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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

From Orators to Cyborgs: The Evolution of Delivery, Performativity, and Gender

Willis, Victoria E 13 May 2011 (has links)
@font-face { font-family: "Cambria"; }p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal { margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; font-size: 12pt; font-family: "Times New Roman"; }div.Section1 { page: Section1; } The purpose of this project is to provide a thorough account of delivery by tracing the history and evolution of delivery from antiquity to the present day in order to expose the spread and transmission of proto-masculine ideologies through delivery. By looking at delivery from an evolutionary perspective, delivery no longer becomes a tool of rhetoric, but the technology of rhetoric, evolving over time in the same way the system of rhetoric itself has evolved. Contemporary scholarship on delivery continues to look at delivery as a tool—as the ink, the paper, the computer screen, the keyboard, the font, the hypertext, the web design, and so forth—of communication. Contemporary scholarship re-works the classical definition of delivery to fit into a contemporary context, and consequently ignores the proto-masculinity embedded into classical delivery and its spread from public speaking to all speaking situations—and the larger consequence of this approach is that proto-masculinity remains embedded and idealized. Focusing specifically on delivery’s history and evolution into a post-human, cyborg technology demonstrates how proto-masculinity has operated within delivery and how proto-masculinity has been spread through delivery instruction. The importance of re-situating delivery within the rhetorical canons affects rhetoric as a whole because it demonstrates that not only is delivery still crucial to rhetoric, and possibly still the most important rhetorical canon, but also because it de-naturalizes the proto-masculine imperatives embedded within delivery and conveyed through delivered language performances.
2

Rhetoricity of History and Narrativity of Life: A Life History Approach to the First-Generation Koreans in Japan

Han, Min Wha 05 August 2009 (has links)
No description available.
3

Kaleidoscopic Community History: Theories of Databased Rhetorical History-Making

Giroux, Amy Larner 01 January 2014 (has links)
To accurately describe the past, historians strive to learn the cultural ideologies of the time and place they study so their interpretations are situated in the context of that period and not in the present. This exploration of historical context becomes critical when researching marginalized groups, as evidence of their rhetorics and cultural logics are usually submerged within those of the dominant society. This project focuses on how factors, such as rhetor/audience perspective, influence cross-cultural historical interpretation, and how a community history database can be designed to illuminate and affect these factors. Theories of contact zones and rhetorical listening were explored to determine their applicability both to history-making and to the creation of a community history database where cross-cultural, multi-vocal, historical narratives may be created, encountered, and extended. Contact zones are dynamic spaces where changing connections, accommodations, negotiations, and power struggles occur, and this concept can be applied to history-making, especially histories of marginalized groups. Rhetorical listening focuses on how perspective influences understanding the past, and listening principles are crucial to both historians and the consumers of history. Perspectives are grounded in cultural ideologies, and rhetorical listening focuses on how tropes, such as race and gender, describe and shape these perspectives. Becoming aware of tropes-both of self and other-can bring to view the commonalities and differences between cultures, and allow a better opportunity for cross-cultural understanding. Rhetorical listening steers the historian and the consumer of history towards looking at who is writing the history, and how both the rhetor and the audience's perspective may affect the outcome. These theories of contact zones and rhetorical listening influenced the design of the project database and website by bringing perspective to the forefront. The visualization of rhetor/audience tropes in conjunction with the co-creation of history were designed to help foster cross-cultural understanding.
4

Only God Knows the Opposition We Face: The Rhetoric of Nineteenth Century Free Methodist Women’s Quest for Ordination

Mesaros-Winckles, Christy Ellen 23 July 2012 (has links)
No description available.
5

The Last Stone is Just the Beginning: A Rhetorical Biography of Washington National Cathedral

Morales, Teresa F 18 April 2013 (has links)
Washington National Cathedral sits atop Mt. St. Alban’s hill in Washington, D.C. declaring itself the nation’s cathedral and spiritual home for the nation. The idea of a national church serving national purposes was first envisioned by L’Enfant in the District’s original plan. Left aside in the times of nation building, the idea of a national church slumbered until 1893 when a group of Episcopalians petitioned and received a Congressional charter to begin a church and school in Washington, D.C. The first bishop of Washington, Henry Y. Satterlee, began his bishopric with the understanding that this cathedral being built by the Protestant Episcopal Church Foundation was to be a house of prayer for all people. Using Jasinksi’s constructivist orientation to reveal the one hundred year rhetorical history defining what constitutes a “national cathedral” within the narrative paradigm first established by Walter Fisher, this work utilizes a rhetorical biographical approach to uncover the various discourses of those speaking of and about the Cathedral. This biographical approach claims that Washington National Cathedral possesses an ethos that differentiates the national cathedral from the Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul even though the two names refer to the same building. The WNC ethos is one that allows a constant “becoming” of a national cathedral, and this ability to “become” allows for a rhetorical voice of the entity we call Washington National Cathedral. Four loci of rhetorical construction weave through this dissertation in the guiding question of how the Cathedral rhetorically created and how it sustains itself as Washington National Cathedral: rhetoric about the Cathedral, the Cathedral as rhetoric, the Cathedral as context, and Cathedral Dean Francis Sayre, Jr. as synecdoche with the Cathedral. This dissertation is divided into eight rhetorical moments of change that take the idea of a national church from L’Enfant’s 1791 plan of the City through the January 2013 announcement allowing same-sex weddings at the Cathedral and Obama’s second inaugural prayer service. The result of this rhetorical exploration is a more nuanced understanding of the place and how it functions in an otherwise secular society for which there is no precedent for the establishment of a national cathedral completely separated from the national government. The narrative strains that wind through Cathedral discourse create a braid of text, context, and moral imperative that ultimately allows for the unique construction of Washington National Cathedral, a construction of what defines “national” created entirely by the Cathedral.
6

