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Die representasie van omstrede kwessies in kontemporêre Afrikaanse jeugverhale / Margaretha Johanna FritzFritz, Margaretha Johannes January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.A. (Afrikaans and Dutch))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2007.
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Die representasie van omstrede kwessies in kontemporêre Afrikaanse jeugverhale / Margaretha Johanna FritzFritz, Margaretha Johanna January 2007 (has links)
There are certain issues - such as violence, sexuality, politics and religion - which
are problematic but have to be dealt with in society. In this dissertation types of
controversial issues present in recent Afrikaans youth literature, the portrayal of
those issues, and the ways in which solutions are offered for these issues are
investigated.
The argument follows from the assumption that the literature which the adolescent
reads, has a directive value. Quite often the reader will choose to read material
about a certain situation with which the reader is also faced in real life. It may be
easy for the reader to identify with a character in similar circumstances or facing the
same dilemma. Through the actions of the character, the reader can then explore
certain avenues or possibilities which have the potential to be helpful in the solution
of the problem or issue.
For this dissertation research was done about certain controversial issues and
related aspects in literature in general, which are then applied to three youth novels:
Skilpoppe (1998) by Barrie Hough, Daar's vis in die punch (2002) by Jackie
Nagtegaal and Nie vir kinders nie (2005) by Francois Bloemhof. These three texts
were chosen because all three of them have generated public discussion, specifically
in the media, about the presence of controversial issues.
The results indicate the portrayal of the controversial issues to be unbiased and from
a non-judgemental authoring perspective. The presence of the text internal
corrective, which refers to the portrayal of a certain issue thereby giving it an
outcome (positive or negative) or an alternative, is noticeable and is discussed in this
dissertation. / Thesis (M.A. (Afrikaans and Dutch))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2007.
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Vampires in the sunburnt country : adapting vampire Gothic to the Australian landscapeNahrung, Jason January 2007 (has links)
I first became enamoured with vampire Gothic after reading Bram Stoker's Dracula in high school, but gradually became dissatisfied with the Australian adaptations of the sub-genre. In looking for examples of Australian vampire Gothic, a survey of more than 50 short stories, 23 novels and five movies made by Australians reveals fewer than half were set in an identifiably Australian setting. Even fewer make use of three key, landscape-related tropes of vampire Gothic - darkness, earth and ruins. Why are so few Australian vampire stories set in Australia? In what ways can the metaphorical elements of vampire Gothic be applied to the Sunburnt Country? This paper seeks to answer these questions by examining examples of Australian vampire narratives, including film. Particular attention is given to Mudrooroo's Master of the Ghost Dreaming series which, more than any other Australian novel, succeeds in manipulating and subverting the tropes of vampire Gothic. The process of adaptation of vampire Gothic to the Australian environment, both natural and man-made, is also a core concern of my own novel, Vampires' Bane, which uses earth, darkness and a modern permutation of ruins to explore its metaphorical intentions. Through examining previous works and through my own creative process, Vampires' Bane, I argue that Australia's growing urbanisation can be juxtaposed against the vampire-hostile natural environment to enhance the tropes of vampire Gothic, and make Australia a suitable home for narratives that explore the ongoing evolution of Count Dracula and his many-faceted descendants.
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Partially Buried: Land-Based Art in Ohio, 1970 to NowTalarico, Anna January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Beyond the Binaries: Passing as Cisgender in Middlesex, Trumpet, and Redefining RealnessWeiss, Hillary, Weiss 15 July 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Monarch Cheers, Integration Whimpers, and a Loyalty Conflict: Kansas City Call's Coverage of the Black Yankees, 1937-1955Eames, Eric M. 05 December 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Already regarded as one of the top teams in Negro League baseball, the Kansas City Monarchs became known as a powerhouse unit in the 1930s and 40s. They rolled into towns with lights, amazing athletes, and competitive play. They won championship after championship during these years as Kansas City baseball fans strongly supported them. As they became an integral part of the city, the Monarchs' success, open-seating policy, and jazzy home openers fostered a large following of mixed-race fans. The local black newspaper, the Kansas City Call, held them up on a pedestal, while sportswriters for the mainstream Kansas City Star/Times downplayed the Monarchs' accomplishments and influence in the community. This thesis focuses on the relationship the Call had with the best team in black baseball through the context of its treatment of games, players, league officials, and team owners, as well as other patterns and tactics. Analysis of the Star/Times coverage is also considered to show variances in coverage between one city's race-divided newspapers. Negro League baseball and the African American newspapers that covered the teams grew out of and illustrated the segregation laws and prejudices feelings that existed in the United States during most of the twentieth century. Over time, especially when the sports world moved into the post-integration period, the Call's bolstering of the Monarchs deteriorated as the paper's promotion of democracy steered its sportswriters away from a baseball organization that symbolized segregation. The different types of coverage by the Call throughout the twenty-year study can be described as all-out promotion, balance, and abandonment. In the 1950s nostalgia and conflict existed, as the Call's sportswriters became torn on how to cover a team that was once the pride of the black community, but now represented inequality. In an attempt to remedy this torment, the Call tried to convince black baseball officials to remove the “Negro League” stigma by signing players of all races in order to mirror the more democratic Major Leagues. The white press, meanwhile, ignored the bigger issues of black baseball as one Negro League team after another died in the 1950s. The Star/Times peripheral coverage of the Monarchs provides context to the social issues and discriminatory practices at play in Missouri. As this thesis outlines the coverage of the Monarchs through the Black and White newspapers of Kansas City, previous research is substantiated and challenged to provide a fuller account of Jim Crow's effects.
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