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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.
1

The illegible state in Cape Verde: language policy and the quality of democracy

Amado, Abel Djassi 08 April 2016 (has links)
To what extent does language policy affect or have an impact on the quality of democracy? In third wave democracies of sub-Saharan Africa, a diglossic language policy--the type of policy that organizes the languages of the community in an asymmetrical manner, in which the language of the former colonial power assumes political and social predominance--constitutes a powerful hindrance to engaging citizenship. Such a policy perpetuates the linguistic divide between the state and society. Subsequently, ordinary citizens' political departicipation ensues, with serious consequences on the quality of democracy. Deriving from the data gathered in Praia, Cape Verde, through a combination of archival research, informed direct and focus groups interviews, during summers of 2010 and 2011, I argue that diglossic language policy limits the quality of democracy by way of lower classes' diminished surveillatory and initiatory political participation. Diglossic language policy creates and reinforces a state that is linguistically detached from society. The state, as such, is illegible to the non-high language speakers, who may find it very difficult to follow its operations, procedures, and processes. Ultimately, state illegibility breeds low levels of surveillatory participation on the part of non-high language speakers. Inability to "read" the state translates into failure to properly supervise it. At the same time, initiatory political participation, the entering and engaging in political discussion and deliberation with peers or state agents, is also constrained. This state of affairs derives from: a) inaudibility, the notion that political communication in the vernacular is of less value; and b) ridicule, the idea that to speak the high language incorrectly is to succumb to public derision, a condition that invalidates the message. In the final analysis, diglossic language policy preserves the divide between elite and masses, whereby the latter participation in politics is limited to voting. While it creates the conditions for political effervescence at the top, through elite pluralism and competition, the Schumpeterian elite democracy freezes the bottom. Given the limited forms of political participation of ordinary citizens, states with diglossic language policy, such as Cape Verde, should not be considered quality democracies.
2

Continuité et métamorphoses du surréalisme bruxellois : la poétique de l’illisible chez Christian Dotremont

Lupu-Onet, Raluca 11 1900 (has links)
Cette thèse pose la question de la fortune remarquable du surréalisme en Belgique et porte particulièrement attention à la poétique de Christian Dotremont qui, après une période surréaliste, trace le premier logogramme en 1962. La partie initiale de notre recherche interroge ses rapports avec le groupe surréaliste bruxellois (Paul Nougé et René Magritte), préoccupé par le refus de l’œuvre. Cette démarche subversive se transforme dans l’art expérimental du groupe Cobra (communauté artistique fondée en 1948 par Dotremont). Nous nous intéressons à cette évolution d’une préoccupation logocentrique (où le mot compte pour le contenu qu’il véhicule : il s’agit de la poétique « primitive » de Nougé et des objets bouleversants de Magritte) vers l’exploration du mot comme trace, comme scription et, par là même, comme source de poésie. La deuxième partie de notre recherche traite de l’époque Cobra où se forge ce que nous appelons la poétique du visible chez Dotremont dont le résultat est la découverte du pouvoir créatif du mot en tant que matière, en tant que trace manuscrite. Ces expérimentations centrées sur la matérialité du langage préparent le cheminement artistique de Dotremont vers l’invention du logogramme (objet d’analyse de la troisième partie de la thèse). Dans l’idée d’une légitimation du logogramme en tant que nouveau genre poético-pictural, nous relevons ses invariants créateurs : sans pour autant se soumettre au modèle pictural, celui-ci n’est ni peinture des mots, ni mot-tableau, il exploite la matérialité de la lettre comme source poétique : genre transfrontalier qui ne cesse de mettre en question et d’inclure dans sa cinétique la métamorphose de sa réception. / The main focus of our research points out the noteworthy longevity of the Belgian surrealist group. Thus, we have chosen to analyze the poetic and artistic works of one of its most important representative, Christian Dotremont. His interartistic poetics (beginning with a surrealist phase and continuing until the invention of the logograms in 1962) is in fact symptomatic for the complete transformation of the Belgian movement. Consequently, the first part of our research examines Dotremont’s contacts and collaborations with the surrealist group (Paul Nougé and René Magritte), mainly interested by subversive creative works. Their negative technique is transformed by Dotremont into experimental art along with his own group founded in 1948, Cobra. The second part of this research would particularly like to draw attention to this evolution from a logocentric artistic point of view in which the word is important for its meaning (Nougé’s “primitive” poetry theory or Magritte’s praxis of “objets bouleversants”) toward Dotremont and Cobra’s discovery of the word as materiality, as scription, and as poetic source. This is the object of the second part of our thesis, where we explore Cobra “poetics of visible”: the pictorial and poetic importance of painted not written texts, words or letters. Cobra collective inventions investigate the aesthetic results of in-between artistic techniques and also emphasize Dotremont progression from a subversive surrealist literary point of view to the invention of logograms. This hybrid creation, the logogram, is examined in detail in the third and last part of our thesis.
3

