974 resultados para Bou i Vilanova, Albert -- Interviews
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This research deals with the possible relationships between the body and the garment in performative scenic states across the contemporary scene, the philosophy of fashion and the philosophical arguments of profanity and dispositive. Some works were observed and cited in this dissertation, for this I conducted structured interviews with eight artists of performance, as a methodological strategy that could bring data about the experiences of this dresses and/or naked bodies on the scene, in addition to literature and revealing the action of clothing on the body as well as its influence on the subjectivities of that whom performes and the public. These relationships can be experienced in the process of creating costumes in contemporary scene naming the possibility of modes of the body, as ways that emerge and constitute as creative, discursive and aesthetic alternatives.
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Survival of a Perverse Nation traces the ways in which contemporary Armenian anxieties are congealing into the figure of the “homosexual.” As in other post-Soviet republics, homosexuality has increasingly become defined as the crisis of the times, and is understood by many as a destructive force linked to European encroachment. In Armenia, a growing right-wing nationalist movement since 2012 has been targeting LGBT and feminist activists. I suggest that this movement has arisen out of Armenia’s concerns regarding proper social and biological reproduction in the face of high rates of emigration of especially men in search of work. Many in the country blame this emigration on a post-Soviet oligarchy, with close ties to the government. This oligarchy, having quickly and massively privatized and liquidated industry and land during the war over the region of Nagorno-Karabagh (1990-1994) with Azerbaijan, created widespread un(der)employment. A national narrative attributing the nation’s survival of the 1915 Genocide and dispersion of its populations to strong morality preserved by institutions such as the Church and the family has now, in the post-Soviet era, ruptured into one of moral “perversion.” This dissertation is based on 15 months of ethnographic research, during which I participated in the work of two local non-governmental organizations: Public Information and Need for Knowledge, an LGBT rights organization and Women’s Resource Center, a feminist organization. I also conducted interviews with 150 households across Yerevan, the capital city, and did in-depth interviews with other activists, right-wing nationalists and journalists. Through psychoanalytic frameworks, as well as studies of kinship, I show how sovereignty – the longed for dream for Armenians over the last century – is felt to have failed because of the moral corruption of the illegitimate figures that fill Armenian seats of authority. I, thus, examine the ways in which a missing father of the household is discursively linked to the lack of strong leadership by a corrupt government, producing a prevalent feeling of moral disintegration that nationalists displace onto the “homosexual.”
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This research aimed to describe, understand, and discuss the curriculum development process of a Brazilian-Portuguese heritage language community-based school in South Florida. This study was guided by the following research questions: (a) What roles does this HL community-based school aim to play for its students? This investigation was also related to the subsidiary question: (b) How does this HL community-based school organize its curriculum development process? In order to explore these research questions, I observed and interviewed teachers and coordinators based on a qualitative research approach. I analyzed the interviews’ transcripts, and the program’s website with a central focus of describing and understanding their curriculum development process. Hopefully, the findings will help Brazilian and other HL community schools toward discussing and elaborating their own curriculum development, as well as to look for specific teacher training courses.
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This thesis explores the affective and political life of anti-violence labour, with particular attention to the ways that neoliberalism comes to bear on subjectivity, embodiment, and relationality among women responding to violence. In fall of 2015, I conducted qualitative interviews with six women engaged in the work of responding to violence. The participants in this project articulated rich descriptions of the affective life of neoliberalism and the demands of neoliberal subjectivity, drawing particular attention to the affective labour involved in navigating the political complexities of anti-violence organizations, negotiating burnout, and affectively self-managing in order to meet norms of professionalism. Bringing participant narratives into conversations with feminist theories of affect, I argue for an account affective labour that centers the specific, materially embodied experiences of that work and for an account of neoliberalism as a system of embodied and affective pressures.
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Projeto de Graduação apresentado à Universidade Fernando Pessoa como parte dos requisitos para obtenção do grau de licenciada em Enfermagem
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The fisheries section of the Annual report provides information on the following: Development and Control of the Victoria Nyanza Fishing Industry, Preparation of Statistics Statistical Tables: (A) Number of half yearly licences issued; (B) Quantities of nets imported; (0) Dried fish landed from Sese and Kome; (D) Dried fish imported from Mwanza ; (E) Dried fish exported to Belgian Congo; Lake Bunyonyi Lake Mutanda Lake Mureyhe Lake Mugisha (or Raiyumbu) I,ake Saka Lake Wamala Commercial Development: (i) Lake Albert: (ii) Lake Edward (iii) Other Waters (iv) Nsonzi Fishery, Kigezi (v) Introductions Experimental Nets and fisheries legislation
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This thesis considers the impact that discursive and community practices have on women’s access to the public sphere by examining female cyclists and a cycling community in Miami, Florida via interviews and observation. In the interviews, female cyclists frequently reported fears for their safety, including concern over harassment, when riding in public space. I interviewed participants of the cycling community and observed Emerge Miami’s meetings and events, where publicly organized cycling excursions were a major component. Using the theoretical and methodological lenses of Feminist Critical Discourse Analysis and Communities of Practice, I examined the interviews to understand how participants discursively framed and contextualized gender-based harassment. I found two meta-discourse frames in operation: a normative frame (that essentially accepted the status quo) and a feminist frame (that challenged the “naturalness” of women’s harassment as just what one had to live with). The feminist frame offered a pathway for women to exert control over their experiences and alter the cultural understanding of harassment’s meaning and effect. The local community practices of Emerge Miami also challenged the normative frames that often silence women, employing explicitly invitational practices, which demonstrates how local discursive and social activity can impact and increase women’s involvement by creating a more accessible space for women to engage with their local cycling community.
