847 resultados para Muscular tension
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El objetivo de esta investigación es comprobar los cambios en la oxigenación muscular del recto anterior durante la realización del ejercicio de sentadilla según el tipo de recuperación. Para ello, 11 sujetos varones bien entrenados fueron distribuidos aleatoriamente a tres grupos experimentales: grupo que realiza recuperación pasiva con 2 minutos de descanso (GC), grupo que realiza recuperación activa hasta la estabilización de oxígeno (GA), grupo que realiza recuperación pasiva hasta la estabilización de oxígeno (GP). Todos realizaron la sentadilla hasta los 90º al 65% del 1RM con un 80% del carácter del esfuerzo (CE) (4x10). Los resultados muestran que el tiempo de reoxigenación (TrecSmO2) fue inferior significativamente en GA (77,94 ± 11,08) que en GC (p<0.001). En las inclinaciones medias de ejecución y reoxigenación el GA obtuvo los menores y mayores valores respectivamente y de forma significativa respecto a GC (p<0.001). Estas dos variables obtuvieron una relación inversamente proporcional con una r=-0.9585 (p<0.001). Estos resultados muestran una mejor reoxigenación en el grupo que realizó descanso de forma activa. Se muestra una relación inversamente proporcional entre la inclinaciones de ejecución y recuperación por lo que cuanto más rápida y completa sea la desoxigenación más lenta resultará la reoxigenación. Además, la saturación de oxígeno puede ser un factor de la fatiga neuromuscular y su control durante el entrenamiento de fuerza podría facilitar los objetivos de entrenamiento. Estos resultados muestran, a priori, una mejor recuperación entre series a nivel oxidativo cuando los sujetos realizan una recuperación de forma activa, en comparación con la pasiva.
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La présente thèse porte sur les enjeux de la progression dans la formation doctorale en sciences de l’humain et du social (SHS). Dans la plupart des pays occidentaux, les administrations universitaires se disent préoccupées par les délais d’achèvement et les faibles taux de diplomation au doctorat. S’il est admis que les aptitudes intellectuelles ne suffisent pas pour progresser dans les études doctorales, les recherches menées jusqu’ici montrent que les modalités de la formation, ainsi que le milieu et le contexte d’études dans lesquels celle-ci s’inscrit ont des répercussions sur l’expérience doctorale. Peu d’études portent toutefois sur la façon dont l’interaction de facteurs individuels et structurels peut affecter la progression dans ce processus de formation. En nous appuyant sur la théorie de la structuration de Giddens (2005), nous postulons dès lors que certaines valeurs, traditions et pratiques propres au monde académique – perpétuées, volontairement ou non, par les acteurs universitaires – peuvent nuire à la progression des doctorant-e-s. Afin d’examiner la question, une étude de cas instrumentale à visée compréhensive (Stake, 1994) a été réalisée. Six facultés des SHS d’une université canadienne ont été ciblées pour constituer le cas à l’étude. Outre l’analyse d’un ensemble de documents institutionnels relatif à la formation doctorale dans le contexte étudié, 36 doctorant-e-s issus de 19 disciplines ainsi que quatorze professeur-e-s et cinq administrateurs universitaires (directions de programmes/doyens/vices-doyens) ont été rencontrés dans le cadre d’entretiens semi-directifs. Nos résultats ont dans un premier temps permis de tracer un portrait descriptif détaillé du cas à l’étude. Les particularités de l’organisation formelle et tacite de la formation doctorale en SHS dans le contexte étudié ainsi que les défis qu’elle sous-tend ont été circonscrits, de même que les stratégies à privilégier – du point de vue des participant-e-s – pour progresser dans la formation. Dans un deuxième temps, il a été possible de montrer, d’une part, que c’est bien à la jonction de facteurs individuels et structurels que se situe la problématique de la progression dans la formation doctorale en SHS et des faibles taux de diplomation qui la caractérisent. D’autre part, la portée systémique d’une telle problématique a été mise au jour : à travers leurs choix, leurs attitudes et leurs pratiques, les acteurs universitaires contribuent à la reproduction de façon de faire et de penser « attendues » ou « admises » dans leur milieu, dont certaines ont le potentiel de nuire à la progression dans la formation doctorale.
