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Configurações de gênero e espaço : um estudo de Sapato de Salto, de Lygia BojungaBottin, Eliandra Lanfredi 15 August 2017 (has links)
A presente dissertação discute as configurações de gênero e espaço na obra Sapato de salto (2006), da escritora Lygia Bojunga, dialogando com questões inerentes à literatura infantil e à identidade. Nessa perspectiva, verifica-se de que maneira aspectos sociais e culturais estão representados nas configurações de gênero e espaço na obra em estudo e que relações estabelecem com as personagens na construção de suas identidades. Para buscar resposta a esse questionamento, torna-se imprescindível a organização de um referencial teórico fundamentado em aspectos sociais e culturais a respeito de gênero e de espaço. Quando se tratar de gênero e suas configurações, utiliza-se Beauvoir (1980), Butler (2003), Louro (1997), Showalter (1994), e, quando o assunto for espaço, a referência consiste em Bachelard (1993), Certeau (1994), Corrêa (1989) e Pesavento (2002). Analisam-se, também, conceitos de literatura infanto-juvenil e identidade que discutem a construção da identidade nas diferentes fases da vida de Sabrina, personagem da obra estudada, sustentados por Lajolo (1993), Hall (2005), Vigotski (1998) e Zilberman (1998) e (2005). / Submitted by Ana Guimarães Pereira (agpereir@ucs.br) on 2017-09-28T19:23:29Z
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Previous issue date: 2017-09-28 / The present Master’s Dissertation discusses space and gender configurations of the literary work Sapato de salto (High heeled shoes) (2006), by Lygia Bojunga. It dialogues matters inherent to children’s literature and identity. In view of this, it is verified how social and cultural aspects are represented in gender and space configuration, considering the studied literary work; and what relationships are established with the characters in the construction of their identities. To find responses for this questioning, it is indispensable to organize theoretical frame based on social and cultural aspects related to gender and space. About gender and its configurations, it is used works by Beauvoir (1980), Butler (2003), Louro (1997), Showalter (1994). With regard to space, the reference consists of Bachelard (1993), Certeau (1994), Corrêa (1989) and Pesavento (2002). Other analyzed concepts were children’s literature and identity, which discuss identity construction in the different stages of life of Sabrina, character of the studied literary work, through theory supported by Lajolo (1993), Hall (2005), Vigotski (1998) e Zilberman (1998) e (2005).
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Configurações de gênero e espaço : um estudo de Sapato de Salto, de Lygia BojungaBottin, Eliandra Lanfredi 15 August 2017 (has links)
A presente dissertação discute as configurações de gênero e espaço na obra Sapato de salto (2006), da escritora Lygia Bojunga, dialogando com questões inerentes à literatura infantil e à identidade. Nessa perspectiva, verifica-se de que maneira aspectos sociais e culturais estão representados nas configurações de gênero e espaço na obra em estudo e que relações estabelecem com as personagens na construção de suas identidades. Para buscar resposta a esse questionamento, torna-se imprescindível a organização de um referencial teórico fundamentado em aspectos sociais e culturais a respeito de gênero e de espaço. Quando se tratar de gênero e suas configurações, utiliza-se Beauvoir (1980), Butler (2003), Louro (1997), Showalter (1994), e, quando o assunto for espaço, a referência consiste em Bachelard (1993), Certeau (1994), Corrêa (1989) e Pesavento (2002). Analisam-se, também, conceitos de literatura infanto-juvenil e identidade que discutem a construção da identidade nas diferentes fases da vida de Sabrina, personagem da obra estudada, sustentados por Lajolo (1993), Hall (2005), Vigotski (1998) e Zilberman (1998) e (2005). / The present Master’s Dissertation discusses space and gender configurations of the literary work Sapato de salto (High heeled shoes) (2006), by Lygia Bojunga. It dialogues matters inherent to children’s literature and identity. In view of this, it is verified how social and cultural aspects are represented in gender and space configuration, considering the studied literary work; and what relationships are established with the characters in the construction of their identities. To find responses for this questioning, it is indispensable to organize theoretical frame based on social and cultural aspects related to gender and space. About gender and its configurations, it is used works by Beauvoir (1980), Butler (2003), Louro (1997), Showalter (1994). With regard to space, the reference consists of Bachelard (1993), Certeau (1994), Corrêa (1989) and Pesavento (2002). Other analyzed concepts were children’s literature and identity, which discuss identity construction in the different stages of life of Sabrina, character of the studied literary work, through theory supported by Lajolo (1993), Hall (2005), Vigotski (1998) e Zilberman (1998) e (2005).
