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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

The Commodification of Everything: Disneyfication and Filipino American Narratives of Globalization and Diaspora

Puente, Lorenzo Alexander Lero January 2014 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Min H. Song / This dissertation examines how contemporary Filipino American novels narrate the experiences of immigrant Filipino workers in the US in the context of neoliberal globalization. In particular, I analyze how these novels depict neoliberal global capitalism's re-ordering of urban and suburban spaces in order to create safe spaces for consumption, and the impact of such re-ordering on immigrant Filipino service workers. This re-ordering of space, based on urban management principles pioneered by Disney Corporation that have become dominant across the US and in other places like the Philippines, has widened the gulf between those who have the means to partake of consumption and those who do not. The dissertation argues that the contemporary Filipino American novels under study perform the cultural task of capturing the disturbances brought about by the dizzying shifts in the nature of work, understanding of self, affiliation, and the world, and of reflecting back to their readers their personal and social costs. Chapter One traces the roots of Disneyfication to the world's fairs of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, highlighting the imperialist legacy imbricated in the Disney theme parks' nativist and anti-poor tendencies. I argue that such bias underpin the strategies of Disneyfication that has dominated the US urban landscape beginning in the 1970s. Chapter Two analyzes Jessica Hagedorn's two novels on the Philippines, Dogeaters and Dream Jungle, focusing on her literary representation of the Marcos dictatorship's attempt to use the strategies of Disneyfication to cover over the regime's violent exploitation of its own people in connivance with the then US-dominated global capitalism. Chapter Three discusses how Han Ong's Fixer Chao depicts the transformation of the subjectivity of an immigrant Filipino service worker against the background of New York City's gentrification in the 1990s. Ong uses the motifs of fragmentation, displacement, and conflation of moral good and material goods to present a Filipino American critique of neoliberal global capitalism's ethos of consumerism. Finally, Chapter Four studies Brian Ascalon Roley's American Son and Evelina Galang's One Tribe in terms of the novels' depiction of the immigrant Filipino workers' experience of the strategies of exclusion and control. Both novels delineate formal and informal means of surveillance targeted at Filipino immigrant workers, highlighting the way immigrant Filipino families and communities discipline their members, in particular the young females, to argue for assimilation into the Disneyfied mainstream American society and culture. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2014. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: English.
2

Minding the Gap: Uncovering the Underground's Role in the Formation of Modern London, 1855-1945

Dodson, Danielle K. 01 January 2016 (has links)
My research examines how the London Underground – the first subway in the world - provided new public spaces and forms of mobility that redefined how Londoners interacted in, moved through, and imaged the city. Perhaps nothing embodies the Underground’s iconic status in London quite as completely as the phrase, “Mind the Gap.” This phrase, which originally referred to the gap between the train and the platform at Embankment station on the Northern line, has since become an enduringly popular symbol of London in the minds of travelers and visitors. The fact that a behavioral command about how to move through Underground space has become synonymous with visiting London suggests the deep connections between spatial behaviors and identity in the modern city. People had to be taught how to “Mind the Gap” – and railway officials were never completely able to control the ways in which people used, traveled through, and imagined these spaces. Illuminating these tensions between railway technicians and ordinary passengers demonstrates how the Underground provided a new type of space in which men and women from different classes and backgrounds could assert claims to freedom of movement within the city. Aside from the gap between station platforms and Underground trains, this cultural history of the Underground also reveals how Londoners negotiated and bridged other important gaps - between rich and poor, men and women, and concepts of what constituted being modern or backwards, progressive or dangerous - as they embraced this public space as a part of their everyday lives. My dissertation interweaves works of art and fiction, literary scholarship, and elements of geography and sociology into a cultural history of London’s transport. Though it was owned and operated by a series of private companies throughout the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, the Underground offered a relatively affordable means of traversing the capitol for Londoners of all classes and backgrounds, and therefore the spaces of the Underground network (stations, platforms, and train cars) acted as public spaces where new ideas about democratic order in society were challenged and negotiated. My dissertation will bring a new perspective to studies of urban history by using interactions within the Tube to demonstrate how modernity was experienced and given meaning through particular spatial practices. I argue that the Underground helped challenge and redefine urban identities in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, particularly for women.
3

Reconfiguring the universe : the contest for time and space in the Roman imperial cults and 1 Peter

