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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.
141

[en] DIALECTICS OF DECONSTRUCTION: MAY 68 AND CINEMA / [pt] DIALÉTICAS DA DESCONSTRUÇÃO: MAIO DE 68 E O CINEMA

LEONARDO GOMES ESTEVES 19 February 2019 (has links)
[pt] Dialéticas da desconstrução: Maio de 68 e o cinema tem como objetivo o estudo da desconstrução do cinema francês que emerge motivado pelo Maio de 68 tendo como referência principal a filmografia de três grupos que surgem no período: Dziga Vertov, Zanzibar e Medvedkine. A desconstrução é analisada tendo como base processos dialéticos que visam demonstrar uma qualidade movente, que permita dissociá-la do debate entre críticos para a qual é geralmente associada. O período sobre o qual a filmografia analisada aqui está confinada (1968-1974) compreende não apenas o surgimento e término dos grupos citados, mas mudanças internas nas artes marxistas utópicas que se veem impulsionadas por 68. Estas transformações no cinema são estudadas nesta tese tomando como referência a obra de Herbert Marcuse, no período que contempla a aparição das obras O homem unidimensional (1964) e A dimensão estética (1977). Desta forma, a tese investiga uma desconstrução histórica, na transmissão de técnicas e estéticas entre neovanguardas francesas do pós-guerra; uma desconstrução teórica, entre os críticos da Cahiers du cinéma e Cinéthique a partir de 1969; e uma autodesconstrução, referente a um reposicionamento que inverte política e estética na obra dos três grupos citados. / [en] This doctoral thesis analyzes the deconstruction of French cinema that emerges with May 68, having as main reference the filmography of three groups that appear in the period: Dziga Vertov, Zanzibar and Medvedkine. The deconstruction will be analyzed from dialectical processes that demonstrate a moving feature that allows its separation from the episode that is managed by the critics and which it has been occasionally associated. The period which the analyzed filmography is confined (1968-1974) reaches not only the beginning and end of the mentioned groups, but the internal changes in the Marxists arts that are influenced by 68. This thesis studies those transformations in cinema, having as reference the work of Herbert Marcuse, during the period that contemplates the appearance of the books The unidimensional man (1964) and The aesthetic dimension (1977). This thesis intends to investigate one historical deconstruction, which appears in the transmission of technics and aesthetics between French neo-avant-gardes of the post-war; one theoretical deconstruction, between the critics of Cahiers du cinéma and Cinéthique after 1969; and one auto-deconstruction, which answers to a repositioning that reverse politic and aesthetic in the work of the groups that are mentioned above.
142

As (im)possibilidades de efetivação dos Direitos Humanos Fundamentais diante das heranças nacionais da dependência e da escravidão /

Marcondes, Fernanda Cristina Barros January 2019 (has links)
Orientador: Antônio Alberto Machado / Resumo: Tendo em vista os disparates existentes entre o plano formal dos Direitos Humanos Fundamentais e o plano material de efetivação desses direitos, esta pesquisa parte da premissa que os Direito s Humanos Fundamentais não são efetivados no Brasil. Desse modo, a pesquisa tem o principal objetivo de questionar se é possível a efetivação dos Direitos Humanos Fundamentais no País, diante não só d o neoliberalismo , mas também das heranças nacionais da dependência e da escravidão. Busca se, assim, compreender inicialmente o que são os Direitos Humanos Fundamentais e como as diferentes correntes teóricas conceituam esses direitos. Desse modo, foi proposto uma divisão epistemológica entre as Corren tes Clássicas Tradicion ais e as Contra Teorias dos Direitos Humanos Fundamentais. As Contra Teorias foram divididas em Teorias Críticas ; Escola U spiana do A lysson M ascaro Perspectiva de Karl Marx na obra A Questão J udai ca ””. Após a compreensão epistemológica das diferentes correntes, o trab alho buscou compreender o capitalismo e o neoliberalismo, bem como as heranças nacionais da dependência e da escravidão. A pesquisa se pauta no paradigma da dialética do direito. Dessa maneira, para conseguir executar os objetivos da pesquisa, utilizou se da pesquisa bibliográfi ca, sendo realizada coleta de informações com caráter exploratório. Também foi aplicada a metodologia comparativa e dedutiva. Uma das conclusões encontradas é que embora a emancipação humana só seja possível com a superaçã... (Resumo completo, clicar acesso eletrônico abaixo) / Abstract: Given the existing nonsense between the formal plan of Fundamental Human Rights and the material plan for the realization of these rights, this research assumes that Fundamental Human Rights are not implemented in Brazil. Thus, the research has the main objective of questioning if it is possible the realization of the Fundamental Human Rights in the Country, facing not only neoliberalism, but also the national inheritances of dependence and slavery. Thus, we seek initially to understand what Fundamental Human Rights are and how the different theoretical currents conceptualize these rights. Thus, an epistemological division was proposed between the Traditional Classical Currents and the Counter-Theories of Fundamental Human Rights. Counter-Theories were divided into Critical Theories; Alysson Mascaro Uspian School; Karl Marx's perspective on the book The Jewish Question. After epistemological understanding of the different currents, the work sought to understand capitalism and neoliberalism, as well as the national inheritances of dependence and slavery. The research is based on the paradigm of the dialectic of law. Thus, in order to be able to execute the research objectives, we used the bibliographic research, and exploratory information was collected. The comparative and deductive methodology was also applied. One of the conclusions is that although human emancipation is only possible with the overcoming of the capitalist structure, political emancipation is possible in cur... (Complete abstract click electronic access below) / Mestre
143

