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Harry Potter et les mots fantastiques : comparaison des néologismes du septième tome chez Rowling et son traducteur françaisJustice, Sandra 30 September 2020 (has links)
This thesis examines the French translation of the 224 neologisms in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the seventh book in J.K. Rowling’s fantasy series. By analyzing the original neologisms and their French equivalents, this research compares the word formation processes used by both the author and the translator, Jean-François Ménard. Additionally, to categorize Ménard’s translation techniques, this study adapts a framework designed by Jacqueline Henry to classify translations of word play. While Ménard uses the same types of word formation as Rowling to create his lexicon, this study reveals that he often chooses a different neological process or distinct lexemes to recreate the effect of the original neologism. To achieve this, Ménard relies on his own creativity and embraces the norms of the French language to give his audience a reading experience comparable to that offered to the readers of the original text. / Graduate
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America in the world: ideology and U.S. foreign policy, 1944-1950Holm, Michael 22 January 2016 (has links)
The idea that the United States is bequeathed the special mission of leading mankind toward liberty has dominated U.S. foreign relations since the American Revolution. It remains the most pervasive theme in Americans' thought about the world to the extent that over time, it has become firmly embedded in the nation's historical and cultural consciousness. A study of diplomatic, intellectual, and cultural history, America in the World: Ideology and U.S. Foreign Policy, 1944-1950 examines the impact of this exceptionalist vision on the policies and public debates that influenced Americans' thinking about their role in the world from the beginning of their efforts to design the global post-World War II order to the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950. Believers in Lockean progress and advocates of modernization, the administrations of Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman sought to establish a one-world order based on American liberal political and economic ideals. At the heart of this American-designed postwar world stood the United Nations, created to ensure collective security and foster a spirit of international collaboration, and transnational institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, envisioned to protect the global economy and promote free trade. These institutions served as concrete articulations of U.S. national interests yet at the same time they were intended to inaugurate a "New Deal" and a "Fair Deal" for the world. Interpreting American post-war and Cold War policymaking through the lens of exceptionalism provides a complementary methodological framework to the national security or economic theses more commonly employed to describe this period. When the Soviet Union refused to accept the American-designed one-world order, the American response - inside and outside of government - was overwhelmingly shaped by ideology. While economic considerations and national security influenced U.S. Cold War policy, this dissertation demonstrates that it was the challenge posed by Moscow's universalist aspirations and Communism's inherent teleological ideology that caused Americans to turn the Cold War into a battle for a way of life.
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The origin and implementation of the Truman doctrineLeach, Charles Edward 01 January 1970 (has links)
The purpose of this paper is to examine the background of the rift between the Soviet and Western allies by selecting several of the more critical points of controvercy involved with the formulation of the Truman Doctrine.
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Kids seeking alternative identity and spirituality through the lived theology glimpsed in the Harry Potter seriesApostolides, Anastasia January 2014 (has links)
The Harry Potter series has been part of many kids’ socio-cultural context
since 1997, and is a phenomenon that has had a huge impact on them
(many of whom are now adults). It is argued that some kids’ identities and
spiritualties may have been directly shaped, and may continue to be directly
shaped, by the alternative sacred story presented by Rowling. As this has
the Christ discourse woven into its narrative, there are kids who are using
the Gospel values on a daily basis, whether they are aware of it or not.
Rowling’s fantasy asks readers to question the impact that the dominant
discourses of their ‘realities’ may be having on their identities and
spiritualities, putting them in a position to question if that is indeed who they
want to be. This study was motivated by how kids, who live in a Western
society where one of the sacred stories is power/materialism/consumerism,
can not only appreciate, but also live out (in lived theology) values of the
Harry Potter series which are in complete opposition to the Western sacred
story of power/consumerism/materialism. Since the consumerist discourse
places a heavy burden on people to keep up with their socio-world, if they
do not live up to these demands they will simply not ‘fit in’. People,
especially kids, do not want to be perceived as outcasts. Practical theology
seeks to react to, and understand the shifts that have a direct implication on
how people’s lives are lived out and affected daily, in response to their
socio-cultural world. One such shift is how people are now seeking ultimate
answers from alternative sources such as for example literature, and
specifically in this thesis, the Harry Potter series. Therefore, when a fantasy,
such as Harry Potter, is published, it is important to question what kind of
transformational and even transcendental impact it may be having on them.
