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Imperial and post-colonial identities : Zimbabwean communities in BritainZembe, Christopher Roy January 2015 (has links)
This comparative study of Zimbabwean immigrants in Britain illustrates why they should not be viewed as reified communities with fixed essence, but as a product of ethno-racial identities and prejudices developed and nurtured during the phases of Zimbabwe’s history. Through an analysis of personal interviews, participant observation, and secondary and primary sources, the thesis identifies and engages historical experiences which had been instrumental in not only constructing relations between Zimbabwean immigrant communities, but also their economic and social integration processes. The quest to recognise historic legacies on Zimbabwean immigrants’ interactions and integration processes necessitated the first thematic chapter to engage the construction of ethno-racial identities in the pre-colonial, colonial and post-colonial phases of Zimbabwe’s history. With contemporary literature on the Zimbabwean communities in Britain tending to create perceptions that Zimbabwean immigrants are a monolithic community of Blacks, the thesis’ examination of inter-community relations between Blacks, Whites, Coloureds and Asians unveils Zimbabwean immigrants fragmented by historic racial and ethnic allegiances and prejudices. Examining education and employment as economic integration indicators has also facilitated the identification of historical experiences that have been influential in determining economic integration patterns of each Zimbabwean community. Intermarriage, language, religion and relations with the indigenous population were critically engaged to gauge the influence of historical socialisation on Zimbabwean communities’ interaction with Britain’s social structures. While it is undeniable that colonial Zimbabwe was beset with a series of political and economic policies which set in motion salient racist discourses that inevitably facilitated the construction of racially divided diaspora communities, the thesis also unveils a Black diaspora community imbued with historic communal tensions and prejudices. By focusing on Black Zimbabwean immigrants, the thesis will not only be acknowledging an increase of Sub-Saharan Africans in Britain, but also offers an alternative perspective on Black British History by moving away from the traditional areas of study such as eighteenth century slavery and post-1945 African-Caribbean migration. Exploring the dynamics of diaspora relations of the Shona and the Ndebele will expose how both the Nationalist Movement and the post-colonial government failed to implement nation building initiatives needed to unite Africans that had been polarised along ethnic lines. Black Zimbabweans therefore migrated as products of unresolved ethnic conflicts that had been developed and nurtured throughout the phases of Zimbabwe’s history. In the absence of shared historic socio-economic or cultural commonalities within the Black community and between the Zimbabwean diaspora communities demarcated by race, the thesis will be tackling the key question: are Zimbabweans in Britain an imagined community?
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A South African post-colonial interpretation of Paul's cross theology in Romans 3:21-31Motloba, Mogorosi John 05 November 2008 (has links)
No abstract available. / Dissertation (MA(Theology))--University of Pretoria, 2008. / New Testament Studies / unrestricted
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Yard-hip hopping -- Reggae and hip hop music : commercialized constructions of blackness and gender identity in Jamaica and the United States, 1980-2004Brown, La Tasha Amelia 01 January 1999 (has links)
This thesis examined how skin-tone, gender, and sexuality, within the entertainment industry, help shape the micro-level process by which racial identity is constructed in American culture. The thesis analyzed and critiqued existing ideologies of race across the Americas, with specific reference to Jamaica and the United States. Issues and questions of re-representation within American popular culture are central concerns: in particular, the ways that Black women's roles are defined and redefined through the positionality of female performance artists within the male-dominated music culture. The thesis argued then that skin-tone is fundamental to the understanding of blackness, as American society continues to view race through the lens of the popular entertainment industry. The study examined the positionality of the light-skinned/or biracial Black woman's identity is fixed sexually within the racialized context of American society. The thesis concluded that the glorification of the light-skinned/or biracial Black female recreates a socio-historical and cultural-political context that simultaneously devalues the darker-skinned Black woman.
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The function and failure of plantation government: interpreting spaces of power and discipline in representations of slave plantationsCarson, Karen Michelle 11 April 2000 (has links)
This investigation focuses on representations of the physical construction and landscape of Southern slave plantations in order to explore the power relationships among inhabitants of those plantations and how those power relationships attempted to function and failed to establish a system of discipline and governance. While every plantation functioned violently in some form, many plantations appear to have attempted to instill a sense of place and permanence of status in slaves with more than just physical violence or obvious and overt forms of mental coercion and abuse. As a supplement to the strategic (and oftentimes random) physical violence inflicted on slaves in the attempts to control their behaviors, owners seem to have also attempted to discipline their slaves through strategic constructions of the plantation landscapes. While concluding that this strategy ultimately failed, this thesis examines attempts by owners to implement particular strategies in regulating and disciplining the behavior of slaves which can be compared with the strategies implemented in a panoptic system as described by Michel Foucault.
