975 resultados para Discussões e debates - Teses
Resumo:
As opiniões de Monteiro Lobato a respeito dos temas saúde e doença não se esgotaram na discussão sobre a situação do Jeca Tatu; ele foi além, e em diversos trechos de sua obra adulta observam-se suas opiniões, seus relatos sobre a experiência de adoecer. O presente artigo resgata as concepções de saúde e doença observadas nos escritos de Monteiro Lobato. Por meio da análise de sua obra adulta, pudemos destacar opiniões, relatos sobre a experiência de adoecer de pessoas próximas e queridas, a possibilidade que a doença oferece de socializar as pessoas, o corporativismo médico, a atuação na Liga Pró-Saneamento, o paternalismo das práticas de saúde e a vulnerabilidade daqueles que possuem condição social desfavorável, além de outros tópicos, ora com traços de comicidade, ora com resignação e até com revolta. Assim, o presente estudo analisou a obra adulta do autor, discutindo trechos que tratam da saúde e da doença como experiência vivenciada nas primeiras décadas do século XX.
Resumo:
O estudo da dinâmica de constituição de uma rede visa identificar que tipos de eventos ocorreram nas conexões entre os nós que levaram a formação da estrutura atual da rede em análise. Entender esses eventos é entender as formas específicas e estratégias de conectividade que deram origem a rede. O presente trabalho tem por objetivo analisar esses eventos geradores com foco específico em redes de colaboração científica, considerando relações de coautoria e participação em bancas de defesas de teses e dissertações. Analisando mais de 11.000 documentos específicos da área das Ciências da Comunicação, propomos dois tipos característicos de eventos que pretendem explicar a dinâmica de formação das redes em análise.
Resumo:
Scopo del presente progetto di ricerca è indagare i lineamenti degli studi teatrali in Italia negli anni Novanta e Duemila. La tesi, tuttavia, configura piani di indagine più ampi, sia in senso temporale che geografico: prendendo in considerazione il rapporto fra la teatrologia italiana post-novecentesca e la sua tradizione disciplinare, da un lato, e, dall'altro, le esperienze nel medesimo campo di altre culture teatrali occidentali. La tesi si struttura in tre parti: nella prima vengono analizzati i processi di rifondazione (anni Sessanta e Settanta) e di consolidamento (anni Settanta e Ottanta) degli studi teatrali italiani; nella seconda si presentano i caratteri della teatrologia post-novecentesca (anni Novanta e Duemila); nella terza, essi vengono indagati attraverso la lente di uno specifico aspetto che si propone di assumere per descrivere il paradigma disciplinare a quest'altezza: quello del progetto di ricomposizione che sembra manifestarsi negli studi teatrali come messa in dialogo di alcune coppie di polarità oppositive tradizionalmente determinanti (teoria/storia, teoria/pratica, ecc.). Ciascuna delle parti si articola nella ricostruzione storica delle vicende occorse alla disciplina (tenendo conto anche dei loro rapporti con i coevi accadimenti in altri campi artistici, del sapere e socio-culturali) e nell'analisi della produzione scientifica di un determinato periodo. In ogni capitolo, infine, tali elementi vengono messi in relazione sia con le tendenze in atto sui più ampi scenari teatrologici internazionali, che con la tradizione di studio. Il progetto di ricerca si è sviluppato attraverso un'ampia ricognizione bibliografica della produzione scientifica del settore, all'interno di cui è stato dato ampio rilievo al ruolo di quegli ambienti di lavoro teatrologico coagulatisi intorno alle maggiori riviste del campo di studio; si è avvalso inoltre di un intenso programma di ricerca sul campo, che è consistito in una serie di incontri con alcuni dei protagonisti della rifondazione e dello sviluppo della nuova teatrologia italiana.
Resumo:
The article explores the developments in German-language anthropology in the past decades, focussing on the period after the 1970s. It argues that the recent history of German-language Ethnologie (social and cultural anthropology) is one of catching-up modernization. German-speaking anthropologists are increasingly involved in, and contribute to, broader theoretical debates, publish in English and in international journals, and are actively engaged in international academic networks. The paper discusses how and under what conditions of knowledge production these transformations have taken place. It analyses the changing institutional environment in which German anthropologists have worked and work today, as well as the theoretical impulses from within and outside the discipline that have given rise to the contemporary orientation of German-language anthropology as an anthropology of the 'present'. Finally, and beyond the focus on Germany, the article offers some ideas on the future of anthropology as a symmetrical social science, characterized by a continued strong reliance on field work and a high level of 'worldliness', a basic attitude of systematically shifting perspectives, the critical reflection of the social and political embeddedness of knowledge production, and an engagement with social theory across disciplinary boundaries.