This is also an important question from a lived theology perspective as the
Harry Potter series is lived religion. Lived theology seeks to understand how
people practice and apply the sacred outside the Church and the four
Gospels, while still using the Gospel message to live out their life on some
level every day. These values include people’s practices, their actions towards others within their socio-cultural context and their personal sacred
experiences that may allow them to transcend the way in which materialism
affects their identity and spirituality. Lived theology seeks to understand how
these values may affect practical theology. While some people no longer
feel comfortable with/drawn to the Church, and feel alienated from the
Gospels that were written for a socio-cultural context that is very different
from Western society today, this does not mean that human beings are no
longer spiritual/religious/Christian. They continue to seek for answers to the
ultimate question at different stages of their lives. / Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2014. / gm2015 / Practical Theology / PhD / Unrestricted
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The Shame of the Buckeye State: Journalistic Complacency on Episodic Lynching in Ohio from 1872 to 1932Claire, Rounkles M. January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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Wizarding Shrines and Police Box Cathedrals: Re-envisioning Religiosity through Fan and Media PilgrimagesToy, J Caroline 02 September 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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”Fröknarna ska inte räcka upp handen, det ska bara barnen.” : En studie om barns delaktighet och inflytande i förskolans samlingar utifrån barns perspektivAxelsson, Emelie, Olander, Josefine January 2023 (has links)
I förskolans verksamhet förekommer samlingar som ett vardagligt inslag där alla barn på etteller annat sätt förväntas delta. Läroplanen för förskolan (2018) understryker att barn iförskolan ska ges möjlighet till delaktighet och inflytande i enlighet med FN:s konventionom barns rättigheter (Skolverket, 2018). Tidigare forskning om barns delaktighet ochinflytande beskrivs främst utifrån förskollärares perspektiv. Därav blir studiens syfte attbidra med kunskap kring förskolebarns olika upplevelser av delaktighet och inflytande iförskolans samlingar. Med stöd i en fenomenologisk ansats och livsvärldsteorin har barnseget perspektiv getts utrymme genom barnintervjuer av förskolebarn i åldern 3–5 år på treolika förskolor. Harry Shiers (2001) modell för olika nivåer av delaktighet utgör ett redskapi analysen av barnens uttalanden. Resultatet pekar på att en stor del av barnens uttalandenkan relateras till en svagare form av delaktighet i Shiers modell där de på eget initiativ utövarinflytande eller blir föremål för pedagogers makt. Att förhålla sig till den sociala ordningeni samlingen i form av regler och rutiner kan utifrån barnens utsagor tolkas både som enmöjlighet och ett hinder i relation till deras delaktighet och inflytande. På liknande sätt tyderresultatet på att förutsättningar för barns delaktighet och inflytande i förskolans samlingarfinns, men att det är beroende av pedagogers förhållningssätt och i förlängningen vilkamaktförhållanden som existerar mellan pedagog och barn. För att involvera barn ibeslutsprocesser och inte enbart i genomförandet av aktiviteter i förskolan krävs ytterligareansträngningar av pedagoger med visionen om en verksamhet skapad med barnens röster iförgrunden och inte i bakgrunden.
