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"The Problem of Amusement": Trouble in the New Negro NarrativeRodney, Mariel January 2016 (has links)
This dissertation examines black writers' appropriations of blackface minstrelsy as central to the construction of a New Negro image in the early twentieth century U.S. Examining the work of artists who were both fiction writers and pioneers of the black stage, I argue that blackface, along with other popular, late-nineteenth century performance traditions like the cakewalk and ragtime, plays a surprising and paradoxical role in the self-consciously “new” narratives that come to characterize black cultural production in the first decades of the twentieth century. Rather than rejecting minstrelsy as antithetical to the New Negro project of forging black modernity, the novelists and playwrights I consider in this study—Zora Neale Hurston, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and James Weldon Johnson—adapted blackface and other popular performance traditions in order to experiment with narrative and dramatic form. In addition to rethinking the relationship between print and performance as modes of refashioning blackness, my project also charts an alternative genealogy of black cultural production that emphasizes the New Negro Movement as a cultural formation that precedes the Harlem Renaissance and anticipates its concerns.
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A Comparison of Current Anuran Monitoring Methods with Emphasis on the Accuracy of Automatic Vocalization Detection SoftwareEldridge, Jacob Douglas 01 December 2011 (has links)
Currently, a variety of methods are available to monitor anurans, and little standardization of methods exists. New methods to monitor anurans have become available over the past twenty years, including PVC pipe arrays used for tree frog capture and Automated Digital Recording Systems (ADRS) used to remotely monitor calling activity. In addition to ADRS, machine-learning computer software, automated vocalization recognition software (AVRS), has been developed to automatically detect vocalizations within digital sound recordings. The use of a combination of ADRS and AVRS shows the promise to reduce the number of people, time, and resources needed for an effective call survey program. However, little research exists that uses the described tools for wildlife monitoring, especially for anuran monitoring.
In the study, there were two problems addressed relating to AVRS. The first was the poorly understood relationship between auditory survey methods and physical survey methods. I tested this problem by using current auditory monitoring methods, ADRS and the AVRS Song Scope© (v.3.1), alongside more traditional physical monitoring methods that included drift fences, a PVC pipe array, and visual encounter transects. No significant relationship between physical and auditory community population measures was found. Auditory methods were also effective in the detection of call characteristic differences between urban and rural locations, further suggesting an influence of noise pollution. The second problem addressed was the call identification errors found in auditory survey methods. I examined the influence of treatments including the ADRS location, listener group, species, and season on the error rates of the AVRS Song Scope© (v.3.1) and groups of human listeners. Computer error rates were higher than human listeners, yet less affected by the treatments. Both studies suggested that AVRS was a viable method to monitor anuran populations, but the choice of methods should be dependent upon the species of interest and the objectives of the study.
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"This damned business of colour" : passing in African American novels and memoirs /Negrea, Irina C. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Lehigh University, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 222-230).
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Puffball and The handmaid's tale : the influence of pregnancy on the construction of female identityBetts, Lenore 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--University of Stellenbosch, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This thesis uses an analysis of Fay Weldon's Puffball and Margaret Atwood's The
Handmaid's Tale to explore the construction of identity, particularly female identity.
It takes into consideration the influence of both biology and culture on identity and
explores how, within the context of the patriarchal societies depicted by the novels,
female identity is closely linked to reproductive function. It examines how the
construction of female identity based on reproductive function further objectifies the
female body in society, and how it can aid patriarchal domination and oppression of
women. The analysis of the novels draws on both essentialist and social
constructionist feminist approaches to oppression and female identity. The essentialist
approach views female biological difference (reproductive function) as responsible
for the way in which women are oppressed. The social constructionist view argues
that female oppression stems from the social construction of female identity around
concepts of motherhood and femininity. The thesis takes both approaches into account
as it seeks to explain how patriarchy oppresses women through the construction of
female identity.
