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Os operários das letras: o campo literário no Recife (1889-1910)OLIVEIRA JUNIOR, Romulo Jose Francisco de 29 February 2016 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2016-02-29 / FACEPE / Esta tese objetiva analisar questões que se apresentam na fronteira entre
história e literatura tendo a Academia Pernambucana de Letras (APL) e seus
fundadores como fio condutor da problemática central: Como se constituiu o
campo literário na virada do século XIX para o século XX na cidade do Recife?
As fontes consultadas para constituir a narrativa foram revistas literárias,
jornais, almanaques, livros de romances, crônicas, folhetins, poesia, contos,
bem como um diálogo com a historiografia que versa a respeito da literatura
brasileira, do livro e da leitura. A partir de um suporte teórico e metodológico da
História Cultural, em especial de conceitos de autores como Pierre Bourdieu,
Michel de Certeau, Roger Chartier e do trabalho prosopográfico sugerido por
Laurence Stone procurou-se enxergar a literatura de determinado período
como fonte e como meio para entender as relações pessoais, os jogos
sentimentais, o imaginário de um grupo social e as práticas sociais. Investigouse
também as práticas de produção e circulação da literatura de ficção
elaborada pelos literatos que viveram no Recife durante o período de transição
do século XIX para o XX. É um trabalho que buscou contribuir para minimizar a
vacância de pesquisas que existe nos estudos sobre a literatura pernambucana
no período em tela e ao fazer uso de escritos existentes em arquivos diversos e
de um aparato historiográfico denotou-se a necessidade de conhecer a
constituição do campo literário recifense e suas nuances. / This thesis aims to analyze issues that arise on the border between history and
literature with the Pernambuco Academy of Letters (APL) and its founders as a
guide the central problem: As was the literary field at the turn of the nineteenth
to the twentieth century in the city Recife? The sources consulted to constitute
the narrative were literary magazines, newspapers, almanacs, books of novels,
essays, pamphlets, poetry, short stories, as well as a dialogue with
historiography which deals about the Brazilian literature, books and reading.
From a theoretical and methodological support of cultural history, especially the
concepts of authors such as Pierre Bourdieu, Michel de Certeau, Roger
Chartier and prosopographical work suggested by Laurence Stone tried to see
the specific literature period as a source and as a means to understand
personal relationships, sentimental games, the imagination of a social group
and social practices. It also investigated the production and circulation practices
of fiction literature prepared by writers who lived in Recife during the XIX
century transition period to the twentieth. It is a work that sought to help reduce
the vacancy of research that exists in studies of Pernambuco literature in the
period screen and make use of existing written in multiple files and a
historiographical apparatus is denoted a need to know the structure of the field
Recife literary and its nuances.
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Academic Apparel: Examining Gender Inequality and Dress at a Large Canadian UniversityAnnett, Clare January 2016 (has links)
Women working in the current Canadian academic system face challenges which their male colleagues do not; one such challenge lies in dressing for work in the university setting. This paper examines the role dress plays in the workplace experiences of female professors at a large Canadian academic research institution. Through on-line and face-to-face focus groups as well as one-on-one interviews with 16 female professors, this study examines how these women decide what to wear to work. Using Goffman’s (1959) symbolic interactionist approach to self-presentation, in combination with Simmel (1957) and Blumer’s (1969) work on fashion, the various meanings attributed to women’s dress are explored. Women’s self-presentation in professional settings is significant, as theorized by Ridgeway’s (1991; 1993; 2011) theories of gender inequality in the workplace. Finally Scott’s (1990) theories of everyday resistance explore the potential for female professors to resist the dominant power structure through their choice of dress and self-presentation at work. The preliminary findings indicate that for those individuals for whom power and authority are not as accessible, dress and self-presentation can be avenues through which these individuals can access this authority and at times some may push back against the unequal power structures which exist in the current Canadian academic system.
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Uncaring Nurses: Violence in AcademiaBerquist, Melissa Renee January 2017 (has links)
Workplace violence is an area of increasing concern worldwide. Issues of violence are well documented in nursing. To address this, a better understanding of the culture of nursing academia is required. Problems of incivility are reported between students, between students and faculty, and between faculty and faculty. The purpose of this study is to increase understanding of faculty to faculty violence in nursing academia. Guided by a theoretical framework incorporating the perspectives of Mason and Foucault and specifically on the concepts of violence, power, knowledge, difference and resistance, this study focuses on aspects of the social and cultural work environment, and organizational policies and procedures influencing workplace violence between faculty members. Using principles from critical ethnography, the research was conducted within three schools of nursing at universities in eastern Canada. Data collection included 29 semi-structured interviews with nursing faculty, key informants (including representation from management, human resources, support staff and human rights office) and mute document review. Three major themes emerged: the academic apparatus, experiencing academia, and coping mechanisms. Nursing academic culture is divergent, exhibiting fierce competitiveness and elitism, intertwined with pockets of support and resilience. Faculty identified diverse personal and professional strategies employed to withstand the challenges. Need for change was expressed by some faculty and managers. These findings may inform the efforts of faculty and management seeking transformation to a less competitive and elitist culture.