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Antecedentes: Los trastornos musculo-esqueléticos son una de las primeras causas de ausentismo laboral y afectan con mayor frecuencia columna y miembros. El personal de enfermería está expuesto a riesgo biomecánico superior dado por la manipulación manual de pacientes. Estimar la magnitud de asociación entre dolor osteo-muscular y carga biomecánica por movilización de pacientes en personal de enfermería y, los factores que modifican tal efecto, es de gran importancia en el ámbito laboral en busca de estrategias de prevención de enfermedades de origen laboral. Objetivo: determinar los factores predictores de dolor osteo-muscular en trabajadores de enfermería en un centro hospitalario de alta complejidad. Materiales y métodos: Estudio analítico transversal, en el que participaron 141 personas, quienes otorgaron su consentimiento informado. Los criterios de inclusión fueron: edad≥ 18 años, estudiantes, practicantes, auxiliares y jefes de enfermería asistenciales de salas de cirugía y hospitalización, antigüedad mínima de 2 meses en el cargo. Se utilizaron como criterios de exclusión: personal de enfermería en cargos administrativos y de las áreas de urgencias y cuidados intensivos, trabajadores con diagnóstico establecido artrosis, osteoartritis o artritis reumatoide, mujeres gestantes. Para lograr los objetivos aplicó el Cuestionario Nórdico, el cuestionario internacional de actividad física IPAQ y la metodología MAPO. Resultados: La frecuencia global de dolor osteo-muscular en el último año fue de 55%, implicando más frecuentemente columna lumbar, columna dorsal y miembro superior. Se evaluaron los servicios de onco-hematología, hospitalización y salas de cirugía y las clasificaciones de MAPO fueron medio a alto, no hubo áreas con riesgo irrelevante. Mediante análisis de regresión logística multivariada, se pudo determinar que los principales predictores de dolor osteo-muscular son trabajar en un área con MAPO nivel alto (OR=2,236, con respecto a MAPO medio) y en el turno de la mañana (OR=2,355, con respecto a turno en la tarde/noche).
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Objetivo: Estimar la relación entre indicadores de desempeño muscular y estado nutricional con la velocidad/agilidad, en una muestra de escolares de instituciones educativas del Distrito de Bogotá, Colombia, perteneciente al estudio FUPRECOL. Materiales y Métodos: estudio transversal, en 2803 niños y 3952 niñas (58.5 %), entre 9 y 17 años de edad, pertenecientes a 24 instituciones educativas del sector oficial, en Bogotá, Colombia. La velocidad/agilidad se evaluó con la prueba de carrera de ida y vuelta 4x10 m y los indicadores de fuerza muscular fueron medidos por medio de fuerza prensil, salto longitudinal. Las asociaciones se estimaron por medio de regresión logística binaria. Resultados: el 74.6 % de las mujeres y el 68.6 % de los varones mostraron bajos niveles de velocidad/agilidad; en mujeres, el modelo de regresión logística binario se observa que aquellas que tener bajos niveles de velocidad/agilidad se asociaba con obesidad (OR 2.25 IC 95 % 1.53-3.11), sobrepeso (OR 1.43 IC 95 % 1.19-1.72), bajos niveles de salto longitudinal (OR 2.06 IC 95 % 1.73-2.44) y tener valores de fuerza prensi no saludable (OR 1.45 IC 95 % 1.25-1.88). En hombres, tener entre 9-12 años, (OR 1.89 IC 95% 1.53-2.53), padecer de sobrepeso (OR 2.11 IC 95% 1.63-2.74) u obesidad (OR 3.00 IC 95% 2.03-4.43), se asoció con bajos niveles de velocidad/agilidad. Conclusión: se encontró que un alto porcentaje de la muestra estudiada tiene bajos niveles de velocidad/agilidad; adicionalmente, se observó una fuerte relación entre los indicadores de adiposidad y desempeño muscular, con los niveles de velocidad/agilidad. Se sugiere la implementación de programas escolares, que contrarresten la aparición de manifestaciones de riesgo cardiometabólico.
