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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.
11

Performing whiteness; representing otherness : Hugh Tracey and African music

Coetzee, Paulette June January 2015 (has links)
This thesis provides a critical study of texts associated with Hugh Tracey (1903–1977). Tracey is well-known for his work in African music studies, particularly for his major contribution to the recorded archive of musical sound in sub-Saharan Africa and his founding of the International Library of African Music (ILAM) in 1954. My reading of him is informed by a postcolonial perspective, whiteness studies and African scholarship on ways in which constructions of African identity and tradition have been shaped by the colonial archive. In my view, Tracey was part of a mid-twentieth century movement which sought to marshal positive representations of traditional African culture in the interest of maintaining and strengthening colonial rule. While his recording project may have fostered inclusion through creating spaces for indigenous musicians to be heard, it also functioned to promote racist exclusion in the manner of its production, distribution and claims to expertise. Moreover, his initial strategy for ILAM’s sustainability targeted colonial government and industry as primary clients, with the promise that promoting traditional music as a means of entertainment and self-expression for black subjects and workers would ease administration and reduce conflict. I believe that it is important to acknowledge and interrogate the problematic racial attitudes and practices associated with the history of Tracey’s archive – not to undermine its significance in any way but to allow it to be better understood and used more productively in the future.
12

The use of hair as a manifestation of cultural and gender identity in the works of Tracey Rose

Meyerov, Lee-At 08 April 2008 (has links)
ABSTRACT This research report investigates the manifestation of hair as a symbol of cultural and gender identity as is seen in selected works of South African artist Tracey Rose, whose usage of her own culturally specific hair and body serves as metaphor through which she critically engages with issues surrounding the gendered and racialized body. The report will explore the ways in which Rose both in her video piece Ongetiteld (1996) and her performance video installation Span II (1997) challenges and subsequently deconstructs the rigidly defined monoliths of ‘Woman’, ‘femininity’, and the racially constructed category of ‘Coloured’, assigned and imposed on her during the Apartheid era. Rose’s work, highlighting the extent to which the conceptualization of gender and racial identity are bound and read off the body’s corporeality, relates to my own artistic practice, whereby I examine the metaphorical functioning of skin, as a corporeal ‘text’ and parchment, facilitating the inscription of my own cultural, religious and linguistic Otherness.
13

Aksie en kontemplasie? : op weg na mistiek-profetiese gereformeerde spiritualiteit in dialoog met David Tracy en K.H. Miskotte

Hansen, Leonard Dirk 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (DTh (Systematic Theology and Ecclesiology))—Stellenbosch University, 2008. / This study concerns the relationship between mysticism and social action (widely understood, as including political and economic action), or as it was formulated for centuries in the Christian tradition: the relationship between action and contemplation. Chapter 1 differentiates between different forms of Christian spirituality. Also, the reason for this study is stated: the apparent search amongst certain contemporary Reformed Christians for a more contemplative spirituality, while preserving the socially and politically involved character of Reformed spirituality. Chapter 2 investigates the origins and evelopment of contemplation (or “mysticism”, as it is commonly called today). Taking into account the history of the meaning of the term “mysticism”, a contemporary definition is sought that would address the changes, distortions and misconceptions that have developed over the centuries. A major focus in Chapter 2 is the relationship between action and contemplation/mysticism. This issue is reviewed with reference to its history, from patristic times until approximately the time of the Counter-reformation. The extent to which distortions regarding this issue have occurred, as well as possible subsequent corrections of these, are also examined in this chapter. In Chapter 3, a short overview is given of the recent revaluation and incorporation of mysticism alongside a commitment to social action in the theology of a number of prominent “mystical-political” Roman-Catholic theologians of the 20th century. The focus then shifts to the revaluation of mysticism and the reformulation of mystical-prophetic theology in the theological project of the 20th-century North American theologian David Tracy. Of especial importance is his use of the Ricoeurian methodology of “suspicion and retrieval” to retrieve and incorporate the Christian mystical tradition into his own theology, as this forms the ethodological basis for the next chapter. Chapter 4 takes the form of an “exercise of suspicion and retrieval” with a view to find and retrieve possible mystical elements in the Reformed tradition via an investigation into the history, way of life and spirituality of the Roman Catholic contemplative monastic order of the Carthusians – specifically their tradition of manibus praedicare and the manifestations thereof. Chapter 5 focuses on the theology and spirituality of the Dutch theologian K.H. (Kornelis) Miskotte as an example of a Reformed theologian in whose theology elements of both contemplation/mysticism and social action are present. Contrary to the views of many researchers into Miskotte’s theology (as well as Miskotte himself) it is concluded that: In light of the recent, sometimes retrieved, views of mysticism by present-day scholars of mysticism – as well as those of the mystical-political theologians, especially David Tracy – Miskotte’s spirituality can indeed be seen as a form of mystical-political spirituality. This is true despite some profound differences between the mystical-prophetic theologians and Tracy on the one hand and Miskotte on the other – differences that, however, stamp Miskotte’s mystical-political spirituality as authentically Reformed.
14

