Spelling suggestions: "subject:"other anda otherness"" "subject:"other ando otherness""
1 |
Brother Nation: a novel. / Representations of the Other in contemporary Australia.Soman, Rudrakumar. January 2007 (has links)
Representations of the Other in Contemporary Australia is a thesis consisting of a novel, Brother Nation, and an exegesis in a separate volume. Brother Nation is set in Australia at the beginning of the twenty-first century, a time of great political and social change. The novel explores ambiguities in issues of race, crime and moral justice through the eyes of an adolescent who comes of age amidst a chain of disturbing events. Omar Assaf is a sensitive sixteen-year-old with a problem—he needs to lose his virginity. However, like most boys his age, he is anxious and naive about matters of sex and love. When a young female friend, Belle, rejects his romantic overtures, Omar is crushed. He rapidly falls under the corrupting influence of his older brother, Sam, and Sam’s motley band of miscreant friends. Fuelled by drugs, alcohol and pornography, the boys roam the migrant suburbs of southwest Sydney, alleviating their boredom and frustration by flirting with crime, cruising in cars and pursuing girls. However, Omar soon learns that being involved with Sam and the boys has dangerous consequences. In compensating for his sense of emasculation, Omar finds himself taking part in a series of attacks, including a betrayal of Belle. Though ambivalent about and at times sickened by his complicity, Omar realises much too late that he and his brother have entered a theatre where their fate will be determined by broader, more powerful forces than he could ever have imagined. The exegesis charts the creation of Brother Nation via the author’s movement from a mode of autopoiesis to allopoiesis, through the practice of narrative research. That is, the essay is structured to illustrate how the process of researching the novel resulted in the production of knowledge external to the creative work itself. In doing this I discuss the genesis of the idea to write the novel, the basis and modes of my narrative research, the style of the finished work in relation to the genre of the ‘faction’ or ‘non-fiction novel’, and the internal and external conflicts that arose in relation to the representation of demonised Arabic Other characters in the story. I also contextualise the work in relation to other relevant fiction and non-fiction texts that address similar subject matter, and make a case for holding a non-essentialised notion of cultural identity regarding my own speaking position. In particular, this exegesis investigates problematic questions in relation to representations of contemporary characters with an immigrant Other background; and, via the framework of Bakhtinian theories of dialogism and heteroglossia, considers the extent to which seemingly incompatible moral viewpoints can be coherently instantiated in fiction through a multiplicity of characters’ voices. / v. 1 [Novel]: Brother Nation -- v. 2 [Exegesis]: Representations of the Other in contemporary Australia. / Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Humanities, 2007
|
2 |
Die self as 'n hibridiese ander : 'n postkoloniale perspektief op die hoofkarakter in die film District 9 / Theresa Le GrangeLe Grange, Theresa January 2014 (has links)
This dissertation presents an investigation into the identity transformation of the character of Wikus van der Merwe, the protagonist of the film District 9 (2009), from a postcolonial perspective. In the first instance, I argue that the film can be regarded as an allegory of the apartheid era in South Africa, and that the marginalised aliens in the film can therefore be seen as metaphorically representing the suppressed races of the apartheid era. The humans and aliens in the film are initially represented as binary opposites of each other: the humans are positioned as the normative in-group diametrically opposite the aliens, who are regarded as the non-normative out-group. In its ideological context, apartheid can also be understood as a type of colonialism. Like those who were marginalised by colonial practices, the aliens in the film are regarded as the other, mainly because of their physical, corporeal otherness. In the film Wikus experiences a bodily as well as an emotional transformation - and thus also an identity transformation – from a normative, Afrikaans-speaking white male (the self) into a non-normative and strange-looking alien (other) – with reference here to how normativity and otherness were conceptualised in the context