta é a minha vida, organizado pelo Fundo Internacional de Defesa e Auxílio de 1989, a primeira edição é de 1978 em inglês; Mandela Retrato Autorizado, 2007; Os Caminhos de Mandela Lições de vida, amor e coragem, 2010, cujo autor é Richard Stengel; Mandela: Conversas que tive Comigo, 2010 Fundação Nelson Mandela; Nelson Mandela Longa Caminhada até a Liberdade, 2012 (autobiografia), apreendendo Mandela em suas tradições sul-africanas. Por meio da leitura de autores como Franz Fanon, Achille Mbembe, Hampaté Bá, Anibal Quijano, Jeanne Marie Gagnebin e Sabina Loriga, procuramos compreender como Madiba, por meio de uma releitura de suas tradições, inventou um fazer político que tornou possível a transição do Regime do Apartheid para Democracia na África do Sul. O problema que elaborei como estruturante para o trabalho remete ao que a África tem a nos ensinar na produção de vias políticas decoloniais, em especial através da experiência do líder sul-africano Nelson Mandela em suas práticas governamentais
92

Why Are You “Active”? -Voices of Young Muslim Women Post-9/11

Aslam, Jabeen 16 February 2012 (has links)
Contributing to the literature on the Muslim experience post-9/11, the purpose of this study was to engage with a group that is often talked about, but not with: Muslim youth. Using an integrative anti-racist and anti-colonial approach with an emphasis on a spiritual way of knowing, this study gives voice to young Muslim activists in Toronto who have made the choice to “do something”. The study aims to understand what motivates these young activists, particularly in the context of post-9/11 Islamophobia, with the goal being to challenge stereotypical perceptions of Muslims, while contributing to the body of knowledge that aims to disrupt dominant notions of what “Canadian” identity is. The following analysis helps answer this question, which includes the role of spirituality, the attachment to Canadian identity and the desire to educate. Key challenges and what these youth prescribe for Canada’s future are also discussed.
93

Why Are You “Active”? -Voices of Young Muslim Women Post-9/11

Aslam, Jabeen 16 February 2012 (has links)
Contributing to the literature on the Muslim experience post-9/11, the purpose of this study was to engage with a group that is often talked about, but not with: Muslim youth. Using an integrative anti-racist and anti-colonial approach with an emphasis on a spiritual way of knowing, this study gives voice to young Muslim activists in Toronto who have made the choice to “do something”. The study aims to understand what motivates these young activists, particularly in the context of post-9/11 Islamophobia, with the goal being to challenge stereotypical perceptions of Muslims, while contributing to the body of knowledge that aims to disrupt dominant notions of what “Canadian” identity is. The following analysis helps answer this question, which includes the role of spirituality, the attachment to Canadian identity and the desire to educate. Key challenges and what these youth prescribe for Canada’s future are also discussed.
94

Why are you “Active”? - Voices of Young Muslim Women Post-9/11

Aslam, Jabeen 29 November 2011 (has links)
Contributing to the literature on the Muslim experience post-9/11, the purpose of this study was to engage with a group that is often talked about, but not with: Muslim youth. Using an integrative anti-racist and anti-colonial approach with an emphasis on a spiritual way of knowing, this study gives voice to young Muslim activists in Toronto who have made the choice to “do something”. The study aims to understand what motivates these young activists, particularly in the context of post-9/11 Islamophobia, with the goal being to challenge stereotypical perceptions of Muslims, while contributing to the body of knowledge that aims to disrupt dominant notions of what “Canadian” identity is. The following analysis helps answer this question, which includes the role of spirituality, the attachment to Canadian identity and the desire to educate. Key challenges and what these youth prescribe for Canada’s future are also discussed.
95

Negotiating Race-Related Tensions: How White Educational Leaders Recognize, Confront, and Dialogue about Race and Racism

Samuels, Amy Jo 01 January 2013 (has links)
Despite exposure of educational disparities for students of color, as well as the notion that educational training rarely discusses race and racism, there continues to be a lack of discourse on race, racism, and anti-racism in educational leadership. Subsequently, it is important to challenge deficit thinking and encourage further examination of the deeply-rooted foundation of oppression. The study explored personal narratives of white educational leaders who oppose racial inequity to heighten awareness about conceptualizations of race, racism, and anti-racism. The research involved interviewing educational leaders in three groups: 1) aspiring, 2) currently-practicing, and 3) recently-retired. Eight participants were selected to engage in two semi-structured interviews about their experiences aligned with the following research questions: 1) How do white educational leaders frame the impact of race and racism? and 2) How do white educational leaders describe their perceptions and experiences recognizing, confronting, and dialoguing with others about race and racism? The findings revealed commonalties about the subtle nature of racism, as well as how to confront racism through thoughts and actions. While participants considered dialogue beneficial in their own awareness of race and racism, the lack of venues to dialogue were emphasized. The findings suggest implications for further contextualizing negotiations of race-related tensions and framing the impact of race and racism, particularly in relation to creating purposeful spaces and relationships to encourage such dialogue. Additionally, interpretation of the findings adds insight to further conceptualizing racial identity models and anti-racism.
96

