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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.
1

Comunicação, corpo e territorialidades: o declínio das narrativas globalistas / Communication, body and territoriality: the decline of globalists narratives

Alencar, Jakson Ferreira de 02 June 2016 (has links)
Submitted by Jailda Nascimento (jmnascimento@pucsp.br) on 2016-09-27T19:36:25Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Jakson Ferreira de Alencar.pdf: 1484435 bytes, checksum: 75314eedff5ce42d8b0d091b12859cb0 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2016-09-27T19:36:25Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Jakson Ferreira de Alencar.pdf: 1484435 bytes, checksum: 75314eedff5ce42d8b0d091b12859cb0 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2016-06-02 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico / The thesis identifies and analyzes the decline of globalists narratives, in connection with the communication, which does not abolish the corporeity and territorialities, as suggested theories that predicted the global homogeneity; does not dependent of them and of the complexity that arise from them, even when using the most advanced technologies and the most international media. Parts of the world become more visible, as well as divergences, disparity and differences. Two thirds of humanity are not part of the imagined full connection, and there remains very muting, incommunication, superficial knowledge or ignorance of various shapes and large parts of the word, even for those superconnected. The acceleration of cultural exchanges, increasing the amount of information circulating, of media and of channels, although spreading equal products and information, have produced unpredictable and unexpected results. Instead of generating the homogeneity, is increasing diversification, segmentation, fragmentation, resistances and even intolerances. Maintaining and creating new and multiple territorialities, even in the context of digital networks and more advanced communication technologies. To identify the decline of globalism, the thesis is based on authors such as Wolton (2006), Ghemawat (2012), Milton Santos (2000, 2006, 2008), Martín-Barbero (2009, 2012), Walden Bello (2003), Kellner (2001), Pieterse (2009), Martel (2012), Vergopoulos (2005), Haesbaert (2004, 2005) and Castells (1999), among others. Search the body's relation with the communication with the bodymedia theory (Katz e Greiner, 2004, 2005, 2010, 2014), and to treat the communication relation with the environment, the space and the culture employs Pinheiro (2009, 2013), Warnier (2003) and Dênis Moraes (2009, 2013), among others. With them formulates a critical reading of a empirical corpus which shows the rise of these trends, composed of the information published by the agencies at the period after the onset of the economic crisis of 2008 up until the end of 2012. The goal is to demonstrate that global levels of integration are still very low, far from suggests the theses of the “global village”. The hypothesis is that the communication technologies and the ease of transmission and access to information seem to interconnect and homogenize the world, but may not be creating communication, mutual understanding, common views, understanding, integration and the expected homogeneity / A tese identifica e analisa o declínio das narrativas globalistas, em relação com a comunicação, a qual não abole o corpo e as territorialidades como se aventava nas teorias que previam a homogeneidade mundial; não independe delas e da complexidade delas advinda, mesmo quando usa as mais avançadas tecnologias e as mídias mais internacionais. Partes do mundo tornaram-se mais visíveis, assim como as divergências, disparidades e diferenças. Dois terços da humanidade não fazem parte da imaginada conexão total, e permanece havendo muito silenciamento, incomunicação, conhecimento superficial ou desconhecimento de diversas e amplas partes do mundo, mesmo para quem está superconectado. A aceleração das trocas culturais, o aumento da quantidade de informação circulando, das mídias e canais, embora propaguem produtos e informações iguais, têm produzido resultados imprevisíveis e inesperados. Ao invés de gerar a homogeneidade, está aumentando a diversificação, a segmentação, a fragmentação, as resistências e até as intolerâncias; mantendo e criando novas e múltiplas territorialidades, mesmo no âmbito das redes digitais e mais avançadas tecnologias de comunicação. Para identificar o declínio do globalismo, a tese fundamenta-se em autores como Wolton (2006), Ghemawat (2012), Milton Santos (2000, 2006, 2008), Martín-Barbero (2009, 2012), Walden Bello (2003), Kellner (2001), Pieterse (2009), Martel (2012), Vergopoulos (2005), Haesbaert (2004, 2005) e Castells (1999), dentre outros. Pesquisa a relação do corpo com a comunicação com a Teoria Corpomídia (Katz e Greiner, 2004, 2005,2010, 2014), e para tratar da relação da comunicação com o ambiente, com o espaço e com a cultura emprega Pinheiro (2009, 2013), Warnier (2003) e Dênis Moraes (2009, 2013), dentre outros. Com eles formula uma leitura crítica de um corpus empírico que evidencia o aumento dessas tendências, composto pelas informações publicadas pelas agências The Economist e Pátria Latina no período pós início da crise econômica de 2008 até final de 2012. O objetivo é demonstrar que os níveis mundiais de integração continuam bastante baixos, muito longe do que sugerem as teses da “aldeia global”. A hipótese é a de que as tecnologias da comunicação e a facilidade de transmissão e de acesso à informação parecem interconectar e homogeneizar todo o mundo, mas podem não estar criando comunicação, intercompreensão, pontos de vista comuns, entendimento, integração e a homogeneidade prevista
2

Underground Britain : public perceptions of the geological subsurface

Gibson, Hazel Laura January 2017 (has links)
Geoscience operates at the boundary between two worlds; the visible and the invisible. Increasingly, new geological technologies such as hydraulic fracturing, carbon capture and storage (CCS) and radioactive waste disposal are drawing the public’s attention to the ‘invisible’ world of the geological subsurface. This presents unique communication challenges because these technologies exist in a realm that can never be physically seen. This thesis addresses this issue by examining the psychological perceptions of residents in three villages in the south west of England. A representative sample from each village was qualitatively interviewed and mental models were constructed from the resultant data using the ‘mental models’ technique (Morgan et al, 2002). The mental models were then quantitatively tested using a questionnaire to assess the perceptions that a broader sample of the residents of these locations hold towards the geological subsurface. The results from the mental models assessment identified the principal perceptions held by the majority of the public surveyed. In particular, the study revealed the connection between the visible surface and the invisible subsurface and how different participants engaged with that boundary; choosing either a geoscience-centric or an anthropocentric approach to penetrating the surface. These approaches utilised by non-experts differed from those employed by the experts, who used a regionally specific geoscience-centric approach to visualising the subsurface. The work provides an important empirical baseline from which to develop a science-led strategy to engage the general public with new technologies and to increase our understanding of the more broadly held conceptions of the invisible subsurface.

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