The Political Nature of the Paris Commune of 1871 and Manifestations of Marxist Ideology in the Official Publications of the Central Committee

Jones, Emily M 01 January 2018 (has links)
Historians originally claimed that the 1871 Paris Commune was inspired by Karl Marx. Since the 1960s, however, this assertion has been rejected by scholars who either claim that Marx had no influence over the Paris Communards or do not address the possibility that this influence existed. Many scholars have also claimed that the Commune was not political in any way, but was a rebellion inspired by patriotism, bitterness for the Versailles government’s capitulation of Paris to Prussia, or a spontaneous reaction to hostility from the national army’s attempt to disarm the indignant, rapidly organizing Parisian workers who called for municipal authority under their own socialist government. This thesis analyzes the official publications of the governing body of the Paris Commune and argues that these sources demonstrate that this movement was political in nature, and that Marxist ideology helped to shape the political minds of the revolutionary working class in Paris.
144

The development of secondary school education in revolutionary Cuba, 1959-1991: A world-systems approach

Griffiths, Thomas January 1998 (has links)
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / In 1959 the popular Revolution of national liberation and independence triumphed in Cuba, extended a few years later into a Marxist-Leninist strategy for building socialism and communism on the island. In this radical social and political context, conditions were ripe for a radical alternative approach to secondary school education. This research confirms and extends existing evidence and analyses, showing that the model of secondary schooling established in revolutionary Cuba shared fundamental aspects of dominant models throughout the world. In particular, Cuba’s revolutionary schools are shown to have adopted a similar approach to mass education, as an investment in human capital and citizen formation. In the analysis of this historical phenomenon, a world-systems geocultural approach is used to describe and explain the non-exceptional form and character of Cuba’s secondary schools. The approach synthesises world-system level economic and cultural aspects, within the concept of a world-systems ‘geoculture’ of development, describing how these interrelated influences historically conditioned secondary school education policy and practice in Cuba. This process is traced through the impact of the world-economy, and related world-systems geocultural assumptions and objectives, over the political economy of Cuba’s socialist project, with direct implications for secondary school education. The world-system level conditioning influence on school policy and practice is shown to have been mediated by the particular national conditions, such that features specific to Cuba’s secondary schools are identified within the broad framework and constraints of the world-system level influence. The world-systems geocultural approach provides a viable, historical account of secondary school policy and practice in revolutionary Cuba. General continuity is identified, in accordance with the broad, world-system level influence. The historical analysis demonstrates the need for a world-system level approach, and supports the need to include world economic and cultural factors, under the geocultural framework.
145

How the Pathet Lao seized power in Laos in 1975

Desley Goldston Unknown Date (has links)
Victors do not always write history. To date our knowledge of how the Pathet Lao seized power in Laos in 1975 has been based on accounts from those who witnessed events but who were not privy to the thinking and planning behind them. After the violent fall of Cambodia and Vietnam, the slow, relatively peaceful and seemingly dilatory takeover of power they observed did not equate with the Lao People’s Revolutionary Party’s assertion that its seizure of power was due to the “creative application of Marxism-Leninism to Lao conditions”. This work attempts to determine the accuracy of the Lao Party’s claim by using LPRP documents and written and verbal accounts, which reveal the strategic thinking and tactics behind the Lao Revolution. The piecing together of information drawn from many and varied sources that were directly involved, at last sheds some light on how a small, weak movement overthrew a government almost without violence. It also reveals that the LPRP carefully and deliberately planned and executed the peaceful formation of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic in December 1975 in a revolution that was unprecedented in the history of Marxist-Leninist revolutions.
146

Theory in Culture: Toward a Psychoanalytic Criticism of Advertising

Bellinson, Robin L 09 June 2006 (has links)
The role of advertising in postmodern culture is far more than an impetus to capitalist economy; from its first full flowering in the 1920s, it has addressed its human subjects in ways that exceed considerations of monetary exchange. Advertising has come not only to sell people what they desire – it has also materially changed their desire, and thus the people themselves in the process. Certainly ‘individuals’ have become ‘consumers’ – but the problem is greater than this. Advertising, with its undeniable aspects of fantasy, often stands in complete opposition to critical thinking. This examination explores advertising’s effects on the individual through the critical lenses of ideology and psychoanalysis, concluding that although ideology is a relevant methodology, it remains incomplete. Psychoanalytic theory, on the other hand, provides multiple avenues of interpreting how advertising addresses both the conscious and the unconscious mind, and offers a potential methodology for personal resistance and social change.
147