Wounded Subjects: White Settler Nationals in Toronto G20 Resistance Narratives

Neuman, Auden 04 October 2012 (has links)
This project engages theories of settler colonialism, biopower, and the state of exception to analyze the operations of rights-based narratives of citizenship in relation to political dissent in Canada. I argue that a normalized state of exception founds the white supremacist, settler colonial state, bringing Canadian citizenship into being as a (white) racialized, (cis)gendered, and (hetero)sexualized construct. By examining “resistance narratives” about the Toronto G20 that emerged in the post-G20 climate, my work argues that, in treating the policing practices employed during the G20 as exceptional and in (re)producing the exaltation of white heterosexual cis-masculine citizens, these narratives normalize and reinforce the daily operations of the exception, which targets Indigenous, racialized, and other “Others” in Canada. Finally, my work critically engages with the space of the Eastern Detention Centre (EDC) as a temporary camp set up to detain G20 arrestees, and with the narrative of “Torontonamo” that emerged to describe and explain the EDC. Reading the EDC in the context of other spatial organizations of the exception in Canada, I argue that the “Torontonamo” narrative reasserts race thinking in relation to the normalized operations of the exception. In so doing, it (re)produces white citizen-subjects as the proper recipients of national and international human rights, while abandoning racialized populations to the space of the camp. Ultimately, my work writes against the hegemonic view of the Toronto G20 as an exceptional event in Canadian history. I contend that G20 policing practices were only a hyper-visible example of the normalized operations of the exception within settler colonialism. / Thesis (Master, Gender Studies) -- Queen's University, 2012-09-29 21:16:51.694
97

The Double-edged Sword: A Critical Race Africology of Collaborations between Blacks and Whites in Racial Equity Work

Howard, Philip Sean Steven 09 March 2010 (has links)
In recent years, there has been a significant amount of new attention to white dominance and privilege (or whiteness) as the often unmarked inverse of racial oppression. This interest has spawned the academic domain called Critical Whiteness Studies (CWS). While the critical investigation of whiteness is not new, and has been pioneered by Black scholars beginning at least since the early 1900s in the work of W. E. B. Du Bois, what is notable about this new interest in whiteness is its advancement almost exclusively by white scholars. The paucity of literature centering the Black voice in the study of whiteness both suggests the lack of appreciation for the importance of this perspective when researching the phenomenon of racial dominance, and raises questions about the manner in which racial equity work is approached by some Whites who do work that is intended to advance racial equity. This study investigates the context of racial equity collaborations between Blacks and Whites, responding to this knowledge deficit in two ways: a) it centers the Black voice, specifically and intentionally seeking the perspectives of Blacks about racial equity collaborations b) it investigates the nature and effects of the relationships between Blacks and Whites in these collaborative endeavours. This qualitative research study uses in-depth interview data collected from ten Black racial equity workers who collaborate with Whites in doing racial equity work. The data makes evident that the Black participants find these collaborations to be necessary and strategic while at the same time having the potential to undermine their own agency. The study examines this contradiction, discussing several manifestations of it in the lives of these Black racial equity workers. It outlines the importance of Black embodied knowledge to racial equity work and to these collaborations, and outlines an epistemology of unknowing and a politics of humility that these Blacks seek in their white colleagues. The study also outlines the collective and individual strategies used by these Black racial equity workers to navigate and resist the contradictory terrain of their collaborations with Whites in racial equity work.
98

Política cultural : uma análise sobre a cultura política do movimento negro em Porto Alegre

Moraes, Kelly da Silva January 2012 (has links)
A presente dissertação versa sobre as relações entre as dimensões política e cultural na cultura política do movimento negro em Porto Alegre, bem como a contínua mobilização e estratégias travadas pelas entidades do movimento social negro através das suas diferentes formas organizativas. O objetivo deste estudo é analisar como são construídas as políticas culturais do movimento negro em Porto Alegre e examinar as estratégias de ação no interior das organizações. O estudo buscou construir uma análise sob uma ótica pós-colonial que contribua para as reflexões sobre as relações entre política e cultura verificando como os movimentos sociais tem ampliado a essa discussão a partir de suas ações. Para isso se construiu uma análise teórico-metodológica interdisciplinar, apoiada em literaturas que analisam a mobilização produzida pelos movimentos sociais latino-americanos. A coleta de dados combinou observação participante, entrevistas e análises de documentos produzidos pelas organizações investigadas a fim de reconstruir as bases em que se apoiam sua cultura política. Sendo assim, buscou-se descrever de forma analítica como a cultura negra e suas diferentes articulações tem contribuído para a luta antirracista promovida pelo movimento negro no Brasil. / This thesis examines the relationships between the cultural and political dimensions of the black movement political culture in Porto Alegre, as well as the continuous mobilization and strategies performed by black social movement organizations through its various organizational forms. The aim of this study is to analyze how black movement cultural policies are built and to investigate the strategies adopted internally by those organizations. The study has developed an analysis through a postcolonial perspective, contributing to the discussion on the relationship between politics and culture by observing how social movements have expanded such discussion through their actions. For that, a theoretical and methodological analysis supported by interdisciplinary literature shed attention to the movements produced by social movements in Latin-America. Data collection combined participant observation, interviews and analysis of documents produced by the organizations observed in the study to reconstruct the foundations supporting their cultural policies. So, an analytical description of how black culture and its diverse interfaces has contributed to the anti-racist figtht, as fought by black movement in Brazil, is presented.
99