Wan, Wei Hsien January 2016 (has links)
Evaluations of the stance of 1 Peter toward the Roman Empire have for the most part concluded that its author adopted a submissive or conformist posture toward imperial authority and influence. Recently, however, David Horrell and Travis Williams have argued that the letter engages in a subtle, calculated (“polite”) form of resistance to Rome that has often gone undetected. Nevertheless, discussion of the matter has remained largely focused on the letter’s stance toward specific Roman institutions, such as the emperor, household structures, and the imperial cults. Taking the conversation beyond these confines, the present work examines 1 Peter’s critique of the Empire from a wider angle, looking instead to the letter’s ideology or worldview. Using James Scott’s work to think about ideological resistance against domination, I consider how the imperial cults of Anatolia and 1 Peter offered distinct constructions of time and space—that is, how they envisioned reality differently. Insofar as these differences led to divergent ways of conceiving the social order, they acquired political valences and generated potential for conflict. 1 Peter, I argue, confronted Rome on a cosmic scale with its alternative construal of time and space. For each of the axes of time and space, I first investigate how it was constructed in cultic veneration of the emperor, and then read 1 Peter comparatively in light of the findings. Although both sides employed similar strategies in conceptualizing time and space, they parted ways on fundamental points. We have evidence that the Petrine author consciously, if cautiously, interrogated the imperial imagination at its most foundational levels, and set forth in its place a theocentric, Christological understanding of the world.
4

La Colonización del Tlacauhtli y la Invención del Espacio en el México Colonial

Astorga Poblete, Daniel Esteban January 2015 (has links)
<p>Este trabajo estudia el proceso de invención del espacio en el México colonial durante el siglo XVI y XVII, entendiendo la invención del espacio como la inserción de una conceptualización del entorno ajena a la experiencia de las comunidades indígenas nahuas. Primero se define la idea particular de cosmos, territorio y tierra manejada por los nahuas previo a la llegada española entendida como tlacauhtli, y su conformación mediante los principios de cahuitl (tiempo), ollin (movimiento), nepantla (equilibrio), y tonalli (fuerza) por medio del análisis de documentos prehispánicos y coloniales concernientes a la cosmología nahua. Luego, utilizando la propuesta de Aníbal Quijano sobre la implementación de la matriz colonial de poder en América, se analizan los aspectos de esta matriz en su relación con los procesos de dominación del territorio, motor de la creación del espacio en el México colonial, mediante los procesos de estructuración de los pueblos indígenas coloniales, la economía y el trabajo de la tierra, la deshumanización del espacio mexicano y la cartografía novohispana. Finalmente, se desarrolla la idea de subsistencia de los principios fundamentales del tlacauhtli a pesar de la implementación del concepto de espacio y de la dominación del territorio mexicano por parte de la corona española. En cada ámbito de la matriz, se develan resistencias de la antigua percepción del entorno nahua frente a los cambios impulsados por el proceso colonial.</p> / Dissertation
5

Identificación de oportunidades : de desarrollo inmobiliario en Barrio Matta Sur

Urrutia Cocco, Camilo January 2019 (has links)
Tesis para optar al Grado de Magíster en Dirección y Administración de Proyectos Inmobiliarios / Se trata de intereses ejercidos hacia el mismo espacio urbano. Tanto patrimonio como mercado inmobiliario corresponden a áreas de estudio confrontadas, situación bastante lógica si piensa en ciertos grupos patrimoniales que preservan sus construcciones, versus aquellos preocupados por la búsqueda de oportunidades de desarrollo. Al aplicar una protección normativa a un determinado barrio, esto conlleva a que exista una serie de restricciones a la producción de obras nuevas, aspecto que complejiza -y muchas veces ahuyenta- los ánimos de ciertos desarrolladores. Sus efectos se reflejaron desde el 3º trimestre del 2016 al revisar una reducción de un 58% de los montos de inversión en la zona frente al mismo periodo en el 2017; y una notoria reducción de permisos ligados a patentes comerciales que ha relegado aquellos emprendimientos de tipo residencial, oficinas y educación. Frente a este comportamiento, el municipio santiaguino propuso no eliminar este tipo de acciones, sino regular la conformación de estas basándose en que este esfuerzo, significa a todas luces un aporte al contexto urbano histórico con el cual dialogar. Esta discusión escala en un contexto en el cual la demanda por vivir en áreas centrales va al alza, pero que reconoce desde el eje MATTA al sur un “territorio de especulación”. A simple vista se piensa en un desincentivo generalizado, toda vez existan tantas restricciones a la edificación continua en 18 metros como restricciones morfológicas en adyacencia a inmuebles de conservación histórica (ICH) que generan saltos en las rentabilidades resultantes. Sin embargo, esto puede ser reconocido como una oportunidad al aplicar estratégicamente los parámetros contenidos en la Zona de Conservación Histórica – E7 (ZCHE7) aprobada el 16 de agosto 2016 por el MINEDUC. La justificación final de esta tesis pretende desmitificar la postura que indica que la protección de los barrios congela su desarrollo inmobiliario, premisa que finalmente, modeló la hipótesis al buscar sus oportunidades dentro de radios acotados. Repensar más acuciosamente los nuevos productos para la zona se convierte en una oportunidad que brinda lineamientos con miras a generar nuevas tipologías y morfologías adaptadas al desarrollo local de barrio. / It’s all about interests exercised to the same urban space. Both heritage and real estate development correspond to study areas that are confronted nowadays, a logical situation if we think about certain heritage groups that preserve their constructions, versus those concerned in searching development opportunities. By applying a regulatory protection to a specific neighborhood, this regulatories lead to a series of restrictions applyed to the production of new urban pieces, an aspect that complicates – and oftently drives away - the spirits of certain developers. Its effects were reflected from the third quarter of 2016, when reviewing a reduction of 58% in investment amounts in the area compared to the same period in 2017; and a notable reduction in permits linked to commercial patents that has relegated residential, office and education ventures. Faced with this behavior, the city council of Santiago proposed not to eliminate this type of actions, but otherwise to regulate the conformation of these inititives, based on the fact that this effort, clearly means a contribution to the historical urban context with which to dialogue. This discussion escalates in a context in which, the demand for living in central areas of Santiago is constinously increasing, but which recognizes from MATTA axis to the south a “territory of speculation”. At first glance we think of a general disincentive, there are both restrictions on continuous building in 18 meters and morphological restrictions in adjacency to historical preservation buildings that generate leaps in the resulting returns. However, this can be recognized as an opportunity to strategically apply the parameters contained in the Historic Conservation Zone - E7 (ZCHE7 in spanish) approved on August 16, 2016 by MINEDUC. The final justification of this thesis aims to demystify the position that indicates that the protection of neighborhoods freezes their real estate development, a premise that finally modeled the hypothesis when looking for opportunities within limited radius. Rethinking new products more acutely for this area becomes an opportunity that provides guidelines that direct the generation of new typologies and morphologies adapted to local neighborhood development.
6

