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民族管弦樂團中、低音笙研究: 從蘆笙及芒筒的演變看少數民族在漢族社會中所扮演的角色. / 從蘆笙及芒筒的演變看少數民族在漢族社會中所扮演的角色 / Min zu guan xian yue tuan zhong, di yin sheng yan jiu: cong lu sheng ji mang tong de yan bian kan shao shu min zu zai Han zu she hui zhong suo ban yan de jiao se. / Cong lu sheng ji mang tong de yan bian kan shao shu min zu zai Han zu she hui zhong suo ban yan de jiao seJanuary 2005 (has links)
盧思泓. / "2005年1月". / 論文(音樂碩士)--香港中文大學, 2005. / 參考文獻(leaves 93-104). / "2005 nian 1 yue". / Abstracts in Chinese and English. / Lu Sihong. / Lun wen (yin yue shuo shi)--Xianggang Zhong wen da xue, 2005. / Can kao wen xian (leaves 93-104). / 圖片及圖表目錄 --- p.viii-ix / 論文槪述 --- p.1 / Chapter 1) --- 硏究動機及目的 --- p.1 / Chapter 2) --- 主要參考理論 --- p.2 / Chapter 3) --- 硏究對象 --- p.3 / Chapter 4) --- 硏究方法 --- p.3 / Chapter 第一章 --- 民族管弦樂與國家建構 --- p.7 / 前言 --- p.7 / Chapter 1.1) --- 民族管弦樂的組建 --- p.7 / Chapter 1.2) --- 國家身分 --- p.9 / Chapter 1.3) --- 電台廣播 --- p.10 / Chapter 1.4) --- 民間音調素材 --- p.14 / Chapter 1.5) --- 「民族管弦樂」、「國家身分」與「國家建構 」 --- p.16 / Chapter 1.6) --- 具有中國特色的管弦樂團 --- p.18 / Chapter 第二章 --- 樂器改革 / 前言 --- p.20 / Chapter 2.1) --- 「西化」與「現代化」及其歷史背景 --- p.21 / Chapter 2.1.1) --- 「西化」與「現代化」 --- p.21 / Chapter 2.1.2) --- 歷史背景 --- p.21 / Chapter 2.2) --- 樂器改革 --- p.22 / Chapter 2.2.1) --- 在既有樂器的基礎上作出改動 --- p.26 / Chapter 2.2.2) --- 創製 --- p.27 / Chapter 2.2.3) --- 挪用西洋樂器 --- p.27 / Chapter 2.3) --- 「中國大型器樂合奏」的外觀設計 --- p.31 / Chapter 2.3.1) --- 視覺印象 --- p.31 / Chapter 2.4) --- 小結 --- p.32 / Chapter 第三章 --- 中、低音笙的改革 / 前言 --- p.34 / Chapter 3.1) --- 少數民族政 策 --- p.35 / Chapter 3.2) --- 蘆笙、葫蘆笙、漢族笙與芒筒的沿革及其結構…… --- p.38 / Chapter 3.2.1) --- 苗族源流 --- p.38 / Chapter 3.2.2) --- 蘆笙的沿革 --- p.39 / Chapter 3.2.3) --- 蘆笙的結構 --- p.44 / Chapter 3.2.4) --- 葫蘆笙的沿革 --- p.45 / Chapter 3.2.5) --- 葫蘆笙的結構 --- p.46 / Chapter 3.2.6) --- 漢族笙的沿革 --- p.48 / Chapter 3.2.7) --- 漢族笙的結構 --- p.50 / Chapter 3.2.8) --- 芒筒的沿革 --- p.51 / Chapter 3.2.9) --- 芒筒的的結構 --- p.52 / Chapter 3.3) --- 能配合樂器改革的少數民族樂器 --- p.54 / Chapter 3.3.1) --- 擴音管設計 --- p.54 / Chapter 3.3.2) --- 高、中、低音齊備的群組演奏模式 --- p.55 / Chapter 3.4) --- 被轉化成爲漢族樂器的蘆笙與芒筒 --- p.55 / Chapter 3.4.1) --- 抱笙與排笙 --- p.56 / Chapter 3.4.2) --- 中音笙與中音蘆笙 --- p.58 / Chapter 3.4.3) --- 鍵盤蘆笙筒 --- p.60 / Chapter 3.4.4) --- 鍵盤排笙 --- p.64 / Chapter 3.5) --- 非單從漢族笙組成的笙群組 --- p.66 / Chapter 第四章 --- 「樣板戲」中的少數民族樂器 / 前言 --- p.69 / Chapter 4.1) --- 文化大革命及樣板戲的沿革 --- p.70 / Chapter 4.2) --- 芭蕾舞劇《紅色娘子軍》的創作沿革 --- p.71 / Chapter 4.3) --- 樣板戲中使用的中國樂器 --- p.73 / Chapter 4.4) --- 沒有蘆笙的黎族與使用了蘆笙的黎族舞 --- p.78 / Chapter 4.5) --- 「漢族」與「非漢族」.」 --- p.80 / Chapter 第五章 --- 結論 / 前言 --- p.82 / Chapter 5.1) --- 漢族管弦樂團 --- p.83 / Chapter 5.2) --- 本質化的少數民族 --- p.84 / Chapter 5.3) --- 總結 --- p.85 / 附頁一 笙的結構 --- p.87 / 發聲原理 --- p.90 / 附頁二 各中、低音笙創制年表 --- p.92 / 參考數目 --- p.93
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The Fevered RoadBombardier, Cooper Lee 09 June 2014 (has links)
"The Fevered Road" is a memoir about coming to know oneself through what is lost and finding the liberation available in moments of absolute failure. The thesis explores the themes of failure, loss, identity, and rites of passage through the lens of the early 1990s, AIDS, murder, family, queerness, travel, and punk rock. The research is based primarily on journals, letters, correspondence with local historians, newspaper reports, internet sources, Massachusetts Department of Correction documents, and the author's personal recollection of events. The narrative is centered around the experience of two deaths in the author's early twenties, and is presented in a hybrid bookended/braided structure of the present and the chronological backstory.