Política cultural : uma análise sobre a cultura política do movimento negro em Porto Alegre

Moraes, Kelly da Silva January 2012 (has links)
A presente dissertação versa sobre as relações entre as dimensões política e cultural na cultura política do movimento negro em Porto Alegre, bem como a contínua mobilização e estratégias travadas pelas entidades do movimento social negro através das suas diferentes formas organizativas. O objetivo deste estudo é analisar como são construídas as políticas culturais do movimento negro em Porto Alegre e examinar as estratégias de ação no interior das organizações. O estudo buscou construir uma análise sob uma ótica pós-colonial que contribua para as reflexões sobre as relações entre política e cultura verificando como os movimentos sociais tem ampliado a essa discussão a partir de suas ações. Para isso se construiu uma análise teórico-metodológica interdisciplinar, apoiada em literaturas que analisam a mobilização produzida pelos movimentos sociais latino-americanos. A coleta de dados combinou observação participante, entrevistas e análises de documentos produzidos pelas organizações investigadas a fim de reconstruir as bases em que se apoiam sua cultura política. Sendo assim, buscou-se descrever de forma analítica como a cultura negra e suas diferentes articulações tem contribuído para a luta antirracista promovida pelo movimento negro no Brasil. / This thesis examines the relationships between the cultural and political dimensions of the black movement political culture in Porto Alegre, as well as the continuous mobilization and strategies performed by black social movement organizations through its various organizational forms. The aim of this study is to analyze how black movement cultural policies are built and to investigate the strategies adopted internally by those organizations. The study has developed an analysis through a postcolonial perspective, contributing to the discussion on the relationship between politics and culture by observing how social movements have expanded such discussion through their actions. For that, a theoretical and methodological analysis supported by interdisciplinary literature shed attention to the movements produced by social movements in Latin-America. Data collection combined participant observation, interviews and analysis of documents produced by the organizations observed in the study to reconstruct the foundations supporting their cultural policies. So, an analytical description of how black culture and its diverse interfaces has contributed to the anti-racist figtht, as fought by black movement in Brazil, is presented.
100

Política cultural : uma análise sobre a cultura política do movimento negro em Porto Alegre

Moraes, Kelly da Silva January 2012 (has links)
A presente dissertação versa sobre as relações entre as dimensões política e cultural na cultura política do movimento negro em Porto Alegre, bem como a contínua mobilização e estratégias travadas pelas entidades do movimento social negro através das suas diferentes formas organizativas. O objetivo deste estudo é analisar como são construídas as políticas culturais do movimento negro em Porto Alegre e examinar as estratégias de ação no interior das organizações. O estudo buscou construir uma análise sob uma ótica pós-colonial que contribua para as reflexões sobre as relações entre política e cultura verificando como os movimentos sociais tem ampliado a essa discussão a partir de suas ações. Para isso se construiu uma análise teórico-metodológica interdisciplinar, apoiada em literaturas que analisam a mobilização produzida pelos movimentos sociais latino-americanos. A coleta de dados combinou observação participante, entrevistas e análises de documentos produzidos pelas organizações investigadas a fim de reconstruir as bases em que se apoiam sua cultura política. Sendo assim, buscou-se descrever de forma analítica como a cultura negra e suas diferentes articulações tem contribuído para a luta antirracista promovida pelo movimento negro no Brasil. / This thesis examines the relationships between the cultural and political dimensions of the black movement political culture in Porto Alegre, as well as the continuous mobilization and strategies performed by black social movement organizations through its various organizational forms. The aim of this study is to analyze how black movement cultural policies are built and to investigate the strategies adopted internally by those organizations. The study has developed an analysis through a postcolonial perspective, contributing to the discussion on the relationship between politics and culture by observing how social movements have expanded such discussion through their actions. For that, a theoretical and methodological analysis supported by interdisciplinary literature shed attention to the movements produced by social movements in Latin-America. Data collection combined participant observation, interviews and analysis of documents produced by the organizations observed in the study to reconstruct the foundations supporting their cultural policies. So, an analytical description of how black culture and its diverse interfaces has contributed to the anti-racist figtht, as fought by black movement in Brazil, is presented.

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