• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 7
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 15
  • 7
  • 7
  • 7
  • 6
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 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

Humanizing the gangster an examination into the character from Hawks' to DePalma's Scarface /

Kirby, Nicholas B., Plasketes, George, January 2008 (has links)
Thesis--Auburn University, 2008. / Abstract. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 73-80).
2

Hong Kong gangs do they have an irrational violent subculture? /

Luk, Wai-kwok. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 94-100) Also available in print.
3

Melodramas of Ethnicity and Masculinity: Generic Transformations of Late Twentieth Century American Film Gangsters

Ennis, Larissa, Ennis, Larissa January 2012 (has links)
Larissa Ennis Doctor of Philosophy Department of English March 2012 Title: Melodramas of Ethnicity and Masculinity: Generic Transformations of Late Twentieth Century American Film Gangsters The gangster film genre in America has enjoyed a long history, from the first one-reelers
4

Hong Kong gangs: do they have an irrational violent subculture?

陸偉國, Luk, Wai-kwok. January 2002 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Criminology / Master / Master of Social Sciences
5

Perceptions of gang violence in an Elsies River primary school in the Western Cape

Mingo, Christopher Dominic January 1999 (has links)
Magister Psychologiae - MPsych / No abstract available. / South Africa
6

The linguistic markers of the language variety spoken by gang members on the Cape Flats, according to the film Dollars and White Pipes

Paterson, Moya Colleen 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--University of Stellenbosch, 2008. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The non-standard “way of speaking” associated with gang members on the Cape Flats is the focus of the present study. This thesis is not about gangsters and gang culture, neither is it an attempt to analyze their use of language. Rather, it is an investigation of the linguistic markers of the language variety spoken by gang members on the Cape Flats, according to the film Dollars and White Pipes. This film portrays the true story of Bernie Baatjies and is set in Hanover Park, an area on the Cape Flats characterized by a high level of unemployment and low levels of education. During the Apartheid years, people of colour all over Cape Town were displaced: they were forced to move to barren land and start rebuilding their lives all over again. The youth perceived their parents as cowards for not fighting back against the system. Their anger with their parents led to the formation of gangs on the Cape Flats. These gangs resort to violence, using it as a means of dominating others and showing power through claiming territory. Gang members establish in-group distinctiveness through speech divergence. In this thesis, the notion of establishing membership of a specific linguistic community, in this case gang membership, by means of vocabulary use is examined with reference to concepts such as slang, anti-language and social judgments based on linguistic aspects. It is shown that the linguistic repertoire of the Cape Flats gangsters as a speech community can broadly be categorised as non-standard Afrikaans, non-standard English and English-Afrikaans code switching. In order to examine the linguistic markers of the language variety spoken by gang members on the Cape Flats, utterances in the film that were judged non-standard were transcribed orthographically. The standard version of each utterance was also identified. Non-standard words and phrases were then grouped according to language and parts of speech. These non-standard words and phrases were in turn presented to real–life gangsters from the Cape Flats in order to obtain judgements on their authenticity. Research approaches and methods drawn on in the thesis are Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) and Discourse Analysis (DA), both of which are briefly discussed. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die nie-standaard “manier van praat” wat geassosieer word met bendes op die Kaapse Vlakte is die fokus van hierdie studie. Hierdie tesis handel nie oor bendes en die bendekultuur nie en is ook nie ʼn poging om hul gebruik van taal te analiseer nie. Dit is eerder ‘n beskrywing van die linguistiese merkers van die taalvariëteit wat deur bendes op die Kaapse Vlakte gepraat word, volgens die rolprent Dollars and White Pipes. Hierdie rolprent is die ware verhaal van Bernie Baatjies en speel af in Hanover Park, ‘n area van die Kaapse Vlakte gekenmerk deur ‘n hoë vlak van werkloosheid en lae vlakke van opvoeding. As gevolg van Apartheid is mense van kleur regoor Kaapstad verplaas: hulle is forseer om na dor land te verskuif en om hul lewens van oor af op te bou. Die jeug het hul ouers gesien as lafaards omdat hulle nie terug baklei het teen die stelsel nie. Hulle woede teenoor hulle ouers het gelei tot die vorming van bendes op die Kaapse Vlakte. Hierdie bendes het hulle gewend na geweld. Geweld is gebruik in ʼn poging om andere te domineer en om mag ten toon te stel in die aanspraak op gebied. Bendelede bewerkstellig spraak uiteenlopenheid as ʼn metode om in-groep onderskeibaarheid daar te stel. In hierdie tesis word die idee van bewerkstelliging van lidmaatskap van ʼn spesifieke linguistieke gemeenskap, in hierdie geval bendelidmaatskap, by wyse van die woordeskat wat hulle verkies om te gebruik, bekyk met verwysing na konsepte soos groeptaal, anti-taal en sosiale oordeel gebaseer op linguistieke aspekte. Daar word gewys dat die linguistiese repetoire van die bendes van die Kaapse Vlakte as spraakgemeenskap, gekategoriseer kan word as nie-standaard Afrikaans, nie-standaard Engels en Afrikaans-Engels kodewisseling. Om die linguistiese merkers van die taalvariëteit wat deur bendes op die Kaapse Vlakte gepraat word te bekyk, is uitings in die rolprent wat nie-standaard ge-ag is, ortografies getranskribeer. Die standaard weergawe van die uitings is ook geïdentifiseer. Nie-standaard woorde en frases is gegroepeer volgens taal en woordsoorte. Hierdie nie-standaard woorde en frases is aan werklike bendelede van die Kaapse Vlakte voorgelê om betroubaarheidsoordele te verkry. Die navorsingsbenaderinge en metodes waarop gefokus is, is Kritiese Diskoers Analise (KDA) sowel as Diskoers Analise (DA), wat beide kortliks bespreek word.
7

