• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 17
  • 12
  • 6
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 37
  • 37
  • 10
  • 9
  • 8
  • 7
  • 7
  • 7
  • 6
  • 5
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 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

Samerna och statsmakten : Vardagligt motstånd och kulturell hybriditet i Torne lappmark under perioden 1639-1732

Axelsson, Einar January 2015 (has links)
This thesis examines the everyday resistance, and its interaction with cultural hybridity, of the Saami population in the administrative unit of Torne lappmark during the period 1639–1732. To do this, the thesis uses theoretical concept of everday resistance as it has been described by JamesC. Scott and the theories of cultural hybridity as they have been described by Peter Burke. Primary source material used in this thesis consists of the court records from Torne lappmark, specifically from the courts at Jukkasjärvi and Enontekis.The results of this thesis present a picture of the everyday resistance in early modern Torne lappmark. The states control was most prominent at the annual markets and court proceedings. The everyday resistance of the Saamis became more subtle when the supervision by the Swedish state became more significant, for example by cutting off pieces from the reindeer hides that they sold or taxed with. Further away from the courts the Saamis could use more drastic options, for example fleeing to Norway. The Swedish state did not want to implement hard punishments on the Saamis because the mining operations in the lappmarks were dependent on Saamis and reindeers to carry ore, wood and food in order to keep the mines operational. This is used by the Saamis as an argument against material domination. The insults and rumours concerning state officials that can be found in the source material often concern abuse of power. The lack of control outside the yearly court proceedings also led to harassments of state and church officials.The Swedish state had political reasons to present the Saamis as chris- tian subjects while trying to exterminate the Saami religion. The Saamis therefore learned a sufficient amount of christianity to make interaction with the state easier and to use as a tool in court proceedings to avoid punishment. This normalised and legitimised the states use of power. The fact that Saamis carried christian ideas and could reproduce them when they needed also led to a cultural hybridisation. They also adapted these ideas in accordance to their own worldview. Some Saamis also hybridised the two religions in different religious practises.The use of these theoretical models offers a new perspective on the interaction between the Swedish state and the Saamis. It also gives a new perspective on the power relationships in Torne lappmark during the early modern period. Keywords: Saami history, everyday resistance, cultural hybridity, 17th century, 18th century
2

Shattered Dreams : An essay analyzing Chanu's assimilation process in Brick Lane

Harmon, Caroline January 2014 (has links)
Brick Lane has stimulated a wide range of debates regarding Monica Ali's portrayal of the inhabitants of the area from which the novel has taken its title. This essay claims that assimilation is the key theme of the novel, and that the desire to achieve it is represented most strongly in the character of Chanu. The latter's primary goal is to assimilate himself into the English society in which he now lives. In order to demonstrate just how complex this assimilation process is, Chanu is discussed in relation to society's influence on him and four concepts of post colonial theory, namely double consciousness, unhomeliness, mimicry and hybridity.
3

L’écriture du vide et de la renaissance dans l’oeuvre de Simone Veil, d’Agata Tuszyńska et de Władysław Szpilman / The Holocaust : emptiness and rebirth in the work of Agata Tuszynska, of Wladyslaw Szpilman and Simone Veil