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Plagues and prejudice : boundaries, outsiders and public health / Christopher Reynolds.Reynolds, Christopher, 1950- January 1992 (has links)
Bibliography : leaves 375-403. / vi, 403 leaves ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Examines the response to a number of outsiders and marginal social groups, such as Jews, Chinese, and Southern and Eastern Europeans predominantly in England and Australia, and considers the role that public health played in arguments for their exclusion and control. Measures the strength of the public health case, arguing that a health threat was generally not a real issue but, more typically, a badge which labelled the outsider as dangerous to the community. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Community Medicine, 1993
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Arming Targets, Allies, and Bystanders in the Face of Microaggressions: A Qualitative Examination of Microintervention Response Strategies and Their EfficacyAlsaidi, Sarah January 2021 (has links)
The need to arm targets, allies, and bystanders in the face of increased discrimination and political unrest is imperative to the well-being and mental health of minorities in the United States. Most recently, Sue and colleagues (2019) introduced “microinterventions” a taxonomy of anti-discrimination strategies that aim to disarm or counteract the experience of a microaggression and enhance overall psychological well-being (Sue, 2019). Utilizers of mental health services may seek treatment due to symptoms of depression, anxiety and/or PTSD related to repeated instances of microaggressions (Sue et al.,2007). The field of psychology must respond by sharing resources and providing identity affirming counseling to help clients process feelings of negative sense of self, helplessness, and internalized attitudes (Anderson & Stevenson, 2019; Miller et al., 2018).
There is a significant gap in the psychological literature with regard to the effectiveness, benefits and associated outcomes of individual-level strategies and tactics to disarm and disrupt instances of microaggressions (Brondolo, Pencille, Beatty, Contrafa, 2009). The purpose of this study was to contribute to the multicultural and social advocacy literature by training individuals on microintervention tactics and utilizing qualitative methodology to evaluate participants experiences and outcomes. A pre and post design with short answer responses and a one month follow up was conducted using consensual qualitative research data analysis methods (CQR-M). The results of the study are discussed in terms of their applicability to multicultural workshops and trainings, clinical practice and future areas of microintervention and response strategy research.
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Reputation and Generalization in Social Context: Turnout Reporting and Intergroup RelationsChang, Jiyeon January 2024 (has links)
This thesis consists of three chapters. In the first chapter, I examine the effect of electoral outcomes on the tendency to overreport turnout among nonvoters, drawing on data from the Cooperative Election Study (CES) for presidential election years spanning from 2008 to 2020. Using standard regression analysis and propensity score matching, I examine whether nonvoters, especially those residing in swing states, are more likely to claim to have voted without corresponding records when the party they support loses the election. The results indeed indicate a higher likelihood of overreporting among nonvoters in swing states, especially when the party they support loses the election.
