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Erasing borders toward tribes /Unger, Ray. January 1992 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, Santa Cruz, 1992. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [127]-178).
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Masks of authenticity : visual representation of the self, self-stereotyping, and the question of visibility in the age of neo-imperialismBiparva, Mohsen January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Europe’s mirror: civil society and the OtherFieldhouse, Julie 11 1900 (has links)
While much has been written in recent times on the concept of civil society, the idea that
it is part of an Orientalist construct of West and non-West has not been explored. This
dissertation addresses this lacuna in the literature by examining Western concepts of civil society
and establishing the ways in which these concepts are constructed through the deployment of a
mirroring construction of non-Western Others.
I examine the work of three theorists (Montesquieu, Ferguson and Hegel) who wrote on
civil society during the Enlightenment or in its aftermath. These theorists are emblematic of a
discursive formation which differed from prior discursive formations in two related respects:
their concept of civil society and their construction of non-Western Others. During the eighteenth
century both constructions of the concept of civil society and of non-Western Others were
undergoing significant changes leading eventually to a concept of civil society as distinct from
the state and to what might be termed a "post-Enlightenment geographical imagination". To
demonstrate the disjuncture between discursive formations, the work of two seventeenth-century
theorists (Hobbes and Locke) is compared and contrasted with that of these writers.
The work of three late twentieth-century social scientists (Shils, Gellner and Fukuyama)
is examined and their concept of civil society and use of non-Western Others is contrasted with
those of the prior discursive formation. I show how their concept of civil society is informed
both by the concept of civil society developed in the Enlightenment and its aftermath and by the
mirroring constructions of non-Western Others of the post-Enlightenment geographical
imagination.
Underscoring the work of all these theorists are methods of comparison and the representational practices they authorize. These are explored through two conceptions of alterity
which have operated in Western thought and their connections to questions of comparison. An
analysis is made of the relationship of the ideas of comparison and comparative method to
questions of translation in Western philosophy and social science. The implications of this
discussion of comparison and representation for theories of civil society and their constructions
of non-Western Others is analyzed. / Arts, Faculty of / Political Science, Department of / Graduate
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Orientalizing Singapore: psychoanalyzing the discourse of `non-Western modernityGabrielpillai, Matilda 11 1900 (has links)
This study represents the scandal of current colonial racist ideologizing by focusing on the American
Orientalizing project in Singapore. It argues that, in the era of global capitalism and post-colonial
theory, the new colonialist epistemologies rely on collaborations between the ruling classes of the 'third
world' and 'first world' as well as a rhetoric of 'native' nationalism to contain threatening non-Western
economic success and to create 'third world' populations and governments that will not resist the
continuation of the Western/American colonizing project. Using a Marxist-Lacanian psychoanalytical
theory of hegemony, of a "libidinal politics" which focuses on the role of desire in national culture, this
thesis shows that the Singapore government has used American Orientalist ideology to effect
disempowering cultural changes in the people. Examining political and literary texts, I argue that the
Singapore government quotes American notions of 'Oriental' difference to keep "dangerous Western
(liberal) influences" from 'ethnically contaminating' the nation, and that it has hegemonized an
'Asian'/'Confucianist' nationalism by hystericizing and repressing the people's desire, leading
Singaporeans to disavow their location in a post-modern world. The Orientalizing of Singapore, where
Chinese identity has been produced as a masquerade of Western culture, has also generated a crisis in
male identity, involving an inward-looking escapist cultural narcissism that blocks a positive response to
historical realities. Paradoxically, the claim to a non-Western modernity has also been used to suppress
ethnic difference by producing ethnicity as 'fetish.' The East/West discourse that emerged from the
caning of an American teenager, Michael Fay, in Singapore is used to reveal the entrapment of
Singapore's 'Oriental' national identity in American colonial desire, and to argue that the perceived East
Asian 'cultural confidence' often spoken about today overlooks the fact that such cultural certitude
accrues from the East entering into the West's fantasy scenarios and staging itself as the other's object of
desire. This thesis suggests that current 'post-colonial' claims to "ethnic, non-Western" modernisms be viewed with some skepticism as possibly involving the ventriloquistic 'passing' of Western colonial
ideology as the voice of the 'racial other.' / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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中國初期駐英使節對於西方文化之觀感LIU, Heng 01 January 1947 (has links)
No description available.
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China encounters Western ideas (1895-1905) : a rhetorical analysis of Yan Fu, Tan Sitong, and Liang Qichao /Xiao, Xiaosui January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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Re-veiling and occidentalism four case studies /Hayman, Sarah. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--State University of New York at Binghamton, Department of Anthropology, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references.
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As the world turns an emerging worldview, an emerging view of God /Nazar, Jo, January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Catholic Theological Union at Chicago, 1999. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 84-87).
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童話背後的歷史: 1900-1937年西方童話在中國的翻譯與傳播. / History behind fairy tales: the Chinese translation and dissemination of western fairy tales in 1900-1937 / Chinese translation and dissemination of western fairy tales in 1900-1937 / 1900-1937年西方童話在中國的翻譯與傳播 / 西方童話在中國的翻譯與傳播 / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collection / Tong hua bei hou de li shi: 1900-1937 nian xi fang tong hua zai Zhongguo de fan yi yu chuan bo. / 1900-1937 nian xi fang tong hua zai Zhongguo de fan yi yu chuan bo / Xi fang tong hua zai Zhongguo de fan yi yu chuan boJanuary 2008 (has links)
伍紅玉. / Submitted: November 2007. / Thesis (doctoral)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 197-204). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstracts in Chinese and English. / Wu Hongyu.
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Maulana Shibla Numani : a study of Islamic modernism and romanticism in India, 1882-1914Umer, Zaitun January 1969 (has links)
No description available.
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