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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.
61

Radical possibilities : anti-racist performance / practice in 900 Gallons

Gurgel, Nicole Leigh 28 June 2012 (has links)
This thesis centers around my autoethnographic performance 900 Gallons; it explores the importance of re-membering oppressive family histories and white supremacist legacies in particular. First, I explore the theoretical frame that whiteness studies offers this project, considering the ways in which performance can disrupt hegemonic whiteness, with specific attention to white invisibility, cultural appropriation and supremacy. Next, I discuss the project’s primary methodologies: performance autoethnography and queer genealogy. Performance autoethnography, I argue, illuminates the discursive potential of privileging both critical distance and critical intimacy. Queer genealogy foregrounds the importance of historiographical descent as well as dissent. Together, these methods reveal the resistant possibilities of embodied scholarship. Finally, I investigate the risks and possibilities of re-performing oppressive histories, arguing that when these narratives are performed with a critical difference, they can create radical possibilities. The Appendix includes the complete 900 Gallons script, as it was performed at the University of Texas on November 3 and 4, 2011. / text
62

Schooling the Body as Venture Capital: A Genealogy of Sport as a Modern Technology of Perfection, Domination and Political Economy

HOLMES, PALOMA 29 August 2011 (has links)
From a normative perspective, sport is often viewed as a form of benign entertainment and an optimal vehicle for health and community development devoid of political bias. This thesis examines the way sport has been constructed and mobilized as an instrument of neoliberalism, especially through a nexus of biopedagogies that instruct ways of knowing, ordering and conditioning bodies. Historically, sport's instrumental role to the politics of governance similarly continues to be a powerful way and useful vehicle to exercise dominance and mastery over one's own body, nature and others. Building upon the work of Michel Foucault and Nikolas Rose, I contend that psy-prefixed disciplines that surfaced from Western capitalism play a distinct role in mobilizing sport to reconfigure the body in such a way that it serves political economic goals. This thesis offers a sociological approach to critically examine the disciplining of the body through sport with the intent to foster moral development, social inclusion and peace-building according to a neoliberal framework of health. Drawing from Foucault’s work as a kind of theoretical toolbox to inform a geneaology, with some archaeological examples, of the biocitizen as he or she has been made a useful subject of neoliberal health. This geneaology addresses the shifts and splits in the human sciences that have contributed to the ubiquity of psy- practices and disciplining techniques that shape the youth education of bodies, movement and physicality. Foucault’s notion of “dividing practices” and the relational interdependency of what is constructed as normal or deviant, reveals a co-dependent producing of the self and its normalization as well as the problematizing and policing of the “other.” These systems of difference undermine the diversity of physical cultures and practices while also creating a binary oriented approach to healthism discourses, which effectively order, dominate and subordinate specific bodies, thereby furthering networks of inequality and exclusion. Finally, the last section turns to the period of modern aestheticism, theatre performance and critical pedagogy in order to rethink possibilities of sport beyond the present limits of the competitive capitalist rubric that shapes body knowledges and practices in current physical education. / Thesis (Master, Sociology) -- Queen's University, 2011-08-29 13:43:27.429
63

Serials: The contested and contextual meanings of seriality.

Larocque, Rachelle MJ Unknown Date
No description available.
64

The Legh of Booths muniments (c.1280-1808) : the study of a Cheshire family through its archive

Harris, Simon January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
65

Genealogical figures in an Arabian Indian Ocean diaspora /

Ho, Engseng. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Dept. of Anthropology, June 2000. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
66

Genealogy Through the Decolonial Turn: Cultivating Critical Attitudes

Nigh, Amy 06 September 2018 (has links)
This thesis offers a reconsideration of the contentious relationship between Michel Foucault and postcolonial thought through the decolonial turn, by interpreting critique as attitude. The discussion of continuity in Foucault’s work on subjectivity, between his genealogical and ethical periods, leads to an understanding of critical attitude as a mode of critique and self-critique that depends on genealogy as a method of historical inquiry. Meanwhile, the shift away from European modes of rationality described by the decolonial turn in philosophy, proposes an approach to social transformation and the dismantling of Eurocentrism through understanding critique as operative in terms of the decolonial attitude. A comparison of these two attitudes as modes of critique provides common ground for the recognition of their mutual compatibility as techniques for reinterpreting history that also work in the service of contending with coloniality.
67

Responsabilidade e imputação: genealogia do direito / Responsability and attribution: genealogy of law

Thaís Helena Smilgys 22 April 2014 (has links)
O presente trabalho trata de investigar os conceitos responsabilidade e imputação em sua historicidade, isto é, sob o prisma genealógico da formação cultural do direito. O trabalho de pesquisa, assim, consiste em acompanhar, a partir de um várias perspectivas contemporâneas, a evolução das diversas significações destes conceitos, relacionando-os ao conceito de sujeito. Daí, deter-se em dois conceitos específicos que aparecem ao longo da pesquisa, trata-se de proceder a um trabalho de dissertação, o qual abarcará a investigação textual da inter-relação de tais conceitos sob o escopo crítico-genealógico do surgimento do direito. Do ponto de vista teórico, esperamos identificar a compreensão de direito, diante do processo formativo desempenhado pelas forças e instintos humanos. / The present work is to investigate the concepts of responsibility and attribution in its historicity, that is, through the prism of cultural formation of Law. The research, therefore, is to monitor, from a number of contemporary perspectives, the evolution of the various meanings of these \"concepts\", relating them to the concept of the subject. Then the claim to study two specific concepts that appear throughout the research. It is to make a discussion, which will cover the investigation of textual interrelation of these concepts within the scope critical-genealogical emergence of the right. From the theoretical point of view, we hope to identify the understanding of Law and therefore the subject of right, before the process played by forces and human instincts.
68