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The discoursal construction of female physical identity in selected works in children's literatureHunt, Sally Ann 20 September 2013 (has links)
This thesis reports on an analysis of the discursive construction of female and male physical identity in children’s literature and explicitly combines corpus linguistic methods with a critical discourse approach. Based on three novels from each of the Chronicles of Narnia and the Harry Potter series, it shows clear gendering of body parts, not only in terms of the purely quantitative preferences for certain body parts to be associated with one or other gender, but in terms of discourse prosody, or the uses to which the body parts are put. Human body parts in these series are mostly used in the following four ways, all of which show differences in realisation in terms of gender: · to describe individuals, physically, in order to distinguish one from the other; · to convey emotion, unintentionally as well as consciously; · for physical interaction between people and · for interaction with the world more broadly: responses to danger and agency, i.e. the ability to act on the world and the nature of what is achieved. The use of body parts by characters to express emotion and act agentively on the world is revealed to be strongly gendered in the two series. I characterise the most prominent patterns in terms of the bodily products blood, sweat and tears, of which the last is strongly connected to female characters, who are generally associated with emotion. The other two, referring to active participation in fighting and injury, as well as agency, are almost exclusively reserved for males, with female characters rendered unable to act on the physical world as a result of overwhelming feelings. The females’ response to danger suggests stereotyped discourses of inequality which see women and girls as requiring protection and being physically incapable. Thus gender is still a particularly salient aspect in these widely-read examples of children’s literature, despite plots which appear to be fairly positive towards women. The strength of the inclusion of a corpus approach in this study lies in its capacity to reveal objective, and often fairly covert, trends in language use. These in turn enrich the critical analysis of discourses in these influential texts, which facilitates social change through linguistic analysis.
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Gender issues, core curriculum, and statewide content standardsGodwin, Scott Douglas 01 January 2002 (has links)
This project is a discussion of the continuing need to address gender issues while teaching core curriculum in English classes at the secondary level.
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Tracing Transgender Feeling in Sexual Modernism: Gender and Queer Affinities in Early Twentieth-Century German Literature and ScienceRhodes, Hazel January 2024 (has links)
This dissertation examines how transgender feelings and gender variation emerged as a vital motivator for scientific and aesthetic explorations of human personhood and social experiences of marginality in German-speaking culture in the early twentieth century. My research illustrates how concepts of gender variation served as a generative problem for modernist practitioners of sexual science and as a creative impulse and figural resource for modernist literary and artistic innovations. The feedback between these fields allowed for novel social categories to develop in a period where designations like “transgender” or “transsexual” were not yet in use as stable public identities or diagnoses, but nevertheless circulated in response to experiences of embodied difference and social alienation.
By reading for “transgender feeling” as a heuristic that unites multiple historical categories of gender and sexual variation, I argue that transgender phenomena were instrumental for the development of German modernist movements at large. Building on affect studies, trans and queer studies, and German literary and cultural studies, my project intervenes in limited contemporary understandings of transgender history and identity as a minority political and diagnostic discourse. Instead, I argue for a more expansive, “democratized” notion of transgender feeling that encompasses diverse historical forms of gender variation, some of which have disappeared or become “obsolete,” and show how narratives of gender intermediacy and incongruence are essential to modernist aesthetic practices.
Chapter One examines theories of sexual intermediacy in the sexological work of Magnus Hirschfeld and Otto Weininger, who both suggested that a transgender condition underlies “normal” human sexual development. I show that trans feelings cut across Hirschfeld’s sexological categories and, in particular, his deployment of the case genre, troubling stable taxonomies of sexual affect and allowing for promising forms of coauthorship and “trans genre writing” to emerge in sexology. Chapter Two takes up Rainer Maria Rilke’s writing in The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge and Das Stunden-Buch, as well as his early childhood experience, to argue that dysphoria and intermediacy are key to understanding the social alienation that Rilke expressed in his modernist work alongside personal attachments to femininity and a feminine poetic voice. Chapter Three on Else Lasker-Schüler illustrates how trans feelings, the masculine persona of Jussuf and appropriations of racial and ethnic difference significantly frame the novel Mein Herz and become enduring features of Lasker-Schüler’s literary and artistic production. I highlight how scholarly reception of Rilke and Lasker-Schüler’s work have intentionally disavowed these expressions as transgender and argue for a reassessment of trans feeling as a creative impulse in German modernism through their texts and images.