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A natação competitiva é uma modalidade onde os praticantes realizam grandes volumes de treino diário, na qual a força propulsiva é obtida essencialmente pelos membros superiores, sendo fácil perceber que poderá ocorrer uma sobrecarga do complexo articular do ombro, que promove o desequilíbrio muscular das suas estruturas (Kluemper, Uhl & Hazelrigg, 2006). As lesões na coifa dos rotadores são comuns em natação devido à realização de inúmeras repetições de gestos técnicos que envolvem o complexo articular em causa e afetam nadadores de todas as idades e de todos os níveis (Johnson, Gauvin & Fredericson, 2003), sendo mesmo a lesão músculo-esquelética que mais afeta os nadadores de competição (Walker, Gabbe, Wajswelner, Blanch & Bennell, 2012). A incidência das dores nos ombros atinge 52% dos nadadores de elite e 27% dos nadadores que não são de elite. Também 47% dos nadadores entre os 10 e os 18 anos de idade e 66% dos nadadores seniores, já teve um episódio de dor no ombro (Heinlein & Cosgarea, 2010). De acordo com a literatura consultada, são vários os fatores de risco para a ocorrência de lesões no ombro em nadadores: laxidão e amplitude de movimentos da articulação glenoumeral, discinesia escapular, desequilíbrios de força na coifa dos rotadores, o género, o nível de natação competitiva, técnica e distância de nado e o uso de palas durante os treinos (Walker et al., 2012). Os músculos rotadores dos ombros, desempenham um papel fundamental na mobilidade e estabilidade da articulação glenoumeral. Ligeiros desequilíbrios na relação entre os RI e os RE do ombro, podem potencializar disfunções ou lesões articulares (Batalha et al., 2012). Desequilíbrios musculares no ombro, indicados por um baixo valor de rácio entre os RE e os RI, têm sido observados em pacientes com instabilidade articular glenoumeral, sendo considerado um fator de risco de lesão no ombro (Niederbracht & Schim, 2008; Lin, Ko, Lee, Chen & Wang, 2015). O tratamento de uma lesão desportiva pode ser difícil, dispendioso e moroso, pelo que se justifica a implementação de atividades e programas de prevenção (Parkkari, Kujala & Kannus, 2001; Edouard et al., 2013; Leppänen et al., 2013). Ao nível da prevenção das diferentes patologias do complexo articular dos ombros, especialmente aquelas com incidência na coifa dos rotadores, diversos clínicos e investigadores enfatizaram a importância da realização de programas de treino de fortalecimento dos músculos RI e RE, devido ao seu papel critico no aporte de estabilidade dinâmica e produção de força ao complexo articular do ombro (Tovin, 2006; Jang & Oh, 2014; Kim & Oh, 2015). Num estudo recente, Batalha et al. (2015) demonstraram que um programa de treino de força compensatório tem efeitos benéficos nos músculos da coifa dos rotadores do ombro, proporcionando não só um aumento dos valores de força dos RE e dos RI, mas também aumentando o equilíbrio muscular entre eles. De igual modo Wanivenhaus et al. (2012), defendem que um programa completo que inclua exercícios de flexibilidade e fortalecimento muscular dos ombros, deve formar a base do regime de treino de qualquer atleta de natação competitiva. Complementarmente, Gaunt & Maffulli (2011) referem que qualquer programa de fortalecimento muscular para os ombros dos nadadores, deve tentar reproduzir um número elevado de repetições, bem como a capacidade de resistência muscular, semelhante à que é requerida pela natação pura desportiva. Os mesmos autores referem como exemplo, um mínimo de 3 séries de 10 repetições para cada exercício do programa de treino, defendendo que assim, a coifa dos rotadores irá ser alvo de uma melhor solicitação. Tendo em conta os estudos apresentados e também devido às exigências colocadas pela natação retratadas anteriormente, fará todo o sentido que os nadadores realizem programas de treino para prevenção de lesões no ombro, tendo por base o reforço muscular. Este treino de prevenção de lesões tem sido tema de estudo de vários autores, (Parkkari et al., 2001; Leppänen et al., 2013; Edouard et al., 2013), assente em estudos longitudinais, essencialmente na comprovação e demonstração da sua eficácia. Contudo, são poucos os estudos com nadadores e nenhum autor se debruçou sobre os efeitos a curto prazo, ou seja, os efeitos causados imediatamente após a realização de um programa de prevenção de lesões para os rotadores do ombro. Reportando-nos a estudos com treino de prevenção de lesões nos ombros realizados com nadadores (Batalha et al., 2015, Kluemper, Uhl & Hazelrigg, 2006; Van de Velde, De Mey, Maenhout, Calders, & Cools, 2011), podemos constatar que os programas de treino são realizados antes do treino aquático. Esta metodologia levanta-nos algumas questões