Dinâmica e genealogia de modelos de evolução / Dynamics and genealogy of evolution models

Milton Taidi Sonoda 21 February 2001 (has links)
Nesse trabalho investigamos através de simulações numéricas a evolução da composição genética de uma população, dando atenção especial ao processo dinâmico conhecido como catraca de Muller, que é responsável pela degradação da população devido ao acúmulo de mutações deletérias em populações finitas. Consideramos também a genealogia dos indivíduos em uma população sob a ação da catraca de Muller. Ainda, investigamos analiticamente o limite determinístico do modelo, no qual o tamanho da população é infinito, onde o processo da catraca não atua. O relevo replicativo, ou seja, a função que mapeia a carga genética de um indivíduo com a sua probabilidade de reprodução utilizado nesse trabalho é uma generalização do relevo originalmente proposto por Muller para ilustrar o processo da catraca. Adicionamos a esse relevo um parâmetro de epistase que simula a interação entre os sítios das seqüências dos indivíduos. A escolha desse parâmetro determina três tipos possíveis de epistase: (i) sinergística, no qual as mutações ficam cada vez mais deletérias com o número de mutações já existentes; (ii) atenuante, no qual o efeito deletério de uma nova mutação é atenuado; e (iii) multiplicativa, no qual as novas mutações causam danos idênticos, independentemente do número anterior de mutações / In this work we investigate through numerical simulations the evolution of the genetic composition of a population, giving emphasis to the dynamic process termed Muller\'s ratchet, which is responsible for the degradation of the population due to the accumulation of deleterious mutations in finite populations. We consider also the genealogy of the individuals evolving in a population under the effect of the Muller\'s ratchet. In addition, we investigate analytically the deterministic limit of the model, in which the population size is infinite, where ratchet process does not act. The replication landscape, i.e., the function that maps the genetic load of an individual on its probability of reproduction used in this work is a generalization of that originally considered by Muller to illustrate the process of the ratchet. In particular, we add to that landscape a parameter of epistasis that models the interactions among the sites of the sequences of the individuals. The tunning of this parameter determines three different types of epistasis: (i) synergistic, where the mutations become more deleterious with the number of mutations already present; (ii) diminishing, where the deleterious effect of a new mutation is attenuated; and (iii) multiplicative, where the new mutations cause identical damages, independently of the previous number of mutations
69

A Comparative Study of Four Genealogies to Determine Predisposition to Cancer

Andrew, Vivian Wilson January 1941 (has links)
This study was made in an effort first, to determine the mode of transmission of the inheritance of a predisposition to cancer as revealed through the analyses of four separate human genealogies, and second, to make a comparative study of the genealogies to determine whether the mode of transmission is the same.
70

The genealogy of Apple in China: towards a genetic phenomenological sociology of culture, media and technology

Zhang, Qing 04 September 2017 (has links)
The state of cultural and social theories is not satisfactory though they seem to flourish in terms of quantity. Scholars successfully describe most of the cultural and social phenomena but propose wildly different, sometime even opposite, interpretations of these phenomena. This thesis offers genetic phenomenological sociology as an alternative interpretation that goes beyond structure oriented theories and construction (agency) oriented theories. It proposes to interpret cultural and social phenomena in the process of their emergence and transformation, and argues that this process or genealogy is the social ontology of culture and society. This thesis develops genetic phenomenological sociology through exploring the genetic side of phenomenology and social theories, and through examining the emergence and transformation of Apple in China. Genealogy is not only method and critique, but also social ontology. This is a main theoretical argument and objective of empirical analysis of the thesis. Theoretically, this thesis explores the genetic side of Husserlian phenomenology, phenomenological sociology as well as the genetic side of social theories. These theories fully develop genealogy as method and critique and imply genealogy as social ontology. But they do not fully develop the idea of genealogy as social ontology. This underdevelopment leads to theoretical problems of subject and normativity, such as Husserlian phenomenology and Foucault's theory. Genealogy, as social ontology, is a way out of the dichotomy of structure and construction, a way out of the philosophy of subject, and a solution to the problems of subject and normativity. This theoretical argument is further developed through theoretical investigation of meaning context, social ontology, genealogy, practice, encountering and embodiment from the perspective of genetic phenomenological sociology in the substantive chapters. Empirically, the genetic phenomenological sociology of Apple answers the question how Apple culture emerges and transforms in China. It examines Apple in genesis in China from the 1980s to 2015. First, the meaning context of this period can be largely described as a transformation of electronic culture from modernization in the 1980s to individualism and consumerism after 2000 through marketization. Second, Apple store exemplifies the social ontology and epistemology of genetic phenomenological sociology. Third, the genealogy of Apple advertisements, media practices and media ritualization concerning Steve Jobs and the cultural encountering of Apple in the meaning context of China's reform era illustrate how Apple culture emerges and transforms. Finally, the genetic phenomenological sociology of Apple technology further reveals the relation between people and thing, which is embodiment. This thesis develops genetic phenomenological sociology as an alternative approach in the study of culture, media and technology that goes beyond structure and construction oriented theories. The ontological root of genetic phenomenological sociology, which is the non-subject philosophy, needs to be further developed.

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