Representation of Coloured identity in selected visual texts about Westbury, Johannesburg

Dannhauser, Phyllis D. 11 November 2008 (has links)
In post-apartheid South Africa, Coloured communities are engaged in reconstructing identities and social histories. This study examines the representation of community, identity, culture and historic memory in two films about Westbury, Johannesburg, South Africa. The films are Westbury, Plek van Hoop, a documentary, and Waiting for Valdez, a short fiction piece. The ambiguous nature of Coloured identity, coupled with the absence of recorded histories and unambiguous identification with collective cultural codes, results in the representation of identity becoming contested and marginal. Through constructing narratives of lived experience, hybrid communities can challenge dominant stereotypes and subvert discourses of otherness and difference. Analysis of the films reveals that the Coloured community have reverted to stereotypical documentary forms in representing their communal history. Although the documentary genre lays claim to the representation of reality and authentic experience, documentary is not always an effective vehicle for the representation of lived experience and remembered history. Fiction can reinterpret memory by accessing the emotional textures of past experiences in a more direct way.
8

Perceptions of gang violence in an Elsies River primary school in the Western Cape.

Mingo, Christopher Dominic January 1999 (has links)
No abstract available.
9

Perceptions of gang violence in an Elsies River primary school in the Western Cape.

Mingo, Christopher Dominic January 1999 (has links)
No abstract available.
10

Os bandidos da cidade: formas de criminalidade da pobreza e processo de criminalização dos pobres / The gangsters of the city: forms of poor criminality and the process of poor criminalization

Natânia Pinheiro de Oliveira Lopes 17 November 2011 (has links)
Fundação Carlos Chagas Filho de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro / O trabalho procura descrever o que se chama mundo do crime a partir das concepções dos próprios atores; aqueles imediatamente referidos como bandidos no contexto da cidade; os protagonistas do crime comum violento. São ladrões de rua e traficantes pobres das favelas e periferias do Rio de Janeiro que informaram esta pesquisa a respeito da sedução que o mundo do crime exerce sobre alguns jovens. O foco do trabalho são as representações internas desse mundo do crime, entendido como um universo que goza de relativa autonomia em relação ao mundo social, constituído a partir de um jogo de reproduções e inversões dos valores e conteúdos morais da sociedade englobante. Neste sentido, o crime é entendido como religião, como arte, como serviço de natureza militar, como escola e como trabalho representações sobre as quais esta dissertação se debruçou. / The principal idea of this work is to describe what we call crime world from the conception of the own actors; those that immediately remind us bandits in the city context; the protagonists from common and violent crime. They are street thieves and poor traffickers from the slums and outskirts of Rio de Janeiro that reported this research about seduction that the crime world exercises on some young people. The work focus are the own representations of this crime world, understood by an universe which contains a relative autonomy according to social world, made from a miscellaneous game of reproductions and inversions of the values and moral aspects of the whole society. So, the crime is understood as religion, as art, as military work, as an Education and as work representations that this research treats.

Page generated in 0.0779 seconds