acerca dos efeitos inerentes à realização do programa de treino de reforço muscular, nomeadamente ao nível da possível fadiga que se possa instalar, podendo ou não por em causa a realização do treino aquático que se segue nas melhores condições. Desta forma, pretendemos com este trabalho, avaliar os efeitos agudos da realização de um programa de treino de prevenção de lesões para a coifa dos rotadores. Para o efeito propomo-nos avaliar a força, resistência e o equilíbrio muscular nos rotadores dos ombros em nadadores de competição, antes e após a realização de um programa de treino de prevenção de lesões. Com os resultados obtidos, esperamos obter algumas indicações sobre se a realização de um programa de treino compensatório tem ou não algum impacto ao nível da coifa dos rotadores dos ombros, que possa por em causa os objetivos de treino aquático a realizar posteriormente.
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An inverted figurative monument to Victorian governor Charles Joseph Latrobe. By creating the impression that a nineteenth century statue has been made to stand precariously on its head, the work seeks to address the tension between the authority of the monument (as a civic marker and a form of portraiture) and its ‘invisibility’ in public space while simultaneously addressing (and subverting) the ‘authorless’ nature of the figurative monument. The work was awarded a judge’s commendation in the 2005 Helen Lempriere National Sculpture Award and had strong responses from the viewing public and widespread media coverage. Ironically, this parodic monument had the effect of raising the profile of Charles La Trobe in the media in ways that a conventional monument would not. Landmark now endures as part of the permanent sculpture collection of Latrobe University, Melbourne.
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Developing an effective impact evaluation framework, managing and conducting rigorous impact evaluations, and developing a strong research and evaluation culture within development communication organisations presents many challenges. This is especially so when both the community and organisational context is continually changing and the outcomes of programs are complex and difficult to clearly identify.----- This paper presents a case study from a research project being conducted from 2007-2010 that aims to address these challenges and issues, entitled Assessing Communication for Social Change: A New Agenda in Impact Assessment. Building on previous development communication projects which used ethnographic action research, this project is developing, trailing and rigorously evaluating a participatory impact assessment methodology for assessing the social change impacts of community radio programs in Nepal. This project is a collaboration between Equal Access – Nepal (EAN), Equal Access – International, local stakeholders and listeners, a network of trained community researchers, and a research team from two Australian universities. A key element of the project is the establishment of an organisational culture within EAN that values and supports the impact assessment process being developed, which is based on continuous action learning and improvement. The paper describes the situation related to monitoring and evaluation (M&E) and impact assessment before the project began, in which EAN was often reliant on time-bound studies and ‘success stories’ derived from listener letters and feedback. We then outline the various strategies used in an effort to develop stronger and more effective impact assessment and M&E systems, and the gradual changes that have occurred to date. These changes include a greater understanding of the value of adopting a participatory, holistic, evidence-based approach to impact assessment. We also critically review the many challenges experienced in this process, including:----- • Tension between the pressure from donors to ‘prove’ impacts and the adoption of a bottom-up, participatory approach based on ‘improving’ programs in ways that meet community needs and aspirations.----- • Resistance from the content teams to changing their existing M&E practices and to the perceived complexity of the approach.----- • Lack of meaningful connection between the M&E and content teams.----- • Human resource problems and lack of capacity in analysing qualitative data and reporting results.----- • The contextual challenges, including extreme poverty, wide cultural and linguistic diversity, poor transport and communications infrastructure, and political instability.----- • A general lack of acceptance of the importance of evaluation within Nepal due to accepting everything as fate or ‘natural’ rather than requiring investigation into a problem.