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Understanding Basic Indicators of Gender Equality Climate and Culture in Academia: Ankara University as an ExampleDursun, C., Memis, E. 11 1900 (has links)
No
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GENDER DIFFERENCES IN INTENTIONS TO LEAVE ACADEMIA: SOCIAL CONTROL, WORK AND FAMILY EXPLANATIONSDRYFHOUT-FERGUSON, VICKI LYNN January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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The Perceived Impact of Parenthood on Faculty Career TrajectoryWinters, Della J. 26 July 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Nutrigenomics and Nutritional Epigenetics – The State of the Science in AcademiaGrosh, Kimberly Coile 08 September 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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A Pedagogical Model for Realigning the Priorities in Technical Communication Between Industry and AcademiaLee, Sanglin 19 May 2014 (has links)
Although there have been many attempts to mediate the longstanding gap between technical communication academics and practitioners, the field has yet to become a unified community. This study tracks the history of the field to identify the causes of the breach. The goal of this thesis is to assess technical communication's current industry and academic environment based on data collected from interviewing selected academics and practitioners. For my research, I compared my interview findings to the information from my bibliographical research in order to contribute to creating a healthy research-to-practice loop by producing a course syllabus for a senior seminar for the Professional Writing option within Virginia Tech's department of English. This syllabus contains readings, assignments, projects, and industry tests that are meant to help students contribute to bridging the gap between academia and industry by combining the important components from both sides of technical communication.
Research indicates that important professional skills for the workplace include knowing how to transform writing into products through topic-based writing, structured authoring, and information typing. Examples of other important professional technical communication skills include search engine optimization and content repurposing. Advanced technical communication-related jobs in industry include content strategist and information architect.
Methods of diminishing the gap between academics and practitioners and providing an environment that is conducive to collaborative research include generating awareness among technical communicators about what the other group does, changing the paradigm for research and faculty requirements for technical communication academics, and the two groups collaborating to develop more technical communication-related internships for students. / Master of Arts
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"We Don’t Have the Key to the Executive Washroom”: Women’s Perceptions and Experiences of Promotion in AcademiaGuth, Jessica, Wright, Fran 05 1900 (has links)
Yes / This chapter reports on a pilot study looking at the progression of academic women at one UK University.
The chapter focuses on the promotions process and criteria as one important issue emerging from that
research. Earlier research has shown that women are less likely to break into institutional networks
which allow them to access information not only on formal and objective promotion criteria but also
on hidden criteria and the way the ‘academic game’ is played. One result of this is that some academic
women may have an inaccurate view of promotion criteria and processes. At the university studied by
the authors, the Human Resources department has sought to make the promotion process more transparent
and, officially at least, it no longer depends purely upon research achievements. However, these
changes will not necessarily result in easier progression for women academics. The authors’ study
confirms that there is still a mismatch between what women think the criteria for promotion are, what
the formal criteria are and how those criteria actually operate. Reliance on incomplete or inaccurate
information about promotion criteria, coupled other factors, such as women’s reluctance to promote
themselves actively and traditional barriers to promotion such as caring responsibilities, puts women
at a disadvantage when they attempt to progress into more senior positions within universities. Reform
of promotions procedures needs to look beyond re-writing the substantive criteria for promotion and
look to improving understanding of what is involved.
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Policy Statement: Mental Well-being among Anthropologists at Universities: A Call for System TransformationFletcher, E.H., Backe, E.L., Brykalski, T., Fitzpatrick, Alexandra L., Gonzalez, M., Ginzburg, S.L., Meeker, R., Riendeau, R.P., Thies-Sauder, M., Reyes-Foster, B.M. 22 March 2022 (has links)
No / The Anthropology of Mental Health Interest Group affirms that the state of mental health in Academic Anthropology needs serious attention and transformation. We respond to structural inequities in academia that exacerbate mental distress among graduate students and other anthropologists who experience oppression, by putting forward a policy statement with recommendations to create more equitable learning and working environments.
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