Being and Otherness: Conceptualizing Embodiment in Africana Existentialist Discourse (<i>The Bluest Eye</i>, <i>The Fire Next Time</i>, and <i>Black Skin, White Masks</i>)

Brownlee, Jonathan J. 28 August 2020 (has links)
No description available.
7

Implicit corporate political activity and elite formation

Ometto, Maria Paola Di Sessa de Luca 25 August 2014 (has links)
Submitted by Maria Paola Ometto (paolaometto@hotmail.com) on 2014-10-02T03:18:59Z No. of bitstreams: 1 OMETTO, MP 2014 Implicit Corporate Political Activity and Elite Formation.pdf: 900307 bytes, checksum: 79735858f1d84de1cf2b623c0149cf16 (MD5) / Rejected by PAMELA BELTRAN TONSA (pamela.tonsa@fgv.br), reason: Bom dia Maria Paola. Conforme as Normas APA/ABNT, é necessário fazer alguns ajustes para que possamos dar andamento ao seu processo. *A numeração das paginas devem aparecer a partir do sumário. *Terceira folha deve ser a ficha catalográfica; *Quarta folha deve ser a composição da Banca; *Quinta folha - agradecimento (inglês) a palavra deve estar centralizada na folha. *Sexta folha deve ser o Abstract (a palavra deve estar centralizada) *Sétima folha - deve conter o resumo em português (a palavra deve estar centralizada). Em normas é necessário que tenham 2 línguas, neste caso inglês e deve ter o português. Qualquer duvida estamos a disposição. Pâmela Tonsa 3799-7852 on 2014-10-02T10:33:31Z (GMT) / Submitted by Maria Paola Ometto (paolaometto@hotmail.com) on 2014-10-02T15:39:43Z No. of bitstreams: 1 OMETTO, MP 2014 Implicit Corporate Political Activity and Elite Formation.pdf: 906209 bytes, checksum: 6c651af23b68230e19ad207b18e95728 (MD5) / Rejected by PAMELA BELTRAN TONSA (pamela.tonsa@fgv.br), reason: Boa tarde Maria Paola, Infelizmente imprimi a folha e realmente esta em azul o testo do RESUMO. Verifique o titulo RESUMO e o texto, existe diferença. Todo deve estar em PRETO. Favor submeter novamente. Att, Pâmela Tonsa 3799-7852 on 2014-10-06T19:53:30Z (GMT) / Submitted by Maria Paola Ometto (paolaometto@hotmail.com) on 2014-10-07T16:28:54Z No. of bitstreams: 1 OMETTO, MP 2014 Implicit Corporate Political Activity and Elite Formation.pdf: 905981 bytes, checksum: c85c9334e69eb77503315b325c19bbea (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by PAMELA BELTRAN TONSA (pamela.tonsa@fgv.br) on 2014-10-07T17:10:22Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 OMETTO, MP 2014 Implicit Corporate Political Activity and Elite Formation.pdf: 905981 bytes, checksum: c85c9334e69eb77503315b325c19bbea (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2014-10-07T18:51:29Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 OMETTO, MP 2014 Implicit Corporate Political Activity and Elite Formation.pdf: 905981 bytes, checksum: c85c9334e69eb77503315b325c19bbea (MD5) Previous issue date: 2014-08-25 / In this thesis, we analyze how a progressive business elite created the civil society organization Rede Nossa São Paulo (RNSP), achieving significant institutional changes, thus enabling the elite’s consolidation in the political sphere. The research yielded three articles. The first article discusses how RNSP became a strong political actor in the City of São Paulo and also in Brazil. To address this issue, we applied historical constructs to show how RNSP used history to become a central actor in the political sphere. In the second paper, we complement corporate political activity (CPA) theory by adding a new construct, implicit corporate political activity (ICPA), which conceptualizes how business elites together with civil society organizations can influence government. Since government, corporations and civil society organizations now have blurred boundaries; we understand that this concept is extremely important in drawing attention and creating new avenues for research in this novel environment. In the final article, we show the micro foundations of ICPA. Specifically, how business elites and corporations influence RNSP and, indirectly, government. Concluding, we contribute to the literature on how business influences government and the public sphere indirectly, through civil society organizations. Theoretically, we illuminate the literature of institutional theory, history, and power. / Nesta tese, analisamos como a elite empresarial progressista criou a organização da sociedade civil Rede Nossa São Paulo (RNSP), alcançando mudanças institucionais significativas, permitindo assim a consolidação da elite na esfera política. A pesquisa resultou em três artigos. O primeiro artigo discute como a RNSP se tornou um forte ator político na cidade de São Paulo e também no Brasil. Para abordar esta questão, mostramos como a RNSP usou a história retórica para se tornar um ator central na esfera política. No segundo artigo, propomos o conceito de atividade política corporativa implícita (ICPA), complementar a atividade política corporativa. Conceituamos ICPA como elites empresariais em conjunto com organizações da sociedade civil agindo para influenciar o governo. Com os limites entre o governo, as empresas e organizações da sociedade civil difusos; entendemos que este conceito é extremamente importante para chamar a atenção e criar novos caminhos para a pesquisa sobre a influência das empresas no governo. No último artigo, mostramos os micro fundamentos da ICPA. Especificamente, como as elites empresariais e corporações influenciam a RNSP e, indiretamente, o governo. Concluindo, contribuímos para a literatura sobre a influência das empresas no governo e na esfera pública indiretamente, por meio de organizações da sociedade civil. Teoricamente, estendemos a literatura de teoria institucional, história e poder.
8

"Nowhere is Straight Work More Effective:" Women's Participation in Self-Culture

Poland, Bailey M. 20 May 2021 (has links)
No description available.

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