Iwanska, Eleonora 19 December 2013 (has links)
Dans l’histoire des Juifs d’Europe rien n’illumine autant que le mouvement des Lumières (XVIIIe siècle), rien n’est plus troublant que la comparaison entre le sujet national et l'étranger (fin du XIXe siècle), rien n’est plus sinistre que la dévastation de ce qui semblait immuable, en vue d’un but déterminé : pureté raciale. Le nazisme triomphant (début du XXe siècle) a tout fait pour anéantir la diaspora juive. En dehors même de la destruction physique, la résolution de la question juive se présente comme démolition à la fois du patrimoine et de l’identité juifs. Ce qui change dès lors, c’est l’ensemble des rapports sociaux. Le sentiment d’insécurité devient une obsession, qui longtemps après la guerre continue à hanter les survivants. Ce que nous voyons dans Une histoire familiale de la peur, c’est l’impact qu’a l’Holocauste sur le devenir des Juifs polonais. Agata Tuszyńska (deuxième génération des survivants) a eu une période de déni et une période de révolte, puis est venu l’âge de l’acceptation, avec une volonté de restaurer des liens socioculturels entre le monde disparu et le monde contemporain. Le refus de jugement sur la fièvre antisémite, rend caduque la saisie du sens exacte de l’extermination au lendemain de la guerre. Le silence des rescapés couvre d’ombre des siècles d’existence des Juifs polonais. Il enferme les victimes dans un monde de souffrance incommunicable. Dans ces circonstances le deuil du génocide ne réussit pas. Ce qui les empêche de faire ce travail ce sont les défenses psychiques, l’incompréhension sociale et l’oubli de soi. La Shoah devient alors un jeu de confessions et de concepts imprécis, où s’introduisent le vide et le non-sens. / A period of triumphant Nazism (in the beginning of XXth century) imposed in all Europe an abrupt stop: it made everything to annihilate the Jewish Diaspora. Outside even of physical destruction, this resolution of the “Jewish issue” is present as demolition at the same time of the heritage and of the Jewish identity. A lack of apogee is cause by a long way of tolerance and a hard work of integration. What changes from then on, is all the social relationships. The feeling of insecurity becomes an obsession and continues to haunt the survivors long after the end of the War. We can see that in the example of “Rodzinna historia leku” (A family history of the fear) it is the impact which has the Holocaust on the future of Polish Jews. Agata Tuszynska, professor, journalist (the second generation of the survivors) had a period of denial and a period of revolt, then came the age of the acceptance, with a desire to restore socio-cultural links between the disappeared and the contemporary world. The refusal of judgment on a kind of anti-Semitic fever, according to the criterion of the good and the bad, makes null the seizure of the correct meaning of the extermination after the War. The silence of the survivors overshadows the centuries of existence of the Polish Jews. It locks the victims into a world of incommunicable suffering. It is thus obvious that, in these circumstances to mourn and come to terms with the genocide can’t be succeeded. What prevents them from making this work of memory, except the psychic defenses, the social incomprehension and the self-forgetfulness. Shoah becomes then a mix of confessions and concepts, where get the space and the nonsense.
4

Being Indian in the time of transnational screen media cultures: An urban children’s study

Lakshminarayan, Smitha January 2022 (has links)
This study aimed to answer these research questions: what role do transnational screen media play in how urban Indian children think about their culturally hybrid identities? In what ways does transnational screen media consumption influence these children's perceptions of their lived sociocultural realities? Using survey and ethnographic research methods comprising a survey for children, participant observation and in-depth interviews with children, and in-depth interviews with parents and teachers, the research for the study was conducted in Bangalore city in southern India. The study found that the children’s major socialization agents, i.e. the family, the school and the transnational screen media they consumed played an interrelational role in children’s formulating and negotiating their culturally hybrid identities. The implication of this finding is that as these children mature, they are challenged to exercise a critical reflexivity that may only reconcile the differences between their perceptions of mediated globalities and their lived sociocultural contexts uneasily, at the intersections of these children’s sociocultural identity markers. / Media & Communication
5

Towards a framework for understanding ethnic consumers' acculturation strategies in a multicultural environment: a food consumption perspective

Dey, B.L., Alwi, S., Yamoah, F., Agyepong, S.A., Kizgin, Hatice, Sarma, M. 09 September 2019 (has links)
Yes / Purpose – While it is essential to further research the growing diversity in western metropolitan cities, little is currently known about how the members of various ethnic communities acculturate to multicultural societies. The purpose of this paper is to explore immigrants’ cosmopolitanism and acculturation strategies through an analysis of the food consumption behaviour of ethnic consumers in multicultural London. Design/methodology/approach – The study was set within the socio-cultural context of London. A number of qualitative methods such as in-depth interviews, observation and photographs were used to assess consumers’ acculturation strategies in a multicultural environment and how that is influenced by consumer cosmopolitanism. Findings – Ethnic consumers’ food consumption behaviour reflects their acculturation strategies, which can be classified into four groups: rebellion, rarefaction, resonance and refrainment. This classification demonstrates ethnic consumers’ multi-directional acculturation strategies, which are also determined by their level of cosmopolitanism. Research limitations/implications – The taxonomy presented in this paper advances current acculturation scholarship by suggesting a multi-directional model for acculturation strategies as opposed to the existing uni-directional and bi-directional perspectives and explicates the role of consumer cosmopolitanism in consumer acculturation. The paper did not engage host communities and there is hence a need for future research on how and to what extent host communities are acculturated to the multicultural environment. Practical implications – The findings have direct implications for the choice of standardisation vs adaptation as a marketing strategy within multicultural cities. Whilst the rebellion group are more likely to respond to standardisation, increasing adaptation of goods and service can ideally target members of the resistance and resonance groups and more fusion products should be exclusively earmarked for the resonance group.
6

