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Pentecostals in retreat : changing cultural and religious identitiesGorman, Roger Dale 06 1900 (has links)
This study is about the identity of Coloured Pentecostals living in
Retreat, Western Cape. It concerns the effects which social change has upon boundary markers and worldview. It uses Robert Schreiter's semiotic approach to culture. Schreiter says that social change along with boundary markers and worldview are the basis for changing identities. This study applies Schreiter's approach to a case study to see if it will work. The study considers the traditional Coloured Pentecostal Culture's identity represented by the older generation of Pentecostals in Retreat. It then considers some responses to those traditional boundary markers and worldview given primarily
by the younger generation of Pentecostals. It then suggests some possible solutions to the problems which have been identified as the reasons for the changing cultural and religious identity of the Coloured Pentecostal Culture . / Missiology / M.Th. (Missiology)
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The impact of social change on social dominance theory and social identity theoryMaseko, Sibusiso 03 1900 (has links)
Social dominance theory (SDT) and Social identity theory (SIT) are theoretical frameworks that have been conceptualised and examined in societies that predominantly have stable intergroup relations. The present study sought to examine both theoretical frameworks in a context that is undergoing social change. Three cross-sectional studies were conducted amongst black and white students from a South African University. Results indicated that there was no difference in the desire for group-based inequality (i.e. social dominance orientation, SDO) amongst groups affected by social change, when group status was measured subjectively. Yet, when group status was determined sociologically, dominant group members had significantly higher SDO levels. Furthermore, results indicated that the perception of social change had a conditional effect on the relationship between SDO and support for affirmative action amongst white participants, in that when white participants perceived higher in-group status loss, higher SDO levels predicted opposition towards affirmative action. Racial in-group identification had a conditional effect on the relationship between perceived social change and support for affirmative action amongst black participants; when black participants had higher racial in-group identification, greater perception of social change predicted support for affirmative action. Lastly, amongst black participants, hierarchy-attenuating legitimising myths had a conditional effect on the relationship between SDO and support for affirmative action. Specifically, when colourblindness or Ubuntu were endorsed, higher SDO predicted support for affirmative action. However, when these hierarchy-attenuating legitimising myths were rejected, higher SDO predicted opposition towards affirmative action. / Psychology / M.A. (Psychology)
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The challenge of transformation : an analysis of the ethical and strategic need for transformation with special reference to the Employment Equity ActReed, Stephen Graham 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--University of Stellenbosch, 2003. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Since 1994 South Africa has undergone numerous social and political transformations.
Transformation in this country has different meanings for different people, depending on
the individuals perspective. The process of transformation has been slow for some,
particularly those people who are eager to break away from a past, which has denied
them basic individual rights. For others transformation has been too fast and thus a threat
to their status quo. In view of this, transformation must be embraced by all through the
realisation and admission that the apartheid era was inherently unfair to sections of the
population and change must therefore be regarded as the levelling of the playing field.
This study focuses on the generation of inequality, the uprooting of this evil and the
implementation of equity. In addition, this study particularly focuses on how equity can
be implemented in the workplace, why it is important to do so and what are the possible
barriers to successful implementation. I will consider some of the theories that may be
useful in initiating change. Finally, I will discuss the merits of the Employment Equity
Act as legislation to enforce equity in the workplace. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Vanaf 1994, het Suid Afrika verskillende sosiale en politieke veranderings ondergaan.
Hierdie veraderings het verskillende betekenis vir verskillende mense, afhangend van die
individuele se insig. Die proses van veranderings was te stadig vir sommige persone,
veral diegene wie angstig was om weg te breek van die verlede, wat hulle ontneem het
van hulle basiese individuele regte. Vir andere was die veraderings veels te vinning en
was meer 'n bedreiging vir hulle onveranderlike hoë belangrike posisies. Met hierdie
faktor insig, moet veranderings omhels word deur almal se opregte beseffing en
erkenning dat die apartheid jare se alleen regte vir die een groep baie onregverdig was
teenoor die ander groepe, dus moet veranderings aanvaar word as gelykmaking
van alle onreelmatinghede.