In the second chapter, Maria Abascal, Delia Baldassarri and I explore how individuals generalize from a trustworthy versus untrustworthy interaction with strangers onto subsequent interactions. Specifically, we investigate if the generalization pattern varies depending on whether the partners in the interactions are coethnic or non-coethnic. We field a repeated trust game with White adults based in the US in which respondents are randomly assigned to experimental conditions that vary by (i) the race/ethnicity of the partners in the two rounds, (ii) the trustworthiness of the first-round interaction, and (iii) whether the partner in the second round is assigned by the experimenter or chosen by the participant. We find that the nature of the interaction does indeed affect subsequent behavior when it involves an outgroup member. Specifically, White respondents who have a negative experience with Latino partners in the first round are less likely to choose to play with another Latino player in the subsequent round. In contrast, the nature of interactions among White respondents paired with other White partners does not predict their behavior in the second round. Moreover, the nature of first-round interactions does not affect contribution amounts in subsequent rounds when partners are assigned by the experimenter.
In the third chapter, I examine how concerns for the reputation of the group one belongs to influences prosocial behavior. Specifically, I explore whether members of minority groups exhibit greater sensitivity to the potential impact of their actions on group reputation when interacting with individuals from an outgroup, than would members of majority groups. I field a give-or-take dictator’s game with White and Asian adults based in the US and find that among a subgroup of respondents who are less experienced in online surveys and not suspicious of the existence of real partners (versus bots), minority (Asian) respondents are indeed more generous when assigned to the reputation condition than to the anonymity condition. However, a similar difference in behavior is not observed among majority (White) respondents. In other words, the results suggest that members of the minority are more conscientious of the reputational impact than are majority group members when interacting with a member of an outgroup.
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Neither (Fully) Here Nor There: Negotiation Narratives of Nashville's Kurdish YouthGoddard, Stephen Ross 01 May 2014 (has links)
Nashville, Tennessee, is home to nearly fifteen thousand ethnic Kurds. They have come in four distinct groups over the course of two decades to escape the hardship and horror of brutal central government policies, some directed toward their extinction. Many of that number are young people who were infants or toddlers when they were whisked away to the safety of temporary way stations prior to their arrival in the United States. What that means is that these youth have spent the majority of their formative years within the context of the American culture. This thesis is a study of how they view their place within and/or apart from that culture and the one into which they were born, the Kurdish one. My contention is that they all live a double life. Over the course of a seven-month period in 2013, I conducted recorded interviews with eleven Kurds in Nashville, ages 16-26. Most were young women but all represented a healthy cross-section of experience as third-culture kids. What I discovered is presented in three chapters dealing with the issues of emigration/immigration, gender, and identity. That is prefaced by a brief history of the Kurdish nation and of their movement out of Kurdistan, as well as a discussion of my fieldwork procedures and products. My interviewees present their perspectives on each of these issues through select transcript portions provided in each chapter. My thesis was direct: young Kurds in Nashville live a duality in which neither part, American or Kurdish, is equally valued or shared at all times. They live in two worlds but are not and, perhaps, cannot be fully invested in either. That is what their words spoke to me. But just as clearly, there was an unrivaled individuality in the way that every one of the eleven related to each community of which they were a part. Some were closer to one than the other while others attempted a seemingly uncomfortable straddle. Either way, they managed the hand they were dealt as they deemed proper and most did so remarkably well.
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The Measure of Minority: Producing Unequal Citizens through Science and Politics, India 1870-1950Ghoshal, Sayori January 2022 (has links)
What were the knowledges, scientific evidence and terms of recognition that constituted the object minority in the Indian subcontinent? How was minority produced simultaneously as a generalizable identity and as a naturalized marker of the Muslim identity? Focusing on the late colonial and the early postcolonial period, this dissertation is an analysis of the emergence of minority in relation to the nation-state in India. In doing that, I examine how minority came to be constituted as much by scientific knowledge produced about non-dominant communities, as by the discourse around electoral politics and constitutional rights.
I demonstrate the possibilities and limitations in the way minority came to be constructed as a marginalized subject in governance and at the same time a difference from the national norm that threatened the ideal of the homogenous nation. Drawing on and contributing to scholarship in political history, history and sociology of science, and race and religious studies, this dissertation offers a reimagination of the relation between minority, nation and population.
