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CULTURAL FACTORS AFFECTING FOOD PREFERENCE: THE CASE OF TARWI IN THREE QUECHUA SPEAKING AREAS OF PERUMartinez-Zuniga, Sandra Monica 02 April 2007 (has links)
Cultural factors affecting food preference and tarwi consumption in three departments of the Peruvian Andes were evaluated. This study suggests that tarwi consumption in Peru is location specific. Moreover, the contact between lo capitalino and lo serrano affects peoples food preferences. Andahuaylas, which has the least amount of contact with the capital, was the place where tarwi was eaten openly and proudly. Cusco, even though further from Lima, has many new capitalino businesses because of the tourist industry, resulting in shame at the fact that they still eat tarwi. In Ayacucho, the consumption of tarwi has disappeared. Furthermore, Ayacucho suffered more from terrorism than any other department in Peru. Thus, even secondary factors like civil turmoil and tourism, which act indirectly, still modify food preference and dietary choices. Finally, there are cultural factors not always visible to the naked eye, such as whether a food is inherently cold or hot, male or female, or a food fit only for the poor or acceptable for the middle class.
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Spiritual Regeneration and Ultra-Nationalism: The Political Thought of Pedro Albizu Campos and Plínio Salgado in 1930s Puerto Rico and BrazilBottura, Juri 13 April 2009 (has links)
This research explores the political thought of two Latin American intellectuals and party leaders of the 1930s, Pedro Albizu Campos from Puerto Rico and Plínio Salgado from Brazil. During a decade of economic depression and political turmoil, they elaborated nationalist and revolutionary ideologies, and headed two influential political movements, the Partido Nacionalista de Puerto Rico and the Ação Integralista Brasileira, respectively. The interpretation of these experiences benefited from some recent developments in the European field of fascist studies, and in particular from Roger Griffins ideal type of generic fascism as a palingenetic populist ultra-nationalism and Emilio Gentiles notion of political religion. Albizu and Salgado showed a common core of worldviews and values centered on the belief that they were witnessing the peak of a long-term process of moral and material decadence as a consequence of capitalism and liberalism. On this basis, they each proposed a project of spiritual rebirth (palingenesis) to be carried out through the rejection of the foreign, bourgeois model of development, and through the exaltation of what they considered genuine national traits, in particular, race and religion. The Catholic tradition also provided a repertoire of terms, symbols, and principles that they employed to shape their parties as sectarian and hierarchical organizations, subjected to an authoritarian leadership. The comparison of these two converging political discourses strengthens the call for a transnational study of the 1930s Latin American extreme right.
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Intellectual in Flux: the Development of Liberal Catholic Thought in Alceu Amoroso LimaDelgado, Laura E. 20 April 2010 (has links)
This thesis reinterprets the writings of the Brazilian Catholic intellectual Alceu Amoroso Lima, in particular, his work in the 1930s. A leading Catholic intellectual and one of the most important laymen in the country, Alceu Amoroso Lima became well known for his opposition to the Brazilian dictatorship from 1964-85. The 1930s are a critical era in the development of his beliefs about the Church and social justice; however, he is often characterized as a militant, intolerant conservative during this time. This thesis demonstrates that the 1930s were in fact a crucial moment in the development of the beliefs that would transform him into a famous liberal in the 1960s. His writings of the 1930s contain the genesis of his liberal ideas. These same ideas would become central to international Catholic thought in the development of liberation theology in the 1960s. In Alceus philosophical debates over the nature of humanity and society, the Church and politics, several constant themes emerge. First and foremost was his belief in the importance of liberty and justice, and peaceful change as the method to obtain them. Second, he argued for the need for Church intervention into social issues and he initiated a debate over ecclesiology, specifically to what extent the Church should involve itself in temporal affairs. Finally, he stressed the paramount role of education in shaping the laitys understanding of Church doctrine, believing that a better foundation in Church dogma would prepare them to the face challenges of the modern world.
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From Jach'a Mallku to Alcalde: The Tensions Between Liberal Democracy and Indigenous Autonomy in BoliviaVoth, Hillary 12 April 2011 (has links)
This thesis examines the impact of the recent recognition of indigenous autonomy in Bolivia on democracy in that country. Over the past several decades, the Bolivian central government has attempted to improve the quality of democracy in the country through reforms aimed at political decentralization and the inclusion of indigenous citizens, the countrys largest, historically marginalized group. In that spirit, President Evo Morales ratified Bolivias newest constitution in 2009, which legalizes self-determination for indigenous communities, upholding their right to define their own local political, economic and judicial systems. Nevertheless, this reform has failed to deepen democracy in the country for two reasons. First, there are inherent tensions between indigenous political systems and liberal democracy. Second, indigenous autonomy has been implemented in a top-down fashion in Bolivia, a process from which indigenous peoples were largely excluded.
