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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

Symbols of Authenticity: Challenging the Static Imposition of Minority Identities through the Case Study of Contemporary Inuit Art

St-Onge, Colette G. 14 December 2011 (has links)
This thesis examines the use and promotion of shamanic themes in contemporary Canadian Inuit art, being the principle venue in which Inuit identity is presented to non-Inuit in Canada and internationally. The image of Inuit identity promoted through the arts since the mid-twentieth century is arguably the product of non-Inuit state authorities, but Inuit artists themselves are increasingly asserting their voice in their arts and crafts, thereby challenging the image of Inuit identity to non-Inuit. This project first problematizes the history of contemporary Inuit art, where the construction of Inuit identity was heavily prescribed, and then turns to the shifts occurring in Inuit art to highlight the process of identity construction and the agency of Inuit within it. In the process, this project challenges the static conceptualization of minority identities in diverse societies by both state authorities and majority populations. This dissertation contends that Inuit art and identity are fluid concepts and there must be an emphasis made to permit for their fluidity, to avoid affirming a static minority identity in a diverse society, whether in the public or state forums. Consequently, the effort to assert the authenticity of these intangible concepts is contrary to the ideals of diversity and equality promoted in Canada.
2

Symbols of Authenticity: Challenging the Static Imposition of Minority Identities through the Case Study of Contemporary Inuit Art

St-Onge, Colette G. 14 December 2011 (has links)
This thesis examines the use and promotion of shamanic themes in contemporary Canadian Inuit art, being the principle venue in which Inuit identity is presented to non-Inuit in Canada and internationally. The image of Inuit identity promoted through the arts since the mid-twentieth century is arguably the product of non-Inuit state authorities, but Inuit artists themselves are increasingly asserting their voice in their arts and crafts, thereby challenging the image of Inuit identity to non-Inuit. This project first problematizes the history of contemporary Inuit art, where the construction of Inuit identity was heavily prescribed, and then turns to the shifts occurring in Inuit art to highlight the process of identity construction and the agency of Inuit within it. In the process, this project challenges the static conceptualization of minority identities in diverse societies by both state authorities and majority populations. This dissertation contends that Inuit art and identity are fluid concepts and there must be an emphasis made to permit for their fluidity, to avoid affirming a static minority identity in a diverse society, whether in the public or state forums. Consequently, the effort to assert the authenticity of these intangible concepts is contrary to the ideals of diversity and equality promoted in Canada.
3

Symbols of Authenticity: Challenging the Static Imposition of Minority Identities through the Case Study of Contemporary Inuit Art

St-Onge, Colette G. 14 December 2011 (has links)
This thesis examines the use and promotion of shamanic themes in contemporary Canadian Inuit art, being the principle venue in which Inuit identity is presented to non-Inuit in Canada and internationally. The image of Inuit identity promoted through the arts since the mid-twentieth century is arguably the product of non-Inuit state authorities, but Inuit artists themselves are increasingly asserting their voice in their arts and crafts, thereby challenging the image of Inuit identity to non-Inuit. This project first problematizes the history of contemporary Inuit art, where the construction of Inuit identity was heavily prescribed, and then turns to the shifts occurring in Inuit art to highlight the process of identity construction and the agency of Inuit within it. In the process, this project challenges the static conceptualization of minority identities in diverse societies by both state authorities and majority populations. This dissertation contends that Inuit art and identity are fluid concepts and there must be an emphasis made to permit for their fluidity, to avoid affirming a static minority identity in a diverse society, whether in the public or state forums. Consequently, the effort to assert the authenticity of these intangible concepts is contrary to the ideals of diversity and equality promoted in Canada.
4

Symbols of Authenticity: Challenging the Static Imposition of Minority Identities through the Case Study of Contemporary Inuit Art