The thesis also explores how control over the female body and identity can be
exercised through reproductive technology. An examination of the role reproductive
technology plays in contributing to patriarchal dominance, suggests that new
technologies may compel women to conform to stereotypes of femininity based on
pregnancy and motherhood. The thesis considers the impact infertility and the choice
not to have children have on female identity and takes into account the options
available to these women. The main focus, with regard to infertility and choice, is on
the relationship between women who have children and those who do not. This thesis
refutes the notion that there is solidarity between women based on shared childbearing
experience, and focuses on the conflict that occurs between fertile and childless
women. It finds that the conflict that occurs is a result of the socialisation of women
into viewing motherhood as an essential aspect of 'normal' femininity. The thesis also
considers what causes the desire to have children and finds that, as in the case of the
conflict between women, it is as a result of socialisation and an innate/instinctual
biological drive. The thesis investigates options available to women in order for them to avoid
constructing their identities solely around their reproductive function. It considers the
alternatives women are presented with when constructing their identity and how these
may contribute to or liberate them from patriarchal oppression. If they choose to
identify themselves using patriarchal norms, then they are contributing to their
objectification; but if they choose to construct their identity on their own terms, and
offer some resistance to patriarchal constructions, they will be more liberated than
women who conform to stereotypes. Evidence of such resistance can be seen in both
novels in the narrative structure the respective authors have chosen: just as the main
characters subvert traditional stereotypes through the construction of their own
identity, embracing female experience on their own terms, so do both authors subvert
traditional narratives. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie tesis is gegrond op die analisering van die novelle Puffball deur Fay Weldon
en The Handmaid's Tale deur Margaret Atwood ter ondersoek van die konstruksie
van identiteit, naamlik die vroulike identiteit. Die analise neem beide die biologiese
en kulturele invloed van identiteit in ag, veral binne die konteks van die patriargale
samelewing wat in novelles voorkom.Die wisselwerking tussen vroulike identiteit en
die funksie van reproduksie word aangeraak. Die tesis ondersoek die wyse waarop die
konstruksie van die vroulike identiteit gebasseer op die reproduksie funksie, verder
die vroulike liggaam binne samelewingskonteks tipeer en hoe dit indirek patriargale
dominansie ondersteun sowel as die onderdrukking van die vrou.
Die analise van die novelles steun sterk op beide die essensialistiese en sosiale
konstruksialistiese feministiese benaderings ten opsigte van onderdrukking en
vroulike identiteit. Die essensialistiese benadering blameer die vroulike biologiese
verskil, met verwysing na die reproduksie funksie, vir die wyse waarop die vrou
onderdruk word. In kontras hiermee, argumenteer die sosiale konstruksialistiese
seining dat vroulike onderdrukking voortspruit uit die sosiale konstruksie van vroulike
identiteit binne die konsep van moederskap en vroulikheid. Die tesis neem beide
standpunte in ag daar dit hom ten doel stelom te verduidelik waarom patriargie die
vrou onderdruk deur die konstruksie van die vroulike identiteit.
Die tesis fokus ook op die wyse waarop kontrole oor die vroulike liggaam en identiteit
uitgeoefen kan word deur die reproduktiewe tegnologie. 'n Ondersoek na die rol wat
reproduktiewe tegnologie speel ter ondersteuning van patriargale dominansie,
argumenteer dat nuwe tegnologieë "Toue kan verplig tot die konformering van
stereotipes van vroulikheid gebasseer op swangerskap en moederskap. Die analise
neem ook die impak wat onvrugbaarheid op die vroulike identiteit het, in ag , sowel as
die besluit om nie kinders te hê nie. Verder neem dit ook die verskeie opsies wat
beskikbaar is vir die vrou wat daarteen besluit om kinders te hê, in ag, sover dit die
konstruksie van identiteit raak. Die hooffokus met betrekking tot onvrugbaarheid en
keuse, is gebasseer op die verhouding tussen vroue wat wel kinders het en diegene wat kinderloos is. Die tesis weerlê die idee dat daar solidariteit is tussen vroue
gebasseer op gedeelde ervarings en gemeenskaplike doelwitte en begeertes en fokus
op die konflik wat ontstaan tussen kinderlose en vrugbare vroue.
Die ondersoek ondervind dat die konflik wat onstaan, 'n produk is van die
sosialisering van vroue met die idee van moederskap as 'n essensiële aspek van
"normale" vroulikheid. Die tesis ondersoek ook die oorsake van die begeerte om
kinders te hê en ondervind dat, soos ook die geval met konflik, dit die produk is van
sosialisering en instinktiefbiologies gedrewe is.
Die tesis ondersoek die opsies beskikbaar vir die vrou ten einde haar te verhoed om
die konstruksie van haar identiteit te grond alleenlik op die reproduktiewe funksie.
Die analise neem die alternatiewe waarmee die vrou gekonfronteer word tydens die
konstruksieproses, in aanmerking, en bevraagteken die wyse waarop hierdie
alternatiewe kan bydra tot , of die bevryding van, die patriargale onderdrukking.
Indien die vrou verkies om haarself te identifiseer deur patriargale norme te gebruik
sal sy bydra tot haar objektivering binne die tradisionele patriargale konteks; maar
indien sy kies om haar eie identiteit te konstruktueer volgens haar eie norme en
terselfdertyd patriargale konstruksie teenstaan, sal sy meer geëmansipeerd wees as
haar eweknie wat tot die stereotipe gekonformeer het.