<p>While I argue that indigenous political systems must undergo several modifications to make them more democratic, these changes should be born out of serious dialogue between the state and indigenous communities, instead of being imposed from above without heeding the observations of indigenous actors. However, in Bolivia, the latter was the case. Thus, I argue, indigenous autonomy has reinforced the marginalization of indigenous peoples in Bolivia, diminishing the quality of democracy.
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COM A BARRIGA CHEIA: THE IMPACT OF THE BOLSA FAMÍLIA PROGRAM ON EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES IN BRAZILReuse Martins, Becky Kay 18 April 2011 (has links)
This thesis evaluates the impact of the Brazilian Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) Program, Bolsa Família, on educational outcomes with special attention to student performance. In Brazil, CCTs in education first appeared in 1995 in the Federal District of Brasília and in the city of Campinas, São Paulo with the Bolsa Escola Program. In 2004, Bolsa Escola and other social programs were collapsed under the comprehensive poverty alleviation initiative, Bolsa Família. As of 2011 there were 12 million families participating in the Bolsa Família Program making it the largest CCT Program in the world. This thesis demonstrates that since the implementation of Bolsa Família, students in the lowest income quintiles, the target population of Bolsa Família, have shown improved performance on the national achievement test, the SAEB, also known as Prova Brasil. This thesis suggests the inclusion of an additional transfer contingent on improved performance on exams or improved final grades to further stimulate the desire for academic achievement among recipient children and their families. In conclusion, this thesis finds that Bolsa Família has improved the educational outcomes for students of low socioeconomic status while simultaneously stimulating a much-needed discussion about the equity and quality of public education in Brazil.
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THE SIBLINGS OF HISPANIOLA: POLITICAL UNION AND SEPARATION OF HAITI AND SANTO DOMINGO, 1822-1844De Pena, Gustavo Antonio 28 April 2011 (has links)
In 1822 Haiti annexed the Spanish colony of Santo Domingo through effective rhetorical persuasion. The petition of Dominican municipalities for Haitian tutelage in the early 1820s and Spains refusal to object to the Haitian presence on the Spanish side, confirms that Port-Au-Princes twenty-two year administration over Santo Domingo was not an outright occupation. Haiti and the municipalities developed a profitable economic partnership. The city of Santo Domingo chose to exclude itself from the relationship and thereby became a political outcast on the island. President Jean Pierre Boyers administration from 1818 to 1843 succeeded in engendering a local peasantry, abolishing slavery, and producing significant economic growth in the Cibao. But he was deposed for failing to eradicate state-sponsored racial discrimination and for implementing unpopular and ineffective economic policy. The subsequent union between the two communities failed in 1844 not because of linguistic and cultural differences but rather due to the eastern sides increasing political and economic marginalization and the increased racial tensions destabilizing the western side. Although most Dominicans at the time agreed that separation from Haiti should be realized in 1844, they disagreed on whether to assemble a sovereign republic or reinstitute a protectorate over Santo Domingo. Considering that the ruling party there favored a French protectorate, the Dominican Republic was born in 1844 because no world power would agree to protect it. At its core, Dominican nationalism was handicapped because the ruling class was not invested in its preservation.
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LOOK AT ME AND TELL ME IF I DON'T HAVE BRAZIL IN EVERY CURVE OF MY BODY: WOMEN, PROPAGANDA, AND NATION DURING THE ESTADO NÔVO, 1937-1945Eiland, Mary Elizabeth 09 April 2012 (has links)
This project analyzes the disparate images of women produced during the period of Getúlio Vargas Estado Nôvo from 1937-1945, discussing their significance in the state-driven process of identity formation during the period. Using a variety of popular media sources and state-produced propaganda materials, I illustrate the paradoxical and dynamic socio-political space that women occupied in the national imaginary, the extent to which this space expanded or limited the realm of political and social action within Brazilian patriarchy, and how these contrasting images of Brazilian femininity produced at home and abroad affected notions of brasilidade. I argue that the Brazilian state ultimately did not effectively integrate women into the nationalist project, including them in the national imaginary, yet denying them full political rights and mobility. Furthermore, the Vargas regimes definition of brasilidade contradicted the more progressive images and modes of behavior promoted in the public sphere through popular media, as epitomized by Carmen Miranda.
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Ahora Todos Somos Panameños: Kuna Identity and Panamanian Nationalism under the Torrijos Regime, 1968-1981Foss, Sarah 23 April 2012 (has links)
In 1968, a military coup surprised Panama, placing political power in the hands of populist leader General Omar Torrijos Herrera. Recuperation of the Panama Canal remained a high priority to the government, and Torrijos repeatedly articulated that the means to territorial sovereignty only existed through a unified Panamanian nation. Thus, the Torrijos government embarked on the task of incorporating the marginalized masses into the government, including the notoriously autonomous Kuna. As pluriethnicity became a crucial tenet of Panamanian national identity, the Kuna struggled to preserve their culture but simultaneously adopted governmental development programs and capitalized on opportunities for political participation. This project studies the relationship between the Kuna and the Torrijos government, which lasted from 1968-1981, focusing on issues of nationalism, ethnicity, and identity.