Continuité et métamorphoses du surréalisme bruxellois : la poétique de l’illisible chez Christian Dotremont

Lupu-Onet, Raluca 11 1900 (has links)
Cette thèse pose la question de la fortune remarquable du surréalisme en Belgique et porte particulièrement attention à la poétique de Christian Dotremont qui, après une période surréaliste, trace le premier logogramme en 1962. La partie initiale de notre recherche interroge ses rapports avec le groupe surréaliste bruxellois (Paul Nougé et René Magritte), préoccupé par le refus de l’œuvre. Cette démarche subversive se transforme dans l’art expérimental du groupe Cobra (communauté artistique fondée en 1948 par Dotremont). Nous nous intéressons à cette évolution d’une préoccupation logocentrique (où le mot compte pour le contenu qu’il véhicule : il s’agit de la poétique « primitive » de Nougé et des objets bouleversants de Magritte) vers l’exploration du mot comme trace, comme scription et, par là même, comme source de poésie. La deuxième partie de notre recherche traite de l’époque Cobra où se forge ce que nous appelons la poétique du visible chez Dotremont dont le résultat est la découverte du pouvoir créatif du mot en tant que matière, en tant que trace manuscrite. Ces expérimentations centrées sur la matérialité du langage préparent le cheminement artistique de Dotremont vers l’invention du logogramme (objet d’analyse de la troisième partie de la thèse). Dans l’idée d’une légitimation du logogramme en tant que nouveau genre poético-pictural, nous relevons ses invariants créateurs : sans pour autant se soumettre au modèle pictural, celui-ci n’est ni peinture des mots, ni mot-tableau, il exploite la matérialité de la lettre comme source poétique : genre transfrontalier qui ne cesse de mettre en question et d’inclure dans sa cinétique la métamorphose de sa réception. / The main focus of our research points out the noteworthy longevity of the Belgian surrealist group. Thus, we have chosen to analyze the poetic and artistic works of one of its most important representative, Christian Dotremont. His interartistic poetics (beginning with a surrealist phase and continuing until the invention of the logograms in 1962) is in fact symptomatic for the complete transformation of the Belgian movement. Consequently, the first part of our research examines Dotremont’s contacts and collaborations with the surrealist group (Paul Nougé and René Magritte), mainly interested by subversive creative works. Their negative technique is transformed by Dotremont into experimental art along with his own group founded in 1948, Cobra. The second part of this research would particularly like to draw attention to this evolution from a logocentric artistic point of view in which the word is important for its meaning (Nougé’s “primitive” poetry theory or Magritte’s praxis of “objets bouleversants”) toward Dotremont and Cobra’s discovery of the word as materiality, as scription, and as poetic source. This is the object of the second part of our thesis, where we explore Cobra “poetics of visible”: the pictorial and poetic importance of painted not written texts, words or letters. Cobra collective inventions investigate the aesthetic results of in-between artistic techniques and also emphasize Dotremont progression from a subversive surrealist literary point of view to the invention of logograms. This hybrid creation, the logogram, is examined in detail in the third and last part of our thesis.

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