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The Impact of Degraded Speech and Stimulus Familiarity in a Dichotic Listening TaskSinatra, Anne M. 01 January 2012 (has links)
It has been previously established that when engaged in a difficult attention intensive task, which involves repeating information while blocking out other information (the dichotic listening task), participants are often able to report hearing their own names in an unattended audio channel (Moray, 1959). This phenomenon, called the cocktail party effect is a result of words that are important to oneself having a lower threshold, resulting in less attention being necessary to process them (Treisman, 1960). The current studies examined the ability of a person who was engaged in an attention demanding task to hear and recall low-threshold words from a fictional story. These low-threshold words included a traditional alert word, "fire" and fictional character names from a popular franchise-Harry Potter. Further, the role of stimulus degradation was examined by including synthetic and accented speech in the task to determine how it would impact attention and performance. In Study 1 participants repeated passages from a novel that was largely unfamiliar to them, The Secret Garden while blocking out a passage from a much more familiar source, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Each unattended Harry Potter passage was edited so that it would include 4 names from the series, and the word "fire" twice. The type of speech present in the attended and unattended ears (Natural or Synthetic) was varied to examine the impact that processing a degraded speech would have on performance. The speech that the participant shadowed did not impact unattended recall, however it did impact shadowing accuracy. The speech type that was present in the unattended ear did impact the ability to recall low-threshold, Harry Potter information. When the unattended speech type was synthetic, significantly less Harry Potter information was recalled. Interestingly, while Harry Potter information was recalled by participants with both high and low Harry Potter experience, the traditional low-threshold word, "fire" was not noticed by participants. In order to determine if synthetic speech impeded the ability to report low-threshold Harry Potter names due to being degraded or simply being different than natural speech, Study 2 was designed. In Study 2 the attended (shadowed) speech was held constant as American Natural speech, and the unattended ear was manipulated. An accent which was different than the native accent of the participants was included as a mild form of degradation. There were four experimental stimuli which contained one of the following in the unattended ear: American Natural, British Natural, American Synthetic and British Synthetic. Overall, more unattended information was reported when the unattended channel was Natural than Synthetic. This implies that synthetic speech does take more working memory processing power than even an accented natural speech. Further, it was found that experience with the Harry Potter franchise played a role in the ability to report unattended Harry Potter information. Those who had high levels of Harry Potter experience, particularly with audiobooks, were able to process and report Harry Potter information from the unattended stimulus when it was British Natural. While, those with low Harry Potter experience were not able to report unattended Harry Potter information from this slightly degraded stimulus. Therefore, it is believed that the previous audiobook experience of those in the high Harry Potter experience group acted as training and resulted in less working memory being necessary to encode the unattended Harry Potter information. A pilot study was designed in order to examine the impact of story familiarity in the attended and unattended channels of a dichotic listening task. In the pilot study, participants shadowed a Harry Potter passage (familiar) in one condition with a passage from The Secret Garden (unfamiliar) playing in the unattended ear. A second condition had participants shadowing The Secret Garden (unfamiliar) with a passage from Harry Potter (familiar) present in the unattended ear. There was no significant difference in the number of unattended names recalled. Those with low Harry Potter experience reported significantly less attended information when they shadowed Harry Potter than when they shadowed The Secret Garden. Further, there appeared to be a trend such that those with high Harry Potter experience were reporting more attended information when they shadowed Harry Potter than The Secret Garden. This implies that experience with a franchise and characters may make it easier to recall information about a passage, while lack of experience provides no assistance. Overall, the results of the studies indicate that we do treat fictional characters in a way similarly to ourselves. Names and information about fictional characters were able to break through into attention during a task that required a great deal of attention. The experience one had with the characters also served to assist the working memory in processing the information in degraded circumstances. These results have important implications for training, design of alerts, and the use of popular media in the classroom.
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Bibliska motiv i Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows : En intertextuell undersökning / Biblical Motifs in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows : An Intertextual StudyKolenda, Embla January 2018 (has links)
Populärkultur uppstår inte i ett vakuum. Det är inte konstigt att västerländsk populärkultur hämtar inspiration från Bibeln och västerländsk kristen kultur. Bokserien om Harry Potter tycks vara ett sådant exempel. Jag är intresserad av det intertextuella mötet mellan Harry Potter-böckerna och Bibeln. Detta är ett relevant ämne att studera inom bibelvetenskapen då intertextualitet är tolkning i flera led och alltså påverkar vår läsning av såväl Bibeln som skönlitteratur. Som Lina Sjöberg visar kan intertextuella studier mellan Bibeln och skönlitteratur vara ett sätt att exegetiskt arbeta med mellanmänskliga aspekter av bibelberättelser som i sin tur plockats upp av skönlitteraturen genom intertextuella referenser.1 Utifrån bibelvetarens uppgift att tolka och förstå Bibelns texter blir intertextuella studier en framkomlig väg bland flera.2Harry Potter är en bästsäljande bokserie skriven av den brittiske författaren J.K. Rowling.3 Bokserien har filmatiserats och även filmerna är mycket populära. Det har skapats en fandom4 kring Harry Potter. Fansen kallas för ”Potterheads”5 och J.K. Rowling har skapat plattformen ”Pottermore” som är en nöjessite, nyhetssite och online-butik för allt Potter-relaterat.6 Det genomslag Harry Potter har gjort gör serien till ett intressant ämne för intertextuella studier. Många älskar bokserien och även de som inte läst böckerna känner ofta till handlingen i viss utsträckning.
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Behind the Bamboo Curtain: US Ambassadors to China, 1945-1957Pavalko, Nathan L. January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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