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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.
61

The Military Camptown in Retrospect: Multiracial Korean American Subject Formation Along the Black-White Binary

Miller, Perry Dal-nim 21 August 2007 (has links)
No description available.
62

"i am on the Coloured Side": The Roles of the White Suitor and the Black Mother in the Tragic Mulatta Narrative

Luders Manuel, Shannon D 01 January 2013 (has links) (PDF)
What I propose to add to the already established dialogue regarding the tragic mulatta narrative is an investigation into the commonalities of the genre’s endings, as well as to assert that the tragic mulatta genre is present even at the turn of the 21st century with such works as Danzy Senna’s Caucasia. While my investigation by no means covers an exhaustive list of tragic mulatta narratives, the readings provide an overview of the ways in which the narrative has both evolved over time and stayed consistent during the antebellum, post-bellum, Harlem Renaissance, and the present day. I present each author as both building from previous authors’ works and as limited to the time period in which he or she pens the novel(s). The tragic mulatta of the post-bellum rejected white male suitors as a larger and more crucial rejection of sexual slavery and depravity, as well as attempting to shield the suitors from experiencing rejection from their own white contemporaries, as Angela does at the end of Plum Bun: “But I want you to know that from now on, so far as sides are concerned, I am on the coloured side. And I don’t want you to come over on that side” (373). However, the tragic mulattas continue to reject white male suitors even into the 21st century, and I assert that this repetition is limiting both to the characters themselves and to the narrative lives of contemporary mulatta readers. I further assert that the genre continues to pair rejection of the white male suitor with a reappropriation of true “blackness” and maternal domesticity. Through observing the tragic mulatta’s need to gain identity and sense of place through her darker mother or sister and the rejection of a white male suitor, tragic mulatta scholars—as well as critical race theorists in general—become more aware of the unique position the genre holds in identity formation as seen through what I believe are critical fictional texts for an interracial nation.
63

Race, Space, and Gender: Re-mapping Chinese America from the Margins, 1875-1943

Winans, Adrienne Ann 20 October 2015 (has links)
No description available.
64

Mieko Gavia : The Dog Project

Gavia, Mieko 17 June 2011 (has links)
No description available.
65

Entre racialisation et subjectivité : analyse critique de la construction identitaire chez des femmes biraciales francophones au Québec

Lefebvre, Magalie 29 September 2022 (has links)
Cette étude mobilise trois histoires de vie afin d’étudier la construction des subjectivités de femmes biraciales au Québec en 2021. En plus de s’inscrire dans les études sociologiques de la famille, cette recherche dévoile également l’articulation d’un dialogue entre la littérature issue des mixed-race studies, les études critiques de la race, les études de la blanchité. Annexé au savoir expérientiel des répondantes, cela permet de mettre en lumière certains enjeux rencontrés face à l’articulation des identités raciales des femmes issues d’une union interraciale (Noire-blanche). Ainsi, les objectifs spécifiques de ce travail sont d’analyser les impacts de ces enjeux raciaux sur la construction du soi. Les concepts de la racialisation mouvante, voire aléatoire, la binarité de la race ainsi que l’invalidation des identités raciales dans divers espaces de socialisation sont particulièrement explorés. C’est avec un bref rappel historique du passé esclavagiste de la « Belle Province » (Québec) que je démontre que la domination blanche en tant que système est au fondement des stéréotypes raciaux socialement construits qui continuent à définir (ou de laisser se définir) les corps noir.e.s et biraciaux. Quoique cette emprise racialisante soit un frein aux articulations complexes des identités biraciales, cette recherche illustre qu’il est néanmoins possible, par le biais de la résistance et de l’agentivité, que des femmes biraciales construisent leurs subjectivités en dehors des cadres fixes, objectivants et imposés socialement.
66

Mixed race and African parents’ experiences, challenges and coping strategies regarding the coming out of their child as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer, questioning and a-sexual+ : suggestions for social work support

Hobbs-Russell, Marlize 01 1900 (has links)
Mixed race and African South African parents of children coming out as Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transsexual, Intersex, Queer, Questioning and A-Sexual+ have a unique set of challenges within their cultural, religious and social contexts. The problem statement for the study entails that parents have to deal with familial and societal perceptions and reactions to their child coming out, face their own challenges and fears concerning their child’s sexual orientation or identity, and find coping strategies to deal with their coming out as LGBTIQA+. During my research in the UNISA library and online I found that there is a paucity of literature on this subject matter, especially within the South African context. The aim of this study was to obtain an in-depth understanding of these mixed race and African parents’ experiences, challenges and coping strategies in relation to a child coming out as LGBTIQA+. The Resiliency Theory of Family Stress, Adjustment and Adaptation, as linked to Hill’s Stress Theory and the Strength-based approach, were adopted as related theories within the theoretical framework of this study. A qualitative approach was employed, as I intended to gain insight into the lived experiences, challenges and coping strategies of mixed race and African South African parents in relation to a child coming out as LGBTIQA+, as well as to gain advice on social work support. A phenomenological and collective instrumental case study design, together with an explorative, descriptive and contextual strategy of inquiry, were used to explore, describe and contextualise how mixed race and African parents of LGBTIQA+ children experienced their children’s coming out, what their challenges were, and the coping strategies they employed to manage the challenges experienced. The sample of participants was selected by utilising purposive sampling. Semi-structured interviews, contained in an interview guide, were used to collect the data that was analysed using Tesch’s method of analysis (in Creswell, 2014:198). The data were collected by means of individual interviews and presented in a cross-person manner using selected narratives from the participants. Guba’s model, as espoused in Krefting (1991) and Lietz and Zayas (2010), was used and the four aspects of trustworthiness, namely credibility, transferability, dependability and confirmability, were applied. Ethical considerations were observed. The findings led the researcher to make recommendations regarding social work practice, education and further research into the phenomenon of parental experiences, challenges and coping strategies in relation to a child coming out as LGBTIQA+. In terms of parental experiences of their child coming out as LGBTIQA+, I found that parents were surprised and unhappy, disappointed, pained and shocked, and fearful for their child’s safety when they realised he or she was LGBTIQA+. When it came to their challenges and fears, the parents openly admitted that what the community, church and external family would make of their child being LGBTIQA+ caused stress for them. Lastly, the parents made recommendations to social workers based on their experiences, challenges and coping strategies, indicating that social workers should focus on sharing information and guiding parents; but firstly, social workers must have self-awareness and understand their own attitudes toward LGBTIQA+ matters. / Social Work / MA (Social Work)

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