"Serbian" Cultural Events in Buda and Pest between 1860 and 1867

Tömöry, Miklós January 2015 (has links)
"Serbian" Cultural Events in Buda and Pest between 1860 and 1867 Miklós Tömöry (Erasmus Mundus Master "TEMA" - Budapest-Prague-Paris) Abstract Key terms: nationalism, Serbian history, Habsburg Empire, Buda and Pest, urban cultural milieus Situated at the very heart of the Habsburg-ruled Hungarian Kingdom, the twin cities of Buda and Pest played an important role as centres of modern Hungarian (Magyar) and Slavic national movements as well in the course of the nineteenth century. Public and semi-public urban spaces and institutions of the public sphere were used by members of the emerging Slovak, Serbian, Croatian national intelligentsias. Considering their importance in this earlier stage of nation building (and not primarily because of their overall ethnic composition) it is even possible to call Buda and Pest as "Slavic cities".1 These urban spaces had a specific role in the case of the Serbian national movement. In these cities institutions were founded which served as patterns for other national movements as well. During this period of time a vivid exchange of ideas between Hungarians and Serbs can be observed in the cities; multilingualism and even multiple identities were characteristic for the era. To describe complex cultural interrelations in the urban space the thesis will use the notion of urban...
7

I'm Not One of Them but I'm Not One of You : An Analysis of The Effects of Patriarchy and Hybridity in Tsitsi Dangarembga's Nervous Conditions

Osmani, Donjeta January 2019 (has links)
This essay examines how the factors that inspire Tambudzai and Nyasha to counter the patriarchy are portrayed and how these factors contribute to the formation of hybrid identities among the younger generation of women in Nervous Conditions (1988) by Tsitsi Dangarembga. Both characters are faced with different predicaments which makes it necessary to divide the factors in regard to each character. The factors that are connected to Tambudzai are the following: the death of Nhamo, the patriarchal male figures, and the will to obtain an education. Meanwhile, the factors that are connected to Nyasha are the relationship with her patriarchal father, the desire for liberation and gender equality. Postcolonial and feminist criticism are applied. The main focus of the essay is hybridity, or double identity, where the specific term cultural hybridity is used in order to analyze the effect that the struggle against the patriarchy has had on Tambudzai's and Nyasha's emerging hybrid identities. The feminist-psychoanalytic approach is used to analyze the factors that inspire Tambudzai and Nyasha to counter the patriarchy.  The results show that the factors that inspire Tambudzai and Nyasha to counter the patriarchy have been visible and crucial to the formation of their hybrid identities. The struggle that Tambudzai and Nyasha have to face when going against the patriarchal system brings certain predicaments in their lives that affect them and their identity tremendously. One of these predicaments is the realization that patriarchy is universan and, hence, something you cannot escape.
8

The literary benefits of linguistic and cultural hybridity

Radojkovich, Leanne January 2010 (has links)
The objective of this exegesis is to show how linguistic and cultural hybridity create a unique prose style, and how my stories sit within that style. I will use Grace Paley and Lucia Berlin to demonstrate the distinctive narrative techniques. These include the use of sensuous details (instead of descriptions) to make place and character palpable; dialogue that convincingly evokes living speech; plots which emanate from the characters, rather than the other way round; and open-ended resolutions, as in real life. I will then show how I use these narrative techniques in my collection Happiness and other stories. The collection of stories is embargoed until 31 March 2012.
9

The literary benefits of linguistic and cultural hybridity

Radojkovich, Leanne January 2010 (has links)
The objective of this exegesis is to show how linguistic and cultural hybridity create a unique prose style, and how my stories sit within that style. I will use Grace Paley and Lucia Berlin to demonstrate the distinctive narrative techniques. These include the use of sensuous details (instead of descriptions) to make place and character palpable; dialogue that convincingly evokes living speech; plots which emanate from the characters, rather than the other way round; and open-ended resolutions, as in real life. I will then show how I use these narrative techniques in my collection Happiness and other stories.
10

The literary benefits of linguistic and cultural hybridity

Radojkovich, Leanne January 2010 (has links)
The objective of this exegesis is to show how linguistic and cultural hybridity create a unique prose style, and how my stories sit within that style. I will use Grace Paley and Lucia Berlin to demonstrate the distinctive narrative techniques. These include the use of sensuous details (instead of descriptions) to make place and character palpable; dialogue that convincingly evokes living speech; plots which emanate from the characters, rather than the other way round; and open-ended resolutions, as in real life. I will then show how I use these narrative techniques in my collection Happiness and other stories. The collection of stories is embargoed until 31 March 2012.

Page generated in 0.0943 seconds