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Genealogà a De Imaginarios Geogrà Ficos Colombianos: Representaciones Culturales, Espacio, Estado Y Desplazamiento En El Proceso DeJunguito, Andrea 11 December 2008 (has links)
<p>Colombia has historically been known as a fragmented country because of its poor territorial integration. This dissertation intends to transcend the traditional way in which this (dis)integration process has been studied, principally linked to geographical determinism. Based on the theories developed by Henry Lefebvre, David Harvey and Milton Santos regarding the production of space, geographical determinism is confronted in two ways: on one hand Colombian spatial problematic is inserted within a global context, which highlights that the production of space is dependent in peripheral areas, and on the other hand, the role of the symbolic field in the production of space is studied through the conformation of a genealogy of Colombian geographical imaginaries.</p><p>This is a restricted genealogy in the sense that it focuses only on three historical periods: the nation-state building process in the nineteenth century, the period known as La Violencia (1948-1965), and the "triple war" that has been active since the seventies. The sources studied for each respective period are: travel literature and travel illustrations, testimonial novels, and testimonies. Chapter one focuses on the production of the national space, and through an inter-artistic approach of the textual and visual components of the Comisión Corográfica (1850-1859), it highlights this project's influence on the construction of the country as a regionalized country. Chapters two and three focus on how different types of violence have emerged as agents of deep spatial transformations, and highlight that the cultural field not only constructs discursively the "spaces of terror" produced by violence, but by doing so, it contributes to the inclusion of those spaces in the nation's geographical imaginaries. Finally, the conclusion comprises the spatial transformations brought about by the Constitution of 1991, which inevitably refer to the first chapter's view on how national space was constructed in the nineteenth century. This genealogy highlights both the role of the cultural field in the production of space, and in the diffusion of "alternative spaces" (Lefebvre), as it contributes to insert them within the geographical imaginaries. </p><p>Resumen</p><p>Colombia se ha caracterizado históricamente por ser un país fragmentado a raíz de su reducida cohesión territorial. Esta tesis se propone trascender la forma tradicional en la que se ha abordado el proceso de (des)integración nacional, caracterizada por estar fuertemente anclada en el determinismo geográfico. Partiendo de las teorías de Henry Lefebvre, David Harvey y Milton Santos acerca de la producción del espacio, se confronta el determinismo geográfico por dos vías: por un lado se inserta la problemática espacial colombiana dentro de un marco global, con lo cual se resalta el carácter dependiente de la producción del espacio en la periferia, y por el otro, se estudia el papel de lo simbólico en la producción del espacio, mediante la construcción de una genealogía de imaginarios geográficos colombianos. </p><p>Esta es una genealogía restringida en la medida en que sólo se enfoca en tres periodos: la construcción del Estado-nación en la segunda mitad del siglo XIX, el periodo de La Violencia (1948-1965), y la "triple guerra" que viene sucediendo desde finales de los setentas. El tipo de fuentes que se estudian en cada periodo son libros e imágenes de viaje, novelas testimoniales y testimonios respectivamente. En el primer capítulo se estudia la forma en que se construyó el espacio nacional, y mediante el estudio inter-artístico tanto del producto textual como visual de la Comisión Corográfica (1850-1859), se resalta la importancia de este proyecto en la construcción del país como un país de regiones. Luego, en el segundo y el tercer capítulo se aborda la forma en que diferentes tipos de violencia se convierten en agentes de profundas transformaciones espaciales, y se resalta que el campo cultural no sólo construye discursivamente los "espacios del terror" generados a raíz de la violencia, sino que al hacerlo contribuye a insertarlos dentro del imaginario geográfico de la nación. Finalmente en la conclusión se abordan las transformaciones espaciales suscitadas por la Constitución de 1991, lo cual inevitablemente conlleva a retomar las reflexiones planteadas en el primer capítulo con respecto a la forma en se construyó el espacio nacional en el siglo XIX. A través de esta se resalta el papel activo que ha cumplido el campo cultural tanto en la producción del espacio, como en la difusión de "espacios alternativos" (Lefebvre), al contribuir a insertarlos dentro del imaginario geográfico nacional.</p> / Dissertation
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Reconstituting community local religion, political culture, and rebellion in Mexico's Sierra Gorda, 1846-1880 /Cypher, James. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Indiana University, Dept. of History, 2007. / Title from dissertation home page (viewed Sept. 24, 2008). Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 69-02, Section: A, page: 0719. Adviser: Peter Guardino.
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