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Kafoolu and Kompins: Women’s Grassroots Movements in Post-Colonial GambiaJanneh, Fatou 22 January 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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My life is in their hands: Latina adolescent border-crossings, becoming in the shadows, and mental health in schoolsElfreich, Alycia Marie 22 June 2016 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / This project endeavors to move beyond traditional conceptualizations of voice in
conventional qualitative research and instead focuses on embodied, liminal experiences
of Latina adolescents, the intersections of identity, gender, spirituality, ethnicity, etc.,
how these junctures broadly impact mental health, and more specifically, how we
perceive mental health and well-being within educational institutions. The study draws
upon an intervention pilot study that sought to increase resiliency and self-mastery in
Latino adolescents while simultaneously reducing their depressive symptoms. However,
this project aims to take these findings and focus upon the complex and multiple factors
that influence depression, including citizenship status, trauma in crossing the border from
Mexico into the United States, and racial and gendered oppression specific to the
experiences of Latina adolescent immigrants. Thus, this project explores ways in which
four Latina adolescents make sense of their lived experiences through a critical feminist
theoretical framework that integrates post/anti colonial feminism. The framework
provides a nuanced conceptualization of power, oppression, and marginalization that
creates opportunities to explore alternative notions of thinking that encourages new paths
to transform interdisciplinary, university, community, and family relationships
surrounding mental health concerns within educational institutions. Finally, theory,
research, epistemology, and ontology are interwoven to inform a methodology that is
fluid, interchanging, and always becoming.
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SPIRITUALITY IN THE LOVE SONGS AND LAMENTS OF POST-COLONIAL MĀORI SOCIETYHill, Alexis N. January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Capitalism in Post-Colonial India: Primative Accumulation Under Dirigiste and Laissez Faire RegimesBhattacharya, Rajesh 01 May 2010 (has links)
In this dissertation, I try to understand processes of dispossession and exclusion within a class-focused Marxian framework grounded in the epistemological position of overdetermination. The Marxian concept of primitive accumulation has become increasingly prominent in contemporary discussions on these issues. The dominant reading of "primitive accumulation" in the Marxian tradition is historicist, and consequently the notion itself remains outside the field of Marxian political economy. The contemporary literature has de-historicized the concept, but at the same time missed Marx's unique class-perspective. Based on a non-historicist reading of Marx, I argue that primitive accumulation--i.e. separation of direct producers from means of production in non-capitalist class processes--is constitutive of capitalism and not a historical process confined to the period of transition from pre-capitalism to capitalism. I understand primitive accumulation as one aspect of a more complex (contradictory) relation between capitalist and non-capitalist class structure which is subject to uneven development and which admit no teleological universalization of any one class structure. Thus, this dissertation claims to present a notion of primitive accumulation theoretically grounded in the Marxian political economy. In particular, the dissertation problematizes the dominance of capital over a heterogeneous social formation and understands primitive accumulation as a process which simultaneously supports and undermines such dominance. At a more concrete level, I apply this new understanding of primitive accumulation to a social formation--consisting of "ancient" and capitalist enterprises--and consider a particular conjuncture where capitalist accumulation is accompanied by emergence and even expansion of a "surplus population" primarily located in the "ancient" economy. Using these theoretical arguments, I offer an account of postcolonial capitalism in India, distinguishing between two different regimes--1) the dirigiste planning regime and 2) the laissez-faire regime. I argue that both regimes had to grapple with the problem of surplus population, as the capitalist expansion under both regimes involved primitive accumulation. I show how small peasant agriculture, traditional non-capitalist industry and informal "ancient" enterprises (both rural and urban) have acted as "sinks" for surplus population throughout the period of postcolonial capitalist development in India.
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Christian Music as a Contact Zone for Chinese and Hong Kong Communities in Post-colonial Hong KongXian, Yan 03 December 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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A RECONSIDERATION OF THE FUNERARY MONUMENTS OF ROMAN DACIAEMMERSON, ALLISON L. C. January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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