Legal access to our musical history: an investigation into the copyright implications of archived musical recordings held at the International Library of African Music (ILAM) in South Africa

McConnachie, Boudina January 2009 (has links)
This thesis explores the South African Copyright Act No. 98 of 1978 as it pertains to the archived holdings at the International Library of African Music (ILAM) situated at Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa. The purpose of analysing this law is to advise and assist ILAM in fulfilling royalty payment obligations as stipulated in a contract signed between ILAM and the Smithsonian Global Sound (formally Global Sound Network) in 2001. In order to clearly comprehend the scope of the royalty payment clause in the Smithsonian Institution’s contract with ILAM, this research includes an examination of: the history and nature of South African copyright as a sub-structure of intellectual property; specific internationally documented copyright infringement cases; the recording and documentation practices of Hugh Tracey (ILAM’s founder and director from 1954 to 1977); the contract between Global Sound Network and ILAM; and contentious issues surrounding collective ownership and indigenous knowledge. In conclusion, this research suggests equitable solutions to ILAM’s copyright concerns and proposes the Eastern Cape Music Archiving Project (ECMAP) as a practical vehicle to assist the South African Department of Trade and Industry in implementation of the South African Intellectual Property Amendment Bill (2008) if, and when, it is passed.
15

The forging of modern Broadway Sound Design Techniques amid the Fires of the Rock Musicals in the Late 1960s and 1970s.

Tracey, Timothy 01 January 2015 (has links)
From the ancient Greek theater, through the dawn of the Renaissance, beyond the development of Shakespearean theater, to the Broadway theater boon in the 1920s, sound reinforcement within the theater remained virtually unchanged. Through Broadway's Golden Age, directors and producers relied on architectural acoustics to carry sound throughout the theaters. This is not surprising given that most of the theaters were built in the early 1900s, before the invention of any electric sound reinforcement technology. Moreover, early attempts at amplification in the 1940s yielded dismal results. Eventually, the maturation of the integrated book musical and the invasion of the rock musical in the late 1960s demanded more than architectural acoustics alone could provide. Abe Jacob, the sound designer of Hair and Jesus Christ Superstar, led the efforts to create a modern approach to sound design. Relying on his rock-and-roll touring experience and the introduction of technological advancements within the recording industry, Jacob and others forged a modern approach to sound design specifically within the framework of the Broadway musical, which helped restore the fading industry of the Broadway musical in the late 1960s. These new approaches served well the human irony and concept musicals of the 1970s by Sondheim and other emerging composers. Sound design was critical to the successful mounting of the mega-musicals of the 1980s (Cats, Les Miserables, Starlight Express, The Phantom of the Opera, Miss Saigon, etc.). Now, modern day composers collaborate early in the creation process with sound designers and create original works with the power of modern sound design in mind, such that today, sound design is a fundamental design discipline employed in every Broadway musical–from the initial show concept conversations all the way through opening night.
16

The social biography of ethnomusicological field recordings : eliciting responses to Hugh Tracey's 'The Sound of Africa' series

Lobley, Noel James January 2010 (has links)
This thesis is an ethnographic analysis of a collection of field recordings of music from sub-Saharan Africa: The Sound of Africa series made and published by Hugh Tracey between 1933 and 1973. I analyse the aims, methods, value and potential use of this collection, now held at the International Library of African Music (ILAM), in order to address a gap in the ethnomusicological literature and to begin to develop a critical framework for an evaluation of field recording and aural ethnography. An archival analysis of the collection enables me to trace the scope and intended uses of Tracey’s recordings. Identifying a primary intended audience that has not to date been engaged, I argue for the need to develop a new way to circulate recordings among a source community that has never before been reached through institutional archival practice. I use a small sample of Tracey’s archival Xhosa recordings and develop a method of sound elicitation designed to take the recordings back to urban Xhosa communities in the townships located near ILAM. By circulating archival recordings using local mechanisms in township communities, rather than institutional archival methods, I assess the potential relevance of historical recordings to an urban source community more than fifty years after the recordings were made. Having collected and analysed contemporary Xhosa responses, I consider the limitations and the potential for the recordings to connect with indigenous audiences and generate value. I argue that non-analytical responses to historical recordings may contribute to ethnographic understanding, to people’s own sense of Xhosa identity, and to archiving practice in future. Such responses may help increase our understanding of the relationships between music collectors in the field and the people recorded, whether fifty years ago, today or in future.
17