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Disseny instal·lació solar tèrmica de baixa temperatura per ACS i calefacció en una cada situada al terme municipal de Vilanova de Segrià (Lleida). La casa consta de dos plantes i es habitada durant tot l'any per 4 persones. S'aprofitarà la caldera ja instal·lada i la distribució de calefacció que és terra radiant.
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Peer-reviewed
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Intervenció lliure d’Albert Rossich en la taula rodona entorn de les 'Regles de esquivar vocables i mots grossers o pagesívols', què va tenir lloc el 15 de gener de 2004 a la Sala de Graus de la Facultat de Filologia de la Universitat de Barcelona. Aquesta taula rodona se situa en el marc d’un Seminari de Cultura Catalana i Moderna coordinat per Lola Badia i Eulàlia Duran, del Departament de Filologia Catalana de la mateixa Universitat. Hi van participar Antoni Maria Badia i Margarit, Germà Colón, Antoni Ferrando i Mariàngela Vilallonga ; Agustí Alcoberro hi va actuar de moderador
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Background: The exploratory study is part of an evaluation of the pre-graduate teaching of communication skills (Lausanne Medical School). It is based on the data of a project highlighting the impact of individualized vs. group training for medicine students in breaking bad news to simulated patients who are diagnosed with cancer. The analysis of the video-taped interviews of the students (N=63) with the RIAS has shown a current usage of utterances such as I don't know if -you have any plans for the future / you have already heard about chemotherapy / ... or I don't know how -you are feeling today after this surgery / you like that all this stuff takes place / ...Aim: The present study questions the specificity of these assertive utterances used as questions (indirect), the specificity of their content, and their intentionality - specific vs. exploratory.Methods: The mentioned utterances are qualitatively analyzed (content analysis, intentionality analysis, etc).Results: 26 students (41%) used 1 to 6 times I don't know utterances during the interviews that contain 53 of such utterances in total. In contrast, they are atypical in an oncologist sample who conducted similar interviews (N=31; 4 oncologist used them 1 to 2 times). In more than half of the cases (29/53), simulated patients interpret I don't know questions as giving them a space to speak (open responses). Conclusions: The atypicality of the I don't know utterances in the oncologist sample may have linguistic explanations in terms of generational marker, but the specificity of the content suggests psychological explanations in terms of defense mechanism as well (marker of "toning down" or insecurity as regards the discussed topic).Keywords: Breaking bad news, communication skills, oncology, pre-graduate medical education, indirect questioning
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En un panorama econòmic mundial on les grans potències emergents creixen amb força i, com alguns informes recents de la OCDE apunten, la Xina es trobarà durant els propers anys en situació de sobrepassar els EEUU com a primera potència econòmica. En aquest context la Unió Europea apareix en una posició afeblida i els estats membres difícilment poden adoptar individualment un paper rellevant a nivell mundial. També comencen a sentir-se veus demanant una major integració al sí de la UE. Una de les opcions per assolir-la seria la creació d’una Hisenda Pública Europea. L’objecte d’estudi d’aquest treball serà la Unió Europea; més concretament la possibilitat d’assolir una Hisenda Pública Europea. Es pretén respondre a dues preguntes: Seria possible la creació d’una Hisenda Pública Europea? Com es podria estructurar? Per tal de poder respondre sòlidament aquestes qüestions s’analitzarà què s’ha fet fins ara en l’àmbit de la unió fiscal tant a la UE com a diversos països; quins passos es podrien donar per avançar cap a una Hisenda Pública de la Unió; i a quin model es podria arribar. També es contrastarà amb el marc teòric proposat, així com amb l’experiència prèvia de les diferents fases d’Integració Europea dutes a terme fins ara.
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Albert Lewin, conegut director de cinema de Hollywood influenciat pel moviment surrealista, conjumina el mite de Pandora amb la llegenda de l'Holandès errant per crear una història d¿amor exemplar, una història d¿amor foll que va més enllà del límits de la racionalitat. I, com que per creure en aquest tipus d'amor no es la raó stricto sensu la que ens ha de guiar, basteix tot un món de signes, un món semiològic complex que aquest article ajuda a desxifrar.