Hierdie studie is die fokus gerig op die jare van vasgevangheid in onregverdigheid en dat
hierdie ongeregtigheid kan ontwortel word met die aanbeveling of vervangs van
geregtigheid. Die fokus lê veral klem op hoe om gelyke regte by die werksplekke toe te
pas.
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Cross-cultural stories of race and change: a re-languaging of the public discourse on race and ethnicityUnknown Date (has links)
A progressive discourse on race is impeded by several factors: debates on the reality or unreality of the term race itself; discussions of ethnicity that tend to marginalize a discussion of race; the view by majority members of society that race is a topic for discussion principally by minorities; and the lack of models for non-confrontational public conversations on the subject. In the process, a discussion of racial change rarely enters the discourse beyond brief responses in opinion polls. This study proposed the Race and Change Dialogue Model to facilitate the exploration of how race operates in society on an interpersonal level in everyday lives of people across cultures and how changes in racial attitudes occur over time. Theories of race and ethnicity, language, effective communication strategies, and social change provided a starting point, but a "re-languaging" approach was used to advance the innovative nature of this work. In audiorecorded oral histories for public dissemination and interviews in a documentary series on public television, cross-cultural narrators were provided with a safe rhetorical space to tell their stories and to be heard, and a framework of "racenicity" allowed for the discussion of the intersectionality of race, ethnicity, class, and culture as fused aspects of the same issue. An environment was created that enhanced effective communication of a difficult subject. Despite the challenges that arose in the patterns of talk about racial change, the door has been opened to bring change into the dialogue in a more prominent way that moves the discourse on differences in more productive directions. An alternate model for public discussions on race as "racenicity" was created that has the potential to build coalition in the U.S. and has implications for other societies as well. / by Eloise D. (Kitty) Oliver. / Vita. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2009. / Bibliography: leaves 181-197.
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從邊城到圍城: 香港新界邊境蓮蔴坑村的變遷與客家文化傳承(1898-1997). / From periphery to enclosure: the change of Lin Ma Hang Village and Hakka cultural heritage at the frontier of Hong Kong's New Territories (1898-1997) / 香港新界邊境蓮蔴坑村的變遷與客家文化傳承(1898-1997) / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collection / Cong bian cheng dao wei cheng: Xianggang Xinjie bian jing Lianmakeng Cun de bian qian yu Kejia wen hua chuan cheng (1898-1997). / Xianggang Xinjie bian jing Lianmakeng Cun de bian qian yu Kejia wen hua chuan cheng (1898-1997)January 2011 (has links)
After the return to China, the Hong Kong Government finally decided in January 2008 to reduce the Frontier Closed Area (FCA) coverage from about 2,800 hectares to about 400 hectares and over half of the people residing inside the current FCA are no longer required to have a closed area permit to enter or leave the excised area. For over a century, Lin Ma Hang villagers, especially some Hakka women, can be considered as ambassadors promoting communication between Hong Kong and Shenzhen. They not only witnessed the changing relations between China and Britain, but they also moved between different identities as Chinese, Hakka and Hong Kong people. The history of Lin Ma Hang records the experience of a group of Chinese refugees with Hakka consciousness, mostly with the surname Yip, who lived under British and subsequently Japanese rule and became Hong Kong people after the Second World War. It also highlights the complex and multi-layered nature of Hakka identity. / Emphasis has been placed on the manifestations and material culture of Hakka people, studies into their internal consciousness has not attracted much attention. Lin Ma Hang is a specific case to look into the Hakim psychology in the context of a closed area. Adjacent to the boundary between Hong Kong and the Mainland China, this is an indigenous Hakka-speaking village. For many years during the Qing Dynasty, its villagers had to walk on a bridge that enabled them to reach their farmland located on the other side of the Shenzhen River. However, after the Qing Government's signed unequal treaty, Convention for the Extension of Hong Kong Territory in 1898 which allowed Britain to lease the New Territories, the original village area of Lin Ma Hang was divided into two parts - the Chinese side and the British side, with