My last chapter explores how modernist periodical media served as a vital tool for crafting trans intimate publics in the Weimar period and for negotiating the shared norms of gender and social participation for a novel class of gender-variant people under the category of transvestism. In my conclusion, I turn to the unfinished business of sexual and gender definition that continues to frame LGBTQ politics in Germany and abroad today, and I link contemporary questions of trans aesthetics to modernist dynamics of gender and sexual multiplicity.
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The gender of power : inversion of gender roles in Ernest Hemingway's The sun also rises, A farewell to arms, and The garden of edenCarpenter, Richard Alan 01 January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Literatuur en maatskappykritiek : problematisering van seksualiteit in Tom Lanoye se ̀Monstertrilogie'Joubert, Christiaan Johannes 03 1900 (has links)
This dissertation is a report on how Tom Lanoye, a contemporary Flemish
author who explores themes of social relevance, deconstructs the sexual
identity of his characters within the context of a postmodernist culture. The
manifestation of this deconstruction process is described within those
theoretical paradigms of Michel Foucault and Judith Butler that link sexual
identity and social mores. For the purpose of this research Tom Lanoye‘s
‘Monster’ Trilogy was selected. Set against the backdrop of Belgium society
during the late nineties of the twentieth century and highlighting the moral
downfall of the Deschryver patriarchy, Lanoye’s novels address an assortment
of contemporary gender and social political issues in his trilogy. These include
the following: political corruption; incest; homosexuality; racism; the sexual
abuse of minors; the relation between language and identity, volatile childrenparent
relationships; the subversion of gender norms and sexual
transformation. / In hierdie verhandeling word verslag gedoen van die wyse waarop Tom
Lanoye as hedendaagse eksponent van die Vlaamse versetprosa die seksuele
identiteit van sy karakters binne die konteks van 'n postmodernistiese
verwysingsraam dekonstrueer. Die manifestasie van hierdie
dekonstruksieproses word beskryf binne die teoretiese paradigmas met
betrekking tot die verband tussen seksuele identiteit en maatskappy van
Michel Foucault en Judith Butler. Vir die doel van hierdie ondersoek is
Lanoye se 'Monstertrilogie' geselekteer. Gesitueer teen die agtergrond van die
Belgiese maatskappy in die laat negentigerjare van die twintigste eeu en
gefokus op die morele ondergang van die Deschryver-patriargie, sny Lanoye
se trilogie 'n verskeidenheid van aktuele gender-en sosio-politieke kwessies
aan. Hierdie kwessies sluit in: politieke korrupsie; bloedskande;
homoseksualiteit, rassisme; die seksuele misbruik van minderjariges; die
verhouding tussen taal en identiteit; onbestendige ouer-kind-verhoudings; die
ondermyning van gendernorme en die kwessie van seksuele transformasie. / Afrikaans & Theory of Literature / M.A. (Afrikaans)
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New heroines of the diaspora : reading gender identity in South Asian diasporic fictionBanerjee, Lopa 06 1900 (has links)
This thesis looks at literature
by two South Asian, diasporic writers, Jhumpa Lahiri and Monica
Ali, as a space where creative,
cross-cultural and independent
identities for diasporic women might be created.
The central claim of the thesis
is that diasporic migration
affects South Asian women in
particular ways.
The most positive outcome is that
these women adopt new trans-border
identities but that these remain
shaped by class, culture and
gender. Hence a working class
milieu such as the one depicted
by Monica Ali, leads to an
immigrant, ghetto-ised,
community-based identity,
located solely in the land of
adoption, with return or travel to
the homeland no longer possible.
