3 resultados para re-presenting life stories
em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal
Resumo:
Este relatório é o resultado descritivo e reflexivo de um Projeto de Educação e Intervenção Social, "Viver mais... Pensar o passado, viver o presente e sonhar o futuro", desenvolvido com um grupo de idosos do Centro de Caridade Nossa Senhora do Perpetuo Socorro. O projeto de investigação e de intervenção social seguiu as linhas metodológicas da Investigação Ação Participativa, em que os sujeitos são atores participativos e interventivos. Para o desenvolvimento deste projeto foi necessário recorrer a algumas técnicas de investigação, como a observação participante, conversas intencionais e análise documental, que facilitaram a recolha de informações, a análise da realidade e a intervenção desenvolvida. A partir da análise da realidade emergiram alguns problemas e necessidades que foram priorizados pelos sujeitos, daí surgiu o projeto de intervenção que aqui se apresenta com a finalidade de “Melhorar a qualidade de vida dos idosos do Centro de Dia do Centro de Caridade Nossa Senhora do Perpetuo Socorro, através da valorização das suas histórias de vida e melhoria das relações interpessoais”. Este projeto teve três grandes focos importantes que foi a recolha e construção das narrativas de vida de alguns participantes, a realização de vários encontros intergeracionais entre os idosos do Centro de Dia e as crianças do Jardim de Infância e o processo de consciencialização por parte dos idosos sobre a importância do grupo para o bem-estar pessoal, a gestão de conflitos e a melhoria das dinâmicas relacionais. Os resultados do projeto foram relevantes porque foram o produto de um processo reflexivo e de partilha entre os indivíduos, que favoreceu o desenvolvimento de um sentimento de utilidade e de valorização pessoal nos sujeitos, melhorando e fortalecendo assim as relações interpessoais entre eles.
Resumo:
Grounded on Raymond Williams‘s definition of knowable community as a cultural tool to analyse literary texts, the essay reads the texts D.H.Lawrence wrote while travelling in the Mediterranean (Twilight in Italy, Sea and Sardinia and Etruscan Places) as knowable communities, bringing to the discussion the wide importance of literature not only as an object for aesthetic or textual readings, but also as a signifying practice which tells stories of culture. Departing from some considerations regarding the historical development of the relationship between literature and culture, the essay analyses the ways D. H. Lawrence constructed maps of meaning, where the readers, in a dynamic relation with the texts, apprehend experiences, structures and feelings; putting into perspective Williams‘s theory of culture as a whole way of life, it also analyses the ways the author communicates and organizes these experiences, creating a space of communication and operating at different levels of reality: on the one hand, the reality of the whole way of Italian life, and, on the other hand, the reality of the reader who aspires to make sense and to create an interpretative context where all the information is put, and, also, the reality of the writer in the poetic act of writing. To read these travel writings as knowable communities is to understand them as a form that invents a community with no other existence but that of the literary text. The cultural construction we find in these texts is the result of the selection, and interpretation done by D.H.Lawrence, as well as the product of the author‘s enunciative positions, and of his epistemological and ontological filigrees of existence, structured by the conditions of possibility. In the rearticulation of the text, of the writer and of the reader, in a dynamic and shared process of discursive alliances, we understand that Lawrence tells stories of the Mediterranean through his literary art.
Resumo:
In the work of Paul Auster (Newark, 1947 - ), we find two main themes: the sense of loss and existential drift and the loneliness of the individual fully committed to the work of writing, as if he had been confined to the book that commands his life. However, this second theme is clearly the dominant one because the character's space of solitude may include its own wandering, because this wandering is also often performed inside the four walls of a room, just like it is narrated inside the space of the page and the book. Both in his poetry, essays and fiction, Auster seems to face the work of writing as an actual physical effort of effective construction, as if the words that are aligned in the poem-text were stones to place in a row when building a wall or some other structure in stone.