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Vendors provide reference process models as consolidated, off-the-shelf solutions to capture best practices in a given industry domain. Customers can then adapt these models to suit their specific requirements. Traditional process flexibility approaches facilitate this operation, but do not fully address it as they do not sufficiently take controlled change guided by vendors' reference models into account. This tension between the customer's freedom of adapting reference models, and the ability to incorporate with relatively low effort vendor-initiated reference model changes, thus needs to be carefully balanced. This paper introduces process extensibility as a new paradigm for customizing reference processes and managing their evolution over time. Process extensibility mandates a clear recognition of the different responsibilities and interests of reference model vendors and consumers, and is concerned with keeping the effort of customer-side reference model adaptations low while allowing sufficient room for model change.
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The implementation of ‘good governance’ in Indonesia’s regional government sector became a central tenet in governance research following the introduction of the national code for governance in 2006. The code was originally drafted in 1999 as a response to the Asian financial crises and many cases of unearthed corruption, collusion, and nepotism. It was reviewed in 2001 and again in 2006 to incorporate relevant political, economical, and social developments. Even though the national code exists along with many regional government decrees on good governance, the extent of implementation of the tenets of good governance in Indonesia’s regional government is still questioned. Previous research on good governance implementation in Indonesian regional government (Mardiasmo, Barnes and Sakurai, 2008) identified differences in the nature and depth of implementation between various Indonesian regional governments. This paper analyses and extends this recent work and explores key factors that may impede the implementation and sustained application of governance practices across regional settings. The bureaucratic culture of Indonesian regional government is one that has been shaped for over approximately 30 years, in particular during that of the Soeharto regime. Previous research on this regime suggests a bureaucratic culture with a mix of positive and negative aspects. On one hand Soeharto’s regime resulted in strong development growth and strong economic fundamentals, resulting in Indonesia being recognised as one of the Asian economic tigers prior to the 1997 Asian financial crises. The financial crises however revealed a bureaucratic culture that was rife with corruption, collusion, and nepotism. Although subsequent Indonesian governments have been committed to eradicating entrenched practices it seems apparent that the culture is ingrained within the bureaucracy and eradication of it will take time. Informants from regional government agree with this observation, as they identify good governance as an innovative mechanism and to implement it will mean a deviation from the “old ways.” Thus there is a need for a “changed” mind set in order to implement sustained governance practices. Such an exercise has proven to be challenging so far, as there is “hidden” resistance from within the bureaucracy to change its ways. The inertia of such bureaucratic cultures forms a tension against the opportunity for the implementation of good governance. From this context an emergent finding is the existence of a ‘bureaucratic generation gap’ as an impeding variable to enhanced and more efficient implementation of governance systems. It was found that after the Asian financial crises the Indonesian government (both at national and regional level) drew upon a wider human resources pool to fill government positions – including entrants from academia, the private sector, international institutions, foreign nationals and new graduates. It suggested that this change in human capital within government is at the core of this ‘inter-generational divide.’ This divergence is exemplified, at one extreme, by [older] bureaucrats who have been in-position for long periods of time serving during the extended Soeharto regime. The “new” bureaucrats have only sat in their positions since the end of Asian financial crisis and did not serve during Soeharto’s regime. It is argued that the existence of this generation gap and associated aspects of organisational culture have significantly impeded modernising governance practices across regional Indonesia. This paper examines the experiences of government employees in five Indonesian regions: Solok, Padang, Gorontalo, Bali, and Jakarta. Each regional government is examined using a mixed methodology comprising of on-site observation, document analysis, and iterative semi-structured interviewing. Drawing from the experiences of five regional governments in implementing good governance this paper seeks to better understand the causal contexts of variable implementation governance practices and to suggest enhancements to the development of policies for sustainable inter-generational change in governance practice across regional government settings.