Resumo:
This article focuses on the “social side” of pseudonymity—on how writers and readers compete to influence the critical destiny of a pseudonymous work. By analyzing pseudonymity and attribution in both the specific context of Voltaire’s 1760 staging of the play, Le café ou l’écossaise, and in larger debates in the emerging fields of anonymity, pseudonymity, and attribution studies, I hope to show how literary scholars at present can address the individuality of each pseudonymous case while not letting go of trans-historical, general problems of anonymous strategies. Voltaire’s use of multiple pseudonyms before and after releasing L’Ecossaise, a comédie sérieuse in which Voltaire attacks his enemy Elie-Cathérine Fréron, supports his philosophe friends at a crucial moment in history, and exemplifies his emerging taste for serious comedy and British drama calls into question traditional takes on pseudonymity, anonymity, and attribution by refusing to fit into the binary arguments of anonymous vs. attributed and authorial intent vs. the reader’s control.
Resumo:
A Montana Public Radio Commentary by Evan Barrett. Published newspaper columns written by Evan Barrett on this topic, which vary somewhat in content from this commentary, appeared in the following publications: Billings Gazette, September 3, 2014 Montana Standard, September 5, 2014 Missoulian, September 5, 2014 Independent Record, September 7, 2014
Resumo:
This article discusses the impacts of globalization, neo-liberal social policies and the Finnish economic recession of the 1990s on children's and young people's welfare. It summarises some of the impacts of Finnish social policies on the everyday lives of families with children and highlights some of the features of the recent and current debates surrounding youth delinquency and the societal reactions to young generations. All this contributes to a contradictory and conflicting societal context which challenges experts in the field of child welfare social work experts to operate - as expected - at the right moment, legally and effectively. Instead of being overly-defensive for the ‘good old’ ways of practicing social work with children, the authors invite social work scholars and practitioners to reconceptualise both the concept of children's citizenship and its position both in child welfare theory and practice in the context of children's global rights.
Resumo:
This article outlines some of the issues involved in developing partnerships between service users, practitioners and researchers. It discusses these through some experience in Oslo as part of a national level agreement (HUSK) to improve social services in Norway through research and knowledge development. It begins with a review of the main concepts and debates involved in developing collaborative partnerships for practice-based research, particularly in the social services arena. The HUSK program is then described. The article then traces some specific developments and challenges in negotiating partnership relations as discussed by program participants (users, practitioners and researchers) in a series of workshops designed to elicit the issues directly from their experience.
Description & the Production of Presence: Literary Debates in Eighteenth Century England and Germany
Resumo:
This paper describes competing ideas about family preservation, defined both as a defined program of social services and a philosophical approach to helping troubled families. A straightforward definition has become almost impossible because the phrase has taken on so many different meanings, provoking controversy about its "real" meaning and value. Indeed, "family preservation" has become the proverbial elephant whose splendors and horrors are described with great certainty by those impressed by only one of its aspects. While skirmishes between "child savers" and "family preservers" have been part of the child welfare field since its beginning at the turn of the last century, recent debates over family preservation have been especially heated, generating more confusion and animosity than might be expected from the ranks of the small and usually mild-mannered social work profession. The debate is so heated that the director of one of the nation's largest child welfare agencies said recently that he is afraid to "even use the two words on the same page." <1> While the debate about the value of family preservation is unresolved, experimentation with different approaches to service delivery over the last two decades has helped to lay the groundwork for a resurgence of interest in family and community-centered reforms. Better understanding of the family preservation "debates" may be helpful if these reforms are to be successful over the long term. The paper discusses the competing ideas, values, and perceptions that have led observers to their different understandings of family preservation. It briefly chronicles the history of child welfare and examines key theories that have helped lay the groundwork for the resurgence of interest in family-centered services. It concludes with observations about how the competing values at stake in family preservation may affect the next generation of reforms.
Resumo:
The discussion on the New Philology triggered by French and North American scholars in the last decade of the 20th century emphasized the material character of textual transmission inside and outside the written evidences of medieval manuscripts by downgrading the active role of the historical author. However, the reception of the ideas propagated by the New Philology adherents was rather divided. Some researchers considered it to be the result of an academic “crisis” (R.T. Pickens) or questioned its innovative status (K. Stackmann: “Neue Philologie?”); others appreciated the “new attitudes to the page” it had brought to mind (J. Bumke after R.H. and M.A, Rouse) or even saw a new era of the “powers of philology” evoked (H.-U. Gumbrecht). Besides the debates on the New Philology another concept of textual materiality strengthened in the last decade, maintaining that textual alterations somewhat relate to biogenetic mutations. In a matter of fact, phenomena such as genetic and textual variation, gene recombination and ‘contamination’ (the mixing of different exemplars in one manuscript text) share common features. The paper discusses to what extent the biogenetic concepts can be used for evaluating manifestations of textual production (as the approach of ‘critique génétique’ does) and of textual transmission (as the phylogenetic analysis of manuscript variation does). In this context yet the genealogical concept of stemmatology – the treelike representation of textual development abhorred by the New Philology adepts – might prove to be useful for describing the history of texts. The textual material to be analyzed will be drawn from the Parzival Project, which is currently preparing a new electronic edition of Wolfram von Eschenbach’s Parzival novel written shortly after 1200 and transmitted in numerous manuscripts up to the age of printing. Researches of the project have actually resulted in suggesting that the advanced knowledge of the manuscript transmission yields a more precise idea on the author’s own writing process.