Deel van die weerstand wat voorkom in beide novelles, kan opgemerk word in die
naratiewe struktuur gekies deur die skrywer. Paralelle word aangetref tussen
enersyds, die wyse waarop die hoofkarakters hulself aan die tradisionele stereotipes
ondermyn deur die konstruksie van hul eie identiteit, terselfdertyd deur die koestering
van vroulike ervarings, en andersyds die wyse waarop beide skrywers hulself aan
tradisionele naratiewe onderwerp.
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[en] CULTURAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY AND IDENTITY PERFORMANCE: AN ALTERNATIVE READING OF THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF AN EX-COLORED MAN OF JAMES WELDON JOHNSON / [pt] AUTOBIOGRAFIA CULTURAL E PERFORMANCE DE IDENTIDADE: UMA LEITURA ALTERNATIVA DE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF AN EX-COLORED MAN DE JAMES WELDON JOHNSONALEXANDRE FERREIRA VELHO 28 March 2016 (has links)
[pt] Diante do atual interesse pelas escritas de construção de selves, haja vista a proliferação de suas manifestações e incessante processo de reinvenção, discutimos nesta dissertação o romance The Autobiography of an Ex-colored Man de James Weldon Johnson, lançado anonimamente em 1912. Partindo da descrição das estratégias autobiográficas nele adotadas, evidenciamos seu caráter camaleônico e performático, tanto na construção da narrativa, quanto na vivência identitária do narrador-personagem. Nessa perspectiva, elucidamos como o procedimento literário adotado por Johnson deixa entrever também uma dimensão de crítica política e cultural. A partir disso, apresentamos uma leitura alternativa da obra através da conceituação do termo autobiografia cultural . Para tanto, refletimos sobre as categorias já existentes relativas ao espaço autobiográfico, mostrando seus limites e possibilidades: de um lado, discutimos suas insuficiências para pensar o romance; de outro, mostramos até que ponto corroboram a proposição do conceito alternativo, que aqui sugerido: o termo autobiografia cultural . / [en] Given the current interest in the writings of themselves construction, due to the proliferation of its manifestations which are in constant reinvention process, we discuss in this dissertation the novel The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man written by James Weldon Johnson, issued anonymously in 1912. From the description of the autobiography strategies adopted in it, we show it s chameleonic and performative character, both in narrative construction and identity experience of the narrator-character. In this perspective, we elucidate how Johnson s literary procedure suggests a dimension of political and cultural criticism. From this moment, we present an alternative reading of the book through the definition of the term cultural autobiography . Therefore, we reflect on the categories of autobiographical space, highlighting theirs limits and possibilities – on one hand, we discuss theirs insufficient to think of the novel; on the other hand, we show to what extent they corroborate to define the alternative concept that it is suggest here: the term cultural autobiography .
Keywords
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Subversive narrative and thematic strategies : a critical appraisal of Fay Weldon's FictionDowling, Finuala Rachel 06 1900 (has links)
Fay Weldon is a popular, prolific author whose oeuvre stretches from 1967 to the present
and includes 20 novels, three collections of short stories and numerous stage, radio and
television plays, scripts and adaptations. This thesis limits itself to her fiction and follows
the chronological course of Weldon's writing career in five chapters.
Fay Weldon's fiction, situated at the intersection of postmodemism and feminism, is
doubly subversive. It both overturns 'reasonable' narrative conventions and wittily
deconstructs the specious terminology used to define women. Weldon's disobedient female
protagonists - madwomen, criminals, outcasts and she-devils - assert the power of the Other.
Gynocentric themes - single parenthood, sisterhood, reproduction, motherhood, sex and
marriage - are transformed by Weldon into uproarious feminist revenge comedy. This she
achieves through an intertextuality which often involves unorthodox typography, genreswopping
and metafictional devices. Moreover, a unique ventriloquism enables her
omniscient first-person narrators to mimic 'Fay Weldon' herself.
Since her narrators are rebels and iconoclasts, Weldon has always been viewed as a
subversive individual worthy of media attention, especially interviews. For this reason, and
because she is a woman writer who struggled initially against social and domestic odds, the
thesis incorporates in its argument the author's biography and public personae.
Chapter One explores the connections between Weldon's first novels - notably Down
Among the Women (1971) - and early liberationist and anthropological feminism. In Chapter
Two, Bakhtin's dialogic imagination and Derrida's differance provide the basis for a
discussion of multiplicity in Weldon's novels of the late 1970s, particularly Praxis (1979),
shortlisted for the Booker prize. Chapter Three tests the limits of a psychoanalytical model
in accounting for Weldon's novels of (m)Otherhood, including The Life and Loves of a SheDevil
(1983).