of apartheid. Consequently, Wikus’ metamorphosis results in a hybrid figure, which demonstrates that the boundaries between self and other are permeable. Wikus’ unique identity as both self and other, as well as his increased self-awareness, illustrates his new identity position in an in-between space in which the self and other can be both, ironically, accommodated and destabilised. This dissertation demonstrates how the notion of hybridity (which is a key concept in postcolonial discourse) in the film works to destabilise the discourse of the self and other, and in this way hints at the possibility of a broader identity platform where all identities are validated. / M.A. (Graphic Design), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
|
3 |
Die self as 'n hibridiese ander : 'n postkoloniale perspektief op die hoofkarakter in die film District 9 / Theresa Le GrangeLe Grange, Theresa January 2014 (has links)
This dissertation presents an investigation into the identity transformation of the character of Wikus van der Merwe, the protagonist of the film District 9 (2009), from a postcolonial perspective. In the first instance, I argue that the film can be regarded as an allegory of the apartheid era in South Africa, and that the marginalised aliens in the film can therefore be seen as metaphorically representing the suppressed races of the apartheid era. The humans and aliens in the film are initially represented as binary opposites of each other: the humans are positioned as the normative in-group diametrically opposite the aliens, who are regarded as the non-normative out-group. In its ideological context, apartheid can also be understood as a type of colonialism. Like those who were marginalised by colonial practices, the aliens in the film are regarded as the other, mainly because of their physical, corporeal otherness. In the film Wikus experiences a bodily as well as an emotional transformation - and thus also an identity transformation – from a normative, Afrikaans-speaking white male (the self) into a non-normative and strange-looking alien (other) – with reference here to how normativity and otherness were conceptualised in the context of apartheid. Consequently, Wikus’ metamorphosis results in a hybrid figure, which demonstrates that the boundaries between self and other are permeable. Wikus’ unique identity as both self and other, as well as his increased self-awareness, illustrates his new identity position in an in-between space in which the self and other can be both, ironically, accommodated and destabilised. This dissertation demonstrates how the notion of hybridity (which is a key concept in postcolonial discourse) in the film works to destabilise the discourse of the self and other, and in this way hints at the possibility of a broader identity platform where all identities are validated. / M.A. (Graphic Design), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
|
4 |
Überlegungen zu hybrider Repräsentation und Inszenierungen der Andersheit und Altarität im Spiegel der neueren und neuesten Forschung sowie der Chroniken und in prämodernen Diskursen der Eroberung Mexikos und Amerikasde Toro, Alfonso January 2008 (has links)
Mein Thema – zu dem ich heute nur einige wenige Überlegungen anstellen und eine Reihe von Fragen formulieren möchte – hat erstens mit dem Versuch zu tun, den in der postkolonialen Debatte bis heute zentralen und weitverbreiteten Begriff der Hybridität zeitlich zu entgrenzen und diesen somit zu historisieren, um aus bestehenden Polarisierungen innerhalb der Chronikforschung herauszukommen und neue Perspektiven zu eröffnen. Ich betrachte die von mir im Rahmen der Sektion "Hybriditätsdiskurse in Lateinamerika: Von der Eroberung bis zum 21. Jahrhundert" auf dem 14. Deutschen Hispanistentag (6.-9. März 2003 in Regensburg) vorgeschlagene und mittlerweile auf breite Zustimmung gestoßene zeitliche Entgrenzung und Historisierung der Hybridität deshalb als einen zentralen Aspekt, weil gleich zu Beginn von Entdeckung und Eroberung eine neue Konstruktion des Fremden und des Eigenen bzw. der Andersheit begann, die bisher mehr oder weniger – mit Ausnahme von Todorov – nur am Rande oder gar nicht beschrieben worden ist, insofern das Faktische (die Zerstörung der amerikanischen Kulturen) alles andere überdeckte.:Hybridität als Denkfigur, Denkhaltung und analytische Kategorie. - Hybride Repräsentationen und Inszenierungen der Andersheit im Spiegel der neueren und neuesten Forschung. - Hybride Repräsentation und Inszenierungen der Andersheit im Spiegel der Chroniken. - Zusammenfassung
|
Page generated in 0.0825 seconds