A prison-house of myth? symptomal readings in Virgin land, The madwoman in the Attic, and The political unconscious /

Hestetun, Øyunn. January 1993 (has links)
Thèse doctorat : Department of English : Uppsala : 1993.
148

From Upper Volta to Burkina Faso: A Study of the Politics of Reaction and Reform in a Post-Colonial African Nation-state, 1960-1987

Williamson, Bryan J. 01 January 2013 (has links)
Abstract (from thesis text) From Upper Volta to Burkina Faso, is the study of the politics of reaction and reform in a post-colonial nation-state of Burkina Faso. Since its independence from France on 5 August 1960 to 15 October 1987, Burkina Faso, the "land of the upright" people, has experience five changes in government. All of the coups that took place in this twenty-seven year period were reactionary and reforming. However, the most memorable reforms arrived after the coup of 4 August 1983 which gave rise to a youthful president in a thirty-three year old Captain Thomas Sankara. As the leaders before him, Sankara reacted against a post-colonial government that he and supporters saw as inadequate. Unlike the previous coups in the Upper Volta, this work argues that the 4 August 1983 coup brought class consciousness to the forefront. It aimed to establish its identity by changing the country's name from the colonial name of Upper Volta to Burkina Faso. The revolutionaries appeared to be g6enuine in meeting their words with action by working to create self-sufficient citizens, curb environmental depredation, combat corruption in government and provide women more opportunities. Though the Revolution in Burkina Faso (1983-1987) did not end the country's ambitions for a multi-party democracy, it did elevate the status of women, literacy, mortality and pride for the homeland.
149

Reproducing Canada's colonial legacy: a critical analysis of Aboriginal issues in Ontario high school curriculum

Watters, Jordan Austin 29 August 2007 (has links)
Canadian education has historical roots in blatantly assimilationist policies bent on the social, economic, linguistic and spiritual subjugation of Aboriginal peoples and their cultures. Today, Canadian education has moved away from overtly colonialist discourses and publicly embraced the principles of multiculturalism. This research explores how and if this ideological shift has translated into the practice of contemporary Canadian education as it is experienced by students. My research focuses on the ways Canada’s colonial history and contemporary Aboriginal issues are addressed in mandatory Ontario high school social studies curriculum. This analysis is based on interviews with twenty-five recent high school graduates about what they remember learning about Aboriginal issues and how that knowledge has influenced their understanding of colonialism and Aboriginal peoples today. My interpretive analysis of students’ responses relies on the insights provided by critical pedagogy and postcolonial theory. By drawing on Gramsci, Freire and Apple I challenge the hegemonic practices in education that continue to marginalize Aboriginal peoples and their struggles. This research contributes to scholarship in the sociology of education and postcolonial studies by providing a unique picture of the ways in which young people come to understand Canada’s colonial legacy through their formal education, as well as providing insight into new directions for curriculum development, teacher training and more effective integration of anti-racist pedagogy in Ontario’s high schools. / Thesis (Master, Sociology) -- Queen's University, 2007-08-23 17:38:27.532
150

Communication and counter hegemony in contemporary South Africa : considerations on a leftist media theory and practice.

Louw, Paul Eric. January 1991 (has links)
In South Africa the left-wing is currently in an ascendant mode. Yet it is not an unproblematic ascendancy. For one thing, because Marxism has been interwoven with so much of the South African struggle, the South African Left are now unable to disentangle themselves from the contemporary 'collapse of the Marxist dream'. And this translates into a South African socio-political issue because as the Left accumulates influence and power in South Africa so the problems and limitations of historical materialism acquire a wider social significance. This thesis will argue that a key problem with the historical materialist paradigm has been its limitations when dealing with communication and the media. However, there have been historical materialists (usually those who consciously stepped outside 'mainstream Marxist' discourse) who made considerable advances in attempting to develop historical materialism's capacity for dealing with communication, the media and the subjective. This thesis will examine some of the work which has attempted to 'reconstruct' historical materialism away from a narrow materialism. The aim will be to give some direction to the development of a New Left approach to communication. Such a reconstruction is seen as a precondition if the Left-wing is to find a formula for dealing with Information Age relations of production. A New Left communicology able to deal with the 'superstructuralism' of the Information Age offers a specific perspective on how to construct a development strategy for South Africa. This will be discussed, and the thesis will attempt to tie together the notions of communication, development and democracy. The relationship between communication and democracy will be especially important for the New Left approach that will be favoured in this thesis. So an important theme in the thesis will be the question of developing a left-hegemony based upon a democratic-pluralism. This will entail examining the role that media and an institutionalised social-dialogue can play in building a left-wing democracy. The extent to which the left-wing media in South Africa have contributed to a democratic dialogue is discussed. This will then be extended into a discussion of how media can contribute to the reconstruction, development and democratization of a leftist post-apartheid South Africa. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1991.

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