Theories of humour and carnival inform Chapter Four's analysis of how Weldon's wit
- at its tendentious best in The Heart of the Country (1987) - declines into innocence.
Finally, Chapter Five sees Weldon's flagging literary reputation as the symptom of authorial
exhaustion and retreat from a feminist agenda. This concluding chapter is, however,
ultimately optimistic that the mercurial author's undeniable talents may reassert themselves / English Studies / D.Litt. et Phil. (English)
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Subversive narrative and thematic strategies : a critical appraisal of Fay Weldon's FictionDowling, Finuala Rachel 06 1900 (has links)
Fay Weldon is a popular, prolific author whose oeuvre stretches from 1967 to the present
and includes 20 novels, three collections of short stories and numerous stage, radio and
television plays, scripts and adaptations. This thesis limits itself to her fiction and follows
the chronological course of Weldon's writing career in five chapters.
Fay Weldon's fiction, situated at the intersection of postmodemism and feminism, is
doubly subversive. It both overturns 'reasonable' narrative conventions and wittily
deconstructs the specious terminology used to define women. Weldon's disobedient female
protagonists - madwomen, criminals, outcasts and she-devils - assert the power of the Other.
Gynocentric themes - single parenthood, sisterhood, reproduction, motherhood, sex and
marriage - are transformed by Weldon into uproarious feminist revenge comedy. This she
achieves through an intertextuality which often involves unorthodox typography, genreswopping
and metafictional devices. Moreover, a unique ventriloquism enables her
omniscient first-person narrators to mimic 'Fay Weldon' herself.
Since her narrators are rebels and iconoclasts, Weldon has always been viewed as a
subversive individual worthy of media attention, especially interviews. For this reason, and
because she is a woman writer who struggled initially against social and domestic odds, the
thesis incorporates in its argument the author's biography and public personae.
Chapter One explores the connections between Weldon's first novels - notably Down
Among the Women (1971) - and early liberationist and anthropological feminism. In Chapter
Two, Bakhtin's dialogic imagination and Derrida's differance provide the basis for a
discussion of multiplicity in Weldon's novels of the late 1970s, particularly Praxis (1979),
shortlisted for the Booker prize. Chapter Three tests the limits of a psychoanalytical model
in accounting for Weldon's novels of (m)Otherhood, including The Life and Loves of a SheDevil
(1983).
Theories of humour and carnival inform Chapter Four's analysis of how Weldon's wit
- at its tendentious best in The Heart of the Country (1987) - declines into innocence.
Finally, Chapter Five sees Weldon's flagging literary reputation as the symptom of authorial
exhaustion and retreat from a feminist agenda. This concluding chapter is, however,
ultimately optimistic that the mercurial author's undeniable talents may reassert themselves / English Studies / D.Litt. et Phil. (English)
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The “Man Walks Outside Time Now”: Verbal Representations of Photographic Images in the Poems of Larry LevisMiner, Lauren 30 July 2012 (has links)
The poet Larry Levis often employed ekphrasis as an elegiac device—particularly with his verbal descriptions of photographic images—to explore human suffering and reconcile feelings of loss. Through the ekphrastic mode, Levis could juxtapose otherwise disparate images, manipulating their temporal and spatial relationships, to achieve what he conceived an authentic portrait of the human experience. The poet, through his verbal descriptions of photographic images, does not try to evade the pain or joy of being human; instead, he confronts his grief directly and, in so doing, transcends that suffering to better understand himself and his own human position. This thesis analyzes the following poems by Larry Levis: “My Only Photograph of Weldon Kees,” “García Lorca: A Photograph of the Granada Cemetery, 1966,” “The Assimilation of the Gypsies,” “Sensationalism,” and “Photograph: Migrant Worker, Parlier, California, 1967.”
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Material Objects as Means of Portraying Female Characters' Personality in the 20th century : As Exemplified in the three Short Stories by J. D. Salinger, V. Woolf and F. WeldonZelenenkaya, Ekaterina January 2013 (has links)
The world we live in is full of material objects that serve as signs and thus are an important tool in literary texts. The purpose of the present essay is to illustrate how material objects are used to portray personalities of female characters, their inner world and attitudes, their ways of life and position in society. It is especially interesting in the context of the 20th century in the Western world, when the culture of consumption was gaining momentum and the role of a woman was gradually changing. The short stories analysed in the essay are written in the Western context in the 20th century, which are “A Perfect Day for Bananafish” by J.D. Salinger, “Moments of Being: ‘Slater’s Pins Have no Points’” by V. Woolf and “The Bottom Line and the Sharp End” by F. Weldon. The material objects mentioned in the texts are classified and analysed due to their role and purpose in the short stories.
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