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Readers and writers use a variety of modes of inscription – print, oral and multimedia – to understand, analyze, critique and transform their social, cultural and political worlds. Beginning from Freire (1970), ‘critical literacy’ has become a theoretically diverse educational project, drawing from reader response theory, linguistic and grammatical analysis from critical linguistics, feminist, poststructuralist, postcolonial and critical race theory, and cultural and media studies. In the UK, Australia, Canada, South Africa, New Zealand and the US different approaches to critical literacy have been developed in curriculum and schools. These focus on social and cultural analysis and on how print and digital texts and discourses work, with a necessary and delicate tension between classroom emphasis on student and community cultural ‘voice’ and social analysis – and on explicit engagement with the technical features and social uses of written and multimodal texts.
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Our experiences as Indigenous academics within universities often reflects the experiences we have as Indigenous people in broader society, yet I am still surprised and angered when it is others working in higher education who espouse notions of justice and equity with whom we experience tension and conflict in asserting our rights, values and cultural values. At times it is a constant struggle even when universities have Reconciliation Statements as most of them do now, Indigenous recruitment or employment strategies and university wide anti-racism and anti-discrimination policies and procedures.
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This study is an inquiry into the professional identity constructions of early childhood educators, where identity is conceptualised as social and contextual. Through a genealogical analysis of narratives of four Queensland early childhood teachers, the thesis renders as problematic universal and fixed notions of what it is to be an early childhood professional. The data are the four teachers’ professional life history narratives recounted through a series of conversational interviews with each participant. As they spoke about professionalism and ethics, these teachers struggled to locate themselves as professionals, as they drew on a number of dominant discourses available to them. These dominant discourses were located and mapped through analysis of the participants’ talk about relationships with parents, colleagues and authorities. Genealogical analysis enabled multiple readings of the ways in which the participants’ talk held together certainties and uncertainties, as they recounted their experiences and spoke of early childhood expertise, relational engagement and ethics. The thesis concludes with suggestions for ways to support early childhood teachers and pre-service teachers to both engage with and resist normative processes and expectations of professional identity construction. In so doing, multiple and contextual opportunities can be made available when it comes to being professional and ‘doing’ ethics. The thesis makes an argument for new possibilities for thinking and speaking professional identities that include both certainty and uncertainty, comfort and discomfort, and these seemingly oppositional terms are held together in tension, with an insistence that both are necessary and true. The use of provocations offers tools through which pre-service teachers, teachers and teacher educators can access new positions associated with certainties and uncertainties in professional identities. These new positions call for work that supports experiences of ‘de-comfort’ – that is, experiences that encourage early childhood educators to step away from the comfort zones that can become part of expertise, professional relationships and ethics embedded within normative representations of what it is to be an early childhood professional.
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Cultural policy studies have previously highlighted the importance of multiple logics, friction and contradiction in cultural policy. Recent developments in institutional theory provide a framework for analysing change in cultural policy which explores movement between these multiple and sometimes contradictory logics. This paper analyses the role of friction in the evolution of Australian film industry policy and in particular the tension between competing logics regarding nationalism, commercialism and the state. The paper is suggestive of the relevance of institutional theory as a framework for understanding cultural policy evolution.