La broderie dans l’oeuvre de Tracey Emin : piquer, percer, fixer, Jouissance filaire et art de l’intime / Embroidery in the artwork of Tracey Emin : pricking and Fixing, Thread Jouissance and Art of Intimacy

Kool, Carine 19 March 2018 (has links)
Cette recherche propose de rendre compte de l'usage de la broderie en art contemporain dans les oeuvres deTracey Emin, première artiste à avoir exposé le récit des trente-deux premières années de sa vie dans une tentebrodée intitulée Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963-1995. Une analyse de réception de type sémio-anthropologiquede cette oeuvre monumentale met en évidence, dřune part, que la broderie est une écriture contemporaine incluant un geste manuel, une loi textile et une jouissance filaire et, d'autre part, que son effet de présence et son pouvoir narratif en font un art de l'intime.En tant qu'écriture filaire, la broderie est singulière. Ecriture universelle, elle est première chez les peuples sans écriture, elle est sésame social en tant que sampler, elle est historiographique par son potentiel narratif, son statut d'objet de prestige ou de mémorandum. Elle est encore écriture monumentale dans la Tapisserie de Bayeux, autre broderie phénoménale, simultanément manuscrit, témoignage documentaire et oeuvre d'art plastique reconnue.La broderie se fait art de l'intime dans d'autres oeuvres de Tracey Emin, telles ses couvertures, dont la première, Hotel International, incarne le curriculum vitae de l'artiste. Mais l'intime peut s'envisager de plusieurs manières. Or, comme en Angleterre la broderie a été considérée comme un art national dès le VIIe siècle, elle se conçoit aussi comme art de l'intime dans le rapport que les oeuvres brodées d'Emin entretiennent avec celles du passé. Si l'intime est un lien puissant entre le public et l'artiste, en brodant sa vie et son intimité, Tracey Emin a transformé le « personnel est politique » des années 1970 en universel. / This research proposes to account for the use of contemporary art embroidery in the works of Tracey Emin, the first artist to have exhibited the story of the first thirty-two years of her life in an embroidered tent entitled Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963-1995. A semio-anthropological reception analysis of this monumental work highlights, on the one hand, that embroidery is a contemporary writing that includes a manual gesture, a textile law and a thread jouissance and, on the other hand, that its effect of presence and its narrative power make it an art of intimacy.As thread writing, embroidery is a singular one. As universal writing, it is first among people without written language, it is a social open sesame as sampler, it is historiographical thanks to its narrative power, its status as an object of prestige or as a memorandum. It is also a monumental writing in the Bayeux Tapestry, another phenomenal embroidery, simultaneously manuscript, documentary testimony and recognized visual work of art. Embroidery is also an art of intimacy in other works of Tracey Emin, such as her blankets, whose first, Hotel International, embodies the curriculum vitae of the artist. However, intimacy can be considered in many ways.And, as in England embroidery was regarded as a national art from the seventh century onwards, it can thus be conceived as an art of intimacy in the relationship that the embroidered works of Emin maintain with those of the past. If intimacy is a powerful bond between the public and the artist, by embroidering her life and her intimacy, Tracey Emin has transformed the "personal is political" of the 1970s into a universal one
18

Monografias sobre as timbila e a construção do Imperio Portugues em Moçambique / Monographs about timbila and the construction of the Portuguese empire in Moçambique