the Shenzhen River serving as the boundary. Indigenous villagers from Lin Ma Hang, which came under the jurisdiction of Britain, continued to cross this bridge to the Chinese side, just like their forefathers. Such border-crossing practice was maintained even during the 1960s when the Mainland China suffered a famine which led to mass exoduses of people and political and social turmoil such as the Cultural Revolution. Since the 1980s, the entire village has been enclosed by iron fences by the British for security reasons, which posed a formidable obstacle to the villagers' daily lives and travelling to nearby markets, and a psychological imprisonment in the minds of villagers, and their gradual loss of control of their farmland. However, it appears that the spirit of endurance embedded in Hakka culture had enabled them to overcome all types of obstacles and reestablish their confidence to communicate with the outside world, continuing their fight for the opening up of the closed area. / Using Lin Ma Hang Village in Sha Tau Kok, Hong Kong's New Territories as a case study, this thesis gives an historical account of how indigenous villagers living in the border area adjusted to political and social changes following the lease of the New Territories by Britain until Hong Kong's return to China, and how they inherited the Hakka culture through different ways. / With the case study of the Lin Ma Hang Hakka village, this thesis attempts to explore the Hakka culture that has been ignored by Hong Kong people. It signifies how an indigenous village, which was divided up due to political reasons, survives through its unique ways. / 阮志偉. / Adviser: Hok Ming Frederick Cheung; Pui Yin Ho. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 73-04, Section: A, page: . / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2011. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 308-321). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Electronic reproduction. [Ann Arbor, MI] : ProQuest Information and Learning, [201-] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstracts in Chinese and English. / Ruan Zhiwei.
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Cosmetic surgery in post-Mao China: state power, market discourse, and the remaking of the body. / 後毛時代中國的整形美容手術: 國家權力、市場話語與身體的重塑 / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collection / Hou Mao shi dai Zhongguo de zheng xing mei rong shou shu: guo jia quan li, shi chang hua yu yu shen ti de chong suJanuary 2010 (has links)
In the Maoist era, the quest for beauty was regarded as decadent Western bourgeois culture. However, more and more Chinese women have been shopping for a youthful and beautiful appearance by undergoing cosmetic surgery in recent decades. Based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Beijing, China, in 2006--2007, this study examines the phenomenon of the rapidly growing popularity of cosmetic surgery among Chinese women and considers the relationships between the remaking of female body image through cosmetic surgery, the reconstruction of self identity, and the reconfiguration of state power and market forces with the expansion of global consumerism in post-Mao China. The thesis suggests that the alteration of female body features through cosmetic surgery reflects in microcosm the transition of China from a Maoist socialist regime to a post-Maoist consumer society within a few decades, following its own "Chinese characteristics." Therefore, Chinese women's involvement in cosmetic surgery must be understood within the broader historical and socio-political context of China, and also must be seen both as the empowerment of Chinese women and also their ongoing subjugation to men, markets, and the state. / Wen, Hua. / Adviser: Gordon Matthews. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 72-04, Section: A, page: . / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2010. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 392-421). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest Information and Learning Company, [200-] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstract and glossary also in Chinese.
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The experience of home during modernizationDu Plessis, Izak David, 1900- 06 1900 (has links)
The housing problem in South Africa is complicated by the
cultural diversity and the rapidly changing nature of the
population. This indicates a need for research to help to
determine "what appropriate housing is" for various sectors of
the South African population. Social researchers and design
professionals therefore have to combine their efforts to provide
house designs that will be appropriate to the housing needs and
values of a variety of future occupants.