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Psychologists investigating dreams in non-Western cultures have generally not considered the meanings of dreams within the unique meaning-structure of the person in his or her societal context. The majority of dream studies in African societies are no exception. Researchers approaching dreams within rural Xhosa and Zulu speaking societies have either adopted an anthropological or a psychodynamic orientation. The latter approach particularly imposes a Western perspective in the interpretation of dream material. There have been no comparable studies of dream interpretation among urban blacks participating in the African Independent Church Movement. The present study focuses on the rural Xhosa speaking people and the urban black population who speak one of the Nguni languages and identify with the African Independent Church Movement. The study is concerned with understanding the meanings of dreams within the cultural context in which they occur. The specific aims of the study are: 1. To explicate the indigenous system of dream interpretation as revealed by acknowledged dream experts. 2. To examine the commonalities and the differences between the interpretation of dreams in two groups, drawn from a rural and urban setting respectively. 3. To elaborate upon the life-world of the participants by the interpretations gained from the above investigation. One hundred dreams and interpretations are collected from two categories of participants referred to as the Rural Group and the Urban Group. The Rural Group is made up of amagqira [traditional healers] and their clients, while the Urban Group consists of prophets and members of the African Independent Churches. Each group includes acknowledged dream experts. A phenomenological methodology is adopted in explicating the data. The methodological precedure involves a number of rigorous stages of expl ication whereby the original data is reduced to Constituent Profiles leading to the construction of a Thematic Index File. By searching and reflect ing upon the data, interpretative themes are identified. These themes are explicated to provide a rigorous description of the interpretative-reality of each group. Themes explicated w i thin the Rural Group are: the physiognomy of the dreamer's life-world as revealed by ithongo, the interpretation of ithongo as revealed through action, the dream relationship as an anticipatory mode-of-existence, iphupha as disclosing a vulnerable mode-of-being, human bodiliness as revealed in dream interpretations and the legitimation of the interpretative-reality within the life-world. Themes explicated within the Urban Group are: the phys iognomy of the dreamer's life-world revealed in their dream-existence, the interpretative-reality revealed through the enaction of dreams, tension between the newer Christian-based cosomology and the traditional cultural-based cosmology, a moral imperative, prophetic perception and human bodiliness, as revealed in dream interpretations and the legitimation of the interpretative-reality within the life-world. The essence of the interpretative-reality of both groups is very similar and is expressed in the notion of relatedness to a cosmic mode-of-being. The cosmic mode-of-being includes a numinous dimension which is expressed through divine presence in the form of ancestors, Holy Spirit or God. These notions cannot be apprehended by theoretical constructs alone but may be grasped and given form in meaning-disclosing intuitions which are expressed in the lifeworld in terms of bodiliness, revelatory knowledge, action and healing. Some differences b e tween the two groups are evident and reveal some conflict between the monotheistic Christian cosmology and the traditional cosmology. Unique aspects of the interpetative-reality of the Urban Group are expressed in terms of difficulties in the urban social environment and the notion of a moral imperative. It is observed that cul tural self-expression based upon traditional ideas continues to play a significant role in the urban environment. The apparent conflict revealed between the respective cosmologies underlies an integration of the aditional meanings with Christian concepts. This finding is consistent with the literature suggesting that the African Independent Church is a syncretic movement. The life-world is based upon the immediate and vivid experience of the numinous as revealed in the dream phenomenon. The participants' approach to dreams is not based upon an explicit theory, but upon an immediate and pathic understanding of the dream phenomenon. The understanding is based upon the interpreter's concrete understanding of the life-world, which includes the possibility of cosmic integration and continuity between the personal and transpersonal realms of being. The approach is characterized as an expression of man's primordial attunement with the cosmos. The approach of the participants to dreams may not b e consistent with a Western rational orientation, but neverthele ss, it is a valid approach . The validity is based upon the immediate life-world of experience which is intelligible, coherent, and above all, it is meaning-giving in revealing life-possibility within the context of human existence.
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This research applies an archaeological lens to an inner-city master planned development in order to investigate the tension between the design of space and the use of space. The chosen case study for this thesis is Kelvin Grove Urban Village (KGUV), located in inner city Brisbane, Australia. The site of this urban village has strong links to the past. KGUV draws on both the history of the place in particular along with more general mythologies of village life in its design and subsequent marketing approaches. The design and marketing approach depends upon notions of an imagined past where life in a place shaped like a traditional village was better and more socially sustainable than modern urban spaces. The appropriation of this urban village concept has been criticised as a shallow marketing ploy. The translation and applicability of the urban village model across time and space is therefore contentious. KGUV was considered both in terms of its design and marketing and in terms of a reading of the actual use of this master planned place. Central to this analysis is the figure of the boundary and related themes of social heterogeneity, inclusion and exclusion. The refraction of history in the site is also an important theme. An interpretive archaeological approach was used overall as a novel method to derive this analysis.