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The Experience of Senior Housing for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Seniors: An Exploratory StudySullivan, Kathleen Margaret 01 January 2011 (has links)
By the year 2030, 20% of the U.S. population will be 65 years of age or older. An increase in the demand for supportive health and social services is expected with the aging of the population. Demand for senior housing is expected to grow, too. This study explores what the social environment offers to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) seniors who relocated to LGBT retirement communities. Previous research asked LGBT seniors who did not live in LGBT senior housing about their housing preferences. The present study, for the first time, asked residents of existing LGBT senior living communities to explain why they chose to live in an LGBT retirement community. Focus groups were conducted at three retirement communities. Thirty-eight residents at the three study sites participated. Seven focus groups were conducted; each was audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. The analysis found common categories across the focus group data that explain the phenomenon of LGBT senior housing. The average age of the participants was 71. Demographic differences were found between generations, with the older participants being more likely to have revealed their sexual orientation late in life, and more likely to have been married and have children. The findings showed that acceptance by other residents of one's sexual orientation and gender identity allows LGBT seniors to feel comfortable in what several residents called their "domestic environment." The questions asked about housing choice and were open ended; respondents chose to focus on the social aspect of their living environments. Acceptance, as opposed to tolerance, was a strong theme. Acceptance by others reduced stress and fostered a feeling of safety and a sense of community. Social networks were strong and expansive, contrary to the theory of socioemotional selectivity theory, which would argue that the total number social relationships diminishes with age. Participants emphasized the social context of their living environment as the reason they chose to live in LGBT senior housing. Participants noted past discrimination, but it was the positive aspects resulting from acceptance that were emphasized as the reason for their choice of LGBT specific retirement housing.
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Aquatic phobias permeated through African American culture, economics, and politicsUnknown Date (has links)
This Project involves looking at African American culture as it relates to swimming, water safety awareness, and water skills. The paper explores the myths and cultural norms associated with drowning phobias in African Americans to discover the root causes. Through historic accounts of African American culture one begins to uncover reasons why this culture became, in a sense aqua phobic. The paper will show what water sport professionals are up against, when working with a culture that is several generations removed from the water and their water skills. The ultimate goal is to draw attention to the importance of water safety and the ability to swim as a life skill. / by Jon Eric Groover. / Vita. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2011. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2011. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
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We have no choice!: social exclusion and citizenship of the nepalese community in Hong Kong.January 2002 (has links)
Yung King-fung Phoenix. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 203-208). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Chapter Chapter 1 --- Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter 1.1 --- Scope of the Studies / Chapter 1.2 --- Reasons of Choosing the Nepalese Case / Chapter 1.3 --- Ethnic Studies in Hong Kong / Chapter 1.4 --- Layout of the Thesis / Chapter Chapter 2 --- Literature Review --- p.9 / Chapter 2.1 --- The Origin of the Discourse / Chapter 2.2 --- Special Features of Social Exclusion Approach / Chapter 2.3 --- Three Paradigms of Social Exclusion / Chapter 2.4 --- Remarks on Citizenship / Chapter 2.5 --- Unanswered Questions / Chapter 2.6 --- Remarks on Methods / Chapter Chapter 3 --- The Nepalese Community in Hong Kong --- p.38 / Chapter 3.1 --- Historical Background and Settlement Pattern / Chapter 3.2 --- Recent Population Trends / Chapter Chapter 4 --- The Problematic Community: Modes of Social Exclusions Against the Nepalese --- p.52 / Chapter 4.1 --- Cultural Exclusion: Inaccessible Cultural Capital / Chapter 4.2 --- Economic Exclusion: 4D Work / Chapter 4.3 --- Civil Exclusion: Second-class Citizens and Distanced Friends / Chapter 4.4 --- Political Exclusion: Invisible Citizens / Chapter 4.5 --- Conclusion: the Marginal Man / Chapter Chapter 5 --- Malign Dynamics Among Modes of Exclusions --- p.127 / Chapter 5.1 --- Cultural Exclusion - Economic Exclusion / Chapter 5.2 --- Cultural Exclusion - Civil Exclusion / Chapter 5.3 --- Cultural Exclusion - Political Exclusion / Chapter 5.4 --- Economic Exclusion - Civil Exclusion / Chapter 5.5 --- Economic Exclusion - Political Exclusion / Chapter 5.6 --- Political Exclusion - Civil Exclusion / Chapter Chapter 6 --- Approaching Complete Citizenship --- p.163 / Chapter 6.1 --- A Divided Community: From FEONA to GNF / Chapter 6.2 --- Reluctance and Domination: Individual Level / Conclusion: We Have No Choice --- p.192 / References --- p.203 / Appendices / Chapter 1. --- List of interviewees / Chapter 2. --- Job History and Income / Chapter 3. --- Accommodation and Rent / Chapter 4. --- Map of Sun Tin,Yuen Long
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