This study focuses on the impact of rapid change in the
sociophysical environment (modernization) on people's experience
of the quality of their relationship with their home
environments. An approach is proposed through which groups of
individuals, who share similar needs and requirements regarding
their housing, can be identified for inclusion in a process of
participatory design. A theoretical framework is developed to
account for the variety of perspectives of participants (users,
researchers and design professionals) in the design process.
Through application of the theoretical framework, a novel
approach to the determination of "what to design for whom" is
developed. The "modernity fit" concept is introduced to describe
the quality of the relationship between people and their housing
in terms of a rating of the modernity of both human and housing
characteristics. It is proposed that the quality of the
relationship or "fit" between the modernity of human
characteristics and the modernity of the physical characteristics
of the house influences people's experience of their houses.
Results of this study indicate that the "modernity fit" concept
opens up new avenues for research to assist in the design of
housing in developing countries. / Psychology / D. Litt. et Phil. (Psychology)
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Pentecostals in retreat : changing cultural and religious identitiesGorman, Roger Dale 06 1900 (has links)
This study is about the identity of Coloured Pentecostals living in
Retreat, Western Cape. It concerns the effects which social change has upon boundary markers and worldview. It uses Robert Schreiter's semiotic approach to culture. Schreiter says that social change along with boundary markers and worldview are the basis for changing identities. This study applies Schreiter's approach to a case study to see if it will work. The study considers the traditional Coloured Pentecostal Culture's identity represented by the older generation of Pentecostals in Retreat. It then considers some responses to those traditional boundary markers and worldview given primarily
by the younger generation of Pentecostals. It then suggests some possible solutions to the problems which have been identified as the reasons for the changing cultural and religious identity of the Coloured Pentecostal Culture . / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / M.Th. (Missiology)
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The impact of social change on social dominance theory and social identity theoryMaseko, Sibusiso 03 1900 (has links)
Social dominance theory (SDT) and Social identity theory (SIT) are theoretical frameworks that have been conceptualised and examined in societies that predominantly have stable intergroup relations. The present study sought to examine both theoretical frameworks in a context that is undergoing social change. Three cross-sectional studies were conducted amongst black and white students from a South African University. Results indicated that there was no difference in the desire for group-based inequality (i.e. social dominance orientation, SDO) amongst groups affected by social change, when group status was measured subjectively. Yet, when group status was determined sociologically, dominant group members had significantly higher SDO levels. Furthermore, results indicated that the perception of social change had a conditional effect on the relationship between SDO and support for affirmative action amongst white participants, in that when white participants perceived higher in-group status loss, higher SDO levels predicted opposition towards affirmative action. Racial in-group identification had a conditional effect on the relationship between perceived social change and support for affirmative action amongst black participants; when black participants had higher racial in-group identification, greater perception of social change predicted support for affirmative action. Lastly, amongst black participants, hierarchy-attenuating legitimising myths had a conditional effect on the relationship between SDO and support for affirmative action. Specifically, when colourblindness or Ubuntu were endorsed, higher SDO predicted support for affirmative action. However, when these hierarchy-attenuating legitimising myths were rejected, higher SDO predicted opposition towards affirmative action. / Psychology / M.A. (Psychology)
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Documentary Photography as a Tool of Social Change: reading a shifting paradigm in the representation of HIV/AIDS in Gideon Mendel's photographyNesbitt Hills, Christine January 2011 (has links)
Gideon Mendel’s ongoing photographic work documenting HIV/ AIDS, first started in 1993, has seen shifts not only in production but also in the author’s representation of his subjects. This paper looks at three texts of Mendel’s work, taken from three different stages of Mendel’s career and reads the shifting paradigm taking Mendel from photojournalist to activist armed with documentary photography as a tool of social change. This thesis explores how different positionings as an author and different representations of the subjects, living and dying, with HIV/AIDS influences meaning-making, and what that means for documentary photography as a tool of social change.
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