Nouvelles organisations de la distribution urbaine des colis sur le dernier kilomètre : innover par une approche spatiale / Structuring last-mile parcel delivery solutions for urban zones : an innovative spatial approach for urban goods distribution

Ducret, Raphaëlle 19 December 2014 (has links)
Le contexte technologique et socioéconomique favorise la croissance des volumes de colis échangés en France et particulièrement l'augmentation des livraisons dans les villes. Livraisons qui se complexifient sous l'effet des contraintes urbaines, des injonctions de durabilité, des évolutions des attentes des clients. Les prestataires de la distribution urbaine de colis doivent relever les défis économiques, organisationnels, environnementaux et politiques que représente cette mutation de la distribution du dernier kilomètre. Replacer la ville et son organisation spatiale au centre de la création de nouvelles organisations de la distribution et rapprocher l'analyse spatiale des outils et des techniques de gestion du transport de marchandises en ville (TMV), et notamment de la modélisation, peut permettre d'innover. La thèse va développer cette posture, jusque-là délaissée par les recherches en TMV. Une analyse détaillée de la nature des relations entre forme urbaine, organisations spatiale et TMV va être proposée. A partir de ces résultats, les premiers éléments d'une modélisation spatiale du TMV au service de la création d'un outil d'aide à la décision capable de segmenter la ville en zones différenciées en fonction de leurs caractéristiques spatiales, socioéconomiques et politiques et d'adapter les solutions de livraison par zones seront proposés. / With the spread of new technologies and the advent of economic and social changes, the volume of parcels has grown in France. Parcel deliveries in cities have similarly experienced an important increase. Deliveries have become more and more complex because of changing client patterns, urban constraints and cities' concerns for sustainability. The growing complexity of the ‘last mile' delivery poses economic, organizational, environmental and political challenges to parcel providers. Putting the spatial organization of cities back at the heart of the creation of new logistics organizations and integrating spatial studies to urban logistics techniques and tools, in particular in modelling, can be means of innovation. Until now spatial studies have been largely under-used in UF. This study will provide an in-depth analysis of the relationships between urban spatial organization, urban form and UF. Based on those results, the thesis provides the first elements of a spatial urban freight modelling approach. The modelling approach will enable the creation of a decision support tool able to identify homogeneous urban zones based on urban form, economic and political characteristics in order to offer the most suitable delivery solution to each zone of a city.
7

Using Digital Mapping Techniques to Rapidly Document Vulnerable Historical Landscapes in Coastal Louisiana: Holt Cemetery Case Study

Moore, Alahna 18 May 2018 (has links)
This thesis outlines a technique for rapid documentation of historic sites in volatile cultural landscapes. Using Holt Cemetery as an exemplary case study, a workflow was developed incorporating RTK terrain survey, UAS aerial imagery, photogrammetry, GIS, and smartphone data collection in order to create a multifaceted database of the material and spatial conditions, as well as the patterns of use, that exist at the cemetery. The purpose of this research is to create a framework for improving the speed of data creation and increasing the accessibility of information regarding threatened cultural resources. It is intended that these processes can be scaled and adapted for use at any site, and that the products generated can be utilized by researchers, resource management professionals, and preservationists. In utilizing expedited methods, this thesis specifically advocates for documentation of sites that exist in coastal environments and are facing imminent destruction due to environmental degradation.

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