However, the milieu imagined in
Jhumpa Lahiri’s text, a middle-class, suburban environment, creates a solitary, transnational
identity, lived between countries,
where travel between the land of
birth and the land of adoption
remains accessible. / English / M.A. (English)
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神異真實的跨性別少年: 重繪英文幻設小說的酷兒陽剛世界. / Mythical real transboyhood: re-mapping worlds of queer masculinity in English speculative fiction / 重繪英文幻設小說的酷兒陽剛世界 / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collection / Shen yi zhen shi de kua xing bie shao nian: chong hui Ying wen huan she xiao shuo de ku er yang gang shi jie. / Chong hui Ying wen huan she xiao shuo de ku er yang gang shi jieJanuary 2010 (has links)
Another major endeavor of this thesis concentrates on self-formulations of these queer sf bodies and textualities. My elaboration concerns their delineation of ontological pursuit, multi-hybrid post/non-humanity, and a highly self-aware appropriation of obscene, ambivalent and amoral performatives to constitute deviant cultural strategies which have by far successfully counter-written dominant politics' desire to assimilate dissident voices and recalcitrant sites. / My thesis provides three different approaches to re-read non-realistic, fantasmatic queer gender formations and trans-masculine sexualities. From these positions and perspectives, I will argue for the emergent force of queer transboyhood and gradual recognition given to several non-normative transgender masculine presences, starting from their connections and disagreements with old-guard lesbian feminist agenda and homo-normative les-bi-gay politics. This multitude built by trans-masculine affects not only greatly disturbs hetero-normativity and homo-normative discourses, such charismatic inscriptions which link into marginal territories also have created a persistent intervention to interfere and even convert/pervert canonized texts and representational modes. In these chapters to extrapolate this queer masculine sf heterogenesis, I focus on analyzing three archetypes of trans-masculine personalities and their highly different subjectivities. My aim for these analyses is to theorize how these marginal genders and bodies counterattack, infect, and thus re-write mega-historical narratives by their cultural momentum and anti-human poetics/politics. By performing these "infections", queer masculine subjectivity twists and transforms a seemingly liberal hegemony devoted to excluding the non-normative in the name of single-minded progress and bi-polar gender dichotomy. / This dissertation proposes to closely study writings on queer masculinity in English science fiction and fantasy, forming a trajectory of queer transboy representations from 1930s to the beginning of 21st century. By this project, I embark to articulate multi-layered historical contexts between speculative literature, sub-cultural sites, transgender politics, and constructions on marginal queer-gendered bodies. Through intertextual dynamics embedded within and among theoretical frameworks such as sf study, paraliterary interaction, penumbra sub-subjective tactics, post-human/trans-species writings, I will conduct articulations to generate forms and genealogies of queer masculinity in sf realm, building their continuum and ruptures, agency and subversive power. / 洪泠泠. / Adviser: Natalia Chan. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 73-03, Section: A, page: . / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2010. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 296-313). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Electronic reproduction. [Ann Arbor, MI] : ProQuest Information and Learning, [201-] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstracts in Chinese and English. / Hong Lingling.
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Fantasy as a mode in British and Irish literary decadence, 1885–1925Mercurio, Jeremiah Romano January 2011 (has links)
This Ph. D. thesis investigates the use of fantasy by British and Irish 'Decadent' authors and illustrators, including Oscar Wilde, Max Beerbohm, Aubrey Beardsley, 'Vernon Lee' (Violet Paget), Ernest Dowson, and Charles Ricketts. Furthermore, this study demonstrates why fantasy was an apposite form for literary Decadence, which is defined in this thesis as a supra-generic mode characterized by its anti-mimetic impulse, its view of language as autonomous and artificial, its frequent use of parody and pastiche, and its transgression of boundaries between art forms. Literary Decadence in the United Kingdom derives its view of autonomous language from Anglo-German Romantic philology and literature, consequently being distinguished from French Decadence by its resistance to realism and Naturalism, which assume language's power to signify the 'real world'. Understanding language to be inorganic, Decadent writers blithely countermand notions of linguistic fitness and employ devices such as catachresis, paradox, and tautology, which in turn emphasize the self-referentiality of Decadent texts. Fantasy furthers the Decadent argument about language because works of fantasy bear no specific relationship to 'reality'; they can express anything evocable within language, as J.R.R. Tolkien demonstrates with his example of "the green sun" (a phrase that can exist independent of the sun's actually being green). The thesis argues that fantasy's usefulness in underscoring arguments about linguistic autonomy explains its widespread presence in Decadent prose and visual art, especially in genres that had become associated with realism and Naturalism, such as the novel (Chapter 1), the short story (Chapter 3), drama (Chapter 4), and textual illustration (Chapter 2). The thesis also analyzes Decadents' use of a wholly non-realistic genre, the fairy tale (see Chapter 5), in order to delineate the consequences of their use of fantasy for the construction of character and gender within their texts.
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