St-Onge, Colette G. January 2012 (has links)
This thesis examines the use and promotion of shamanic themes in contemporary Canadian Inuit art, being the principle venue in which Inuit identity is presented to non-Inuit in Canada and internationally. The image of Inuit identity promoted through the arts since the mid-twentieth century is arguably the product of non-Inuit state authorities, but Inuit artists themselves are increasingly asserting their voice in their arts and crafts, thereby challenging the image of Inuit identity to non-Inuit. This project first problematizes the history of contemporary Inuit art, where the construction of Inuit identity was heavily prescribed, and then turns to the shifts occurring in Inuit art to highlight the process of identity construction and the agency of Inuit within it. In the process, this project challenges the static conceptualization of minority identities in diverse societies by both state authorities and majority populations. This dissertation contends that Inuit art and identity are fluid concepts and there must be an emphasis made to permit for their fluidity, to avoid affirming a static minority identity in a diverse society, whether in the public or state forums. Consequently, the effort to assert the authenticity of these intangible concepts is contrary to the ideals of diversity and equality promoted in Canada.
5

L'eau de l'art contemporain : une dynamique d'une esthétique écosophique / Water of Art : a dynamic of ecosophical aesthetics

Marty, Patrick 19 December 2014 (has links)
L’eau est porteuse d’aspects différents de consciences, tout en étant un espéranto planétaire. Doit-on parler des artistes de l’eau ? ou bien de l’eau des artistes ? Quel que soit le point de vue que l’on considère, il se dégage une synergie de pensées oeuvrant à une réflexion consensuelle et paradigmatique. Cette recherche propose une nouvelle lecture de l’interaction de l’élément naturel avec la place qu’il occupe dans l’art contemporain ; comment l’eau dans l’art contemporain devient, grâce à sa puissance évocatrice, l’Eau de l’Art, une source inépuisable d’adaptabilité transculturelle qui se fait l’écho d’une nécessaire métamorphose. L’eau est devenu un médium parmi tant d’autres. L'eau, matière naturelle par excellence, se retrouve utilisée indifféremment par un peu tous les courants artistiques actuels notamment dans des vidéos, des performances, des sculptures, en architecture ou dans des expériences à la frontière de l’art et des sciences cognitives. On peut examiner trois aspects de la culture de l'eau : en tant que vecteur à la fois d'une culture enracinée, et d'une éthique de l'Universel commun, la force symbolique de l'eau dans l'histoire de l’art, et l'actualité écologique, scientifique et psychologique. L’eau couvre tous les champs du possible, et rend accessible les moindres recoins de la pensée, aussi bien la part d’ombre que la lumière de la psyché humaine. Elle accompagne et interagit sur les non dits des sociétés, car elle contient leurs savoirs ; elle est la matrice de leur philosophie, leur sociabilité, leur géographie (compréhension de l’espace et des milieux de vie), leur communication, leur histoire, leur langage. L’Eau de l’Art dynamise ainsi une esthétique écosophique en puisant dans la poésie du temps. / Water is a messenger of various aspects of consciousness, while being a global Esperanto. Should we talk about artists of water? Or the water of artists? Whatever point of view one considers, a synergy of thoughts emerges involving a consensual and paradigmatic vision. This research proposes a new reading of the interaction of the natural element with its role in contemporary art; how water in contemporary art becomes, with its evocative power, Water of Art, an inexhaustible source of crosscultural adaptability that echoes a necessary metamorphosis. Water has become a medium among many others. Water, a natural material par excellence, is used interchangeably by almost all the current artistic trends, including video, performance, sculpture, architecture and experiences on the frontier of art and cognitive science. There are three aspects of the culture of water: as a vector of both an ingrained culture and the Universal ethic; the symbolic force of water in art history; and the ecological, scientific and psychological information. Water covers all possible fields, and allows access to every corner of the mind, the dark side as well as the light of the human psyche. It supports and interacts on the unspoken aspects of society because it contains their knowledge; it is the matrix of their philosophy, their sociability, their geography (understanding of space and living environments), communication, history, language. Therefore, Water of Art adds a dynamic to ecosophical aesthetics in drawing from the poetics of time.

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