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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.
11

Rome and the Celts of Northern Italy in the Republic

Williams, Jonathan Hugh Creer January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
12

Race's half-life : British fiction and the sciences of race, 1850-1930

Nabers, Drayton January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
13

The accomplishment of divergence : an ethnomethodological exploration of teachers' perceptions and constructions of South Asian pupils in a Bradford middle school

Shepherd, D. J. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
14

The relationship between African-Caribbean boys' sub-culture and schooling

Sewell, Cleveland A. January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
15

The social institutions of Turkish migrant workers in West Berlin

Johnson-Krojzl, C. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
16

Spartohori : The constitution of a Greek Ionian island village community

Just, F. P. R. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
17

Concepts of disease and their relationship to health-seeking behaviour in Chuquisaca department, south Bolivia

Moore, David R. January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
18

What is ecclesiology about? : the provenance and prospects of recent concrete approaches to ecclesiology

Hawksley, Theodora Lucy January 2012 (has links)
Over the last fifteen years, a small group of ecclesiologists has been engaged in redefining the object of ecclesiological inquiry and the purpose of ecclesiological reflection. These ‘concrete’ ecclesiologies take the historical, sinful, concrete church of experience as the object of their theological reflection, and understand ecclesiological reflection as practical reasoning in the service of church communities. Concrete ecclesiologies borrow methods from qualitative social science in order to attend to the concrete church. This thesis describes concrete ecclesiologies as a distinct field for the first time, defines the methodological common sense they share, and traces their roots in twentieth century theology and the postmodern cultural context. The theological and methodological tensions underlying concrete ecclesiologies are analysed, and cril attention is focussed on their use of social science. This critical analysis suggests that significant reparative work is needed in order to realise the promise of concrete approaches to ecclesiology. Constructive ethnographic and theological work is required to develop concrete ecclesiologies’ understandings of (a) the object of ethnographic inquiry, (b) the object of ecclesiological inquiry, and (c) the function of ecclesiological reflection. Constructive work commences with a survey of ethnographic understandings of the social real. Pragmatic/relational anthropology’s understanding of the social real is used as the departure point for a creative theological rethinking of the object of ecclesiological inquiry, the church, and the purpose of ecclesiological reflection.
19

Community and the production of everyday narratives : newspaper journalists and their readers in a Spanish city

Machin, David January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
20

O ensaio ao pé da letra: uma etnografia de ensaios de dança contemporânea / Essay to the letter: an ethnography of contemporary dance rehersals

Veiga, Renato Jacques de Brito 28 November 2014 (has links)
O que são obras de arte, objetos únicos ou transformações de outras obras. O que a dança faz. O dançarino é quem pensa seu corpo ou é seu corpo que o pensa. Como se dão unidades de movimento, como aparecem, como e onde se fixam. De onde vem o olhar, para onde vai, que funções ou disfunções ele cumpre. Qual o lugar da relação entre intérpretes e espectadores, dissolução ou reformulação dessa fronteira. Pode uma obra de dança ser pensada nos moldes de um ritual, como o define Claude Lévi-Strauss [2011], enquanto uma busca um tanto desenfreada pelo contínuo do vivido em oposição à descontinuidade do pensamento mítico. Quantos corpos cabem num corpo, quantas pessoas podem ser um corpo. Não seria também o processo criativo um vasto ritual de passagem, como o descreve Victor Turner [2005], dançarinos neófitos que se deslocam do mundo social para voltarem a ele transformados, refeitos em corpos outros. Pode a dança ser considerada análoga à poesia, por transformar no corpo o que a poesia transforma na língua. São alguns dos problemas que vou criando ao longo deste ensaio, que é fruto de uma imersão etnográfica no universo dos ensaios do Núcleo Artérias, grupo de dança contemporânea da cidade de São Paulo, dirigido pela coreógrafa Adriana Grechi, com o qual me encontrei um tanto fortuitamente, devido ao interesse primeiro de etnografar processos criativos. Meus interlocutores em campo, além de Adriana, são nove dançarinas e três obras de dança contemporânea, Público [2010], Fleshdance [2012] e Bananas [2013], que são aqui desdobradas enquanto processos. A proporção teórica deste ensaio é fruto de algumas leituras mais significativas que fui fazendo ao longo do mestrado, leituras que passaram a informar a imersão etnográfica a que eu me propunha, influenciando meu olhar em campo e consequentemente o sentido das notas que eu ia fazendo. Sua porção etnográfica provém das notas que fui produzindo ao longo dos processos de Público, Fleshdance e Bananas, que frequentei semanalmente, do início ao fim, ora à distância do olhar ora adentrando os processos criativos, pontualmente, quando elas me pediam considerações. A maior parte do tempo passei no chão, sentado a um canto da sala de ensaios, em silêncio, observando e anotando, à mão. Foram três cadernos de campo inteiros. / What are works of art, unique objects or transformations of other works. What does dance do. Is the dancer who thinks their body or their body thinks the dancer. How do units of movement appear, how and where do they attach. Where does gaze come from, where does it go, what functions or dysfunctions does it meet. What is the place of the relationship between performers and spectators, dissolution or recast of that border. Can a dance work be thought of in terms of a ritual, as defined by Claude Levi-Strauss [2011], while a search somewhat unrestrained for the continuous of living as opposed to the discontinuity of mythical thought. How many bodies fit in a body, how many people can be a body. Is not the creative process also a wide rite of passage, as described by Victor Turner [2005], turning dancers into neophytes who move from social world to get back to it transformed, remade in other bodies. Can dance be considered analogous to poetry, by transforming in the body what poetry transforms in the language. These are some of the problems that create over this essay, which is the result of an ethnographic immersion into the world of the rehearsals of Núcleo Artérias, contemporary dance group from São Paulo, directed by choreographer Adriana Grechi. My interlocutors in the field, besides her, are nine dancers and three works of contemporary dance, Público [2010], Fleshdance [2012] and Bananas [2013], which are deployed here as processes. The theoretical proportion of this essay is the result of some more significant readings I did over master, readings that informed the ethnographic immersion, influencing my gaze on the field and consequently the meaning of the notes I was making. Its ethnographic portion comes from the notes that I produced over the rehearsals of Público, Fleshdance and Bananas, which I attended weekly, from start to finish, sometimes by looking, sometimes by entering the creative processes, occasionally, when they asked for my considerations. Most of the time I spent on the ground, sitting in a corner of the rehearsal room, silently watching and taking notes, by hand. There were three field notebooks, filled entirely.

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