Oliveira, Arthur Rovida de 30 June 2008 (has links)
Orientador: Osmar Ribeiro Thomaz / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciencias Humanas / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-11T06:03:51Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Oliveira_ArthurRovidade_M.pdf: 4021966 bytes, checksum: 0fc70b67b946b00cf18f3f71ef8a10c5 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2008 / Resumo: A nação e a nacionalidade cultural, tendo-se como destaque o Estado de Moçambique, são temas complexos, porque reúnem uma série de aspectos políticos, históricos e culturais do país e de sua população. Para desenvolver esta pesquisa, escolheu-se como objeto de análise a categoria de canto e dança enunciada por estudiosos dos nativos de Moçambique, presente em monografias antropológicas do período colonial. Canto e dança são unidos numa categoria ocidental de pesquisa, não nativa. Assim, a princípio, questiona-se: como os autores retiram certos aspectos da vida social para escrever sobre canto e dança? Quais temáticas são criadas e delimitadas? Como, numa vida social ampla, definem-se certas categorias de canto e dança? Com isso, procura-se destacar quais representações são constituídas pelos autores da antropologia sobre o contexto da vida no império e sobre qual base material os autores constroem o conhecimento sobre seus pesquisados, fundamentando suas próprias relações de alteridade / Abstract: The nation and cultural nationality, specially in the state of Mozambique, are complex themes, because they take together a series of political, historical and cultural aspects of the country and its population. For this research, the analitical object chosen was the category of chant and dance made by researchers of the natives of Mozambique, present in anthropological monographs made at the colonial period. Chant and dance are taken together in an ocidental category of research, non-native. So, first of all, we may question: how the authors extract some social life aspects to write about chant and dance? Which thematics are created and delimited? How, in a wide social life, are set certain categories of chant and dance? Taking this point, we hope to know more about which representations are constituted by these anthropology authors in the context of imperial life, and what constitutes their own alterity relationships / Mestrado / Mestre em Antropologia Social
19

Women, film, and oceans a/part: the critical humor of Tracey Moffatt, Monica Pellizzari, and Clara Law

Unknown Date (has links)
The politicized use of humor in accented cinema is a tool for negotiating particular formations of identity, such as sexuality, gender, ethnicity, and class. The body of work produced by contemporary women filmmakers working in Australia, specifically Tracey Moffatt, Monica Pellizzari, and Clara Law, illustrates how these directors have employed critical humor as a response to their multiple marginalization as women, Australian, and accented filmmakers. In their works, humor functions as a critical tool to deconstruct the contradictions in dominant discourses as they relate to (neo)colonial, racist, globalized, patriarchal, and displaced pasts and presents. Produced within Australian national cinema, but emerging from experiences of geographical displacements that defy territorial borders, their films illuminate how critical humor can inflect such accepted categories as the national constitution of a cinema, film genre, and questions of exile and diaspora. Critical humor thus consti tutes a cinematic signifying practice able, following Luigi Pirandello's description of umorismo, to decompose the filmic text, and as a tool for an ideological critique of cinema and its role in (re)producing discourses of the nation predicated on the dominant categories of whiteness and masculinity. The study offers a theoretical framework for decoding humor in a film text, focusing on the manipulation of cinematic language, and it provides a model for a criticism that wishes to heighten the counter-hegemonic potential of cinematic texts, by picking up on the humorous, contradictory openings of the text and widening them through a parallel dissociating process. / Finally, critical humor in the accented cinema of women filmmakers like Moffatt, Pellizzari, and Law is shown to constitute a form of translation and negotiation performed between the national, monologic constraints of film production and cinematic language, the heteroglossia of the global imaginaries that have traveled since the beginning with film technology, and the local and diasporic accents informing a filmmaker's unique style and perspective. / by Alessandra Senzani. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2008. / Includes bibliography and filmography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2008. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
20

An investigation of excess as symptomatic of Neo-Baroque identified in the work of selected South African artists

Greyvenstein, Lisa 22 August 2013 (has links)
This research investigates the Neo-Baroque aesthetic of excess in contemporary South African art, and explores reasons for the emergence of this style. It investigates artists who use their bodies as a site of resistance, to contest or reconstruct the dominant social values which establish differences between bodies to place them within the marginal position of ‘Other’. This investigation relates to post-colonial concerns. The artists’ exploitation of the Neo-Baroque aesthetic of excess as a comment on social concerns reveals a sense of crisis within South African society, similar to the conditions from which the seventeenth century Baroque style evolved. Neo-Baroque aesthetics of excess manifest in a variety of ways, and are particularly evident when artists transgress social boundaries placed on the body through abject and erotic associations. Excess ultimately arises from complexity, as hybrid art forms are created from the combination of media and content found within the art work. / Dissertation (MA)--University of Pretoria, 2012. / Visual Arts / unrestricted

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