876 resultados para Female body
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The award-winning and controversial movie by Pedro Almodóvar “The skin I live” (2011) is an adaptation of Mygale’s novel (1984), the French writer Thierry Jonquet (1954-2009), translated into Portuguese in 2005 as Tarântula. It is a horror story, full of suspense, in which a renowned surgeon, Robert Ledgard, played by Antonio Banderas, switches, without any scruples, the sex of the young Vincent. What it shown to the viewer since the first images of the movie is, therefore, Vicente/Vera in her new and perfect female body. Flashbacks clarify during the movie the events that culminated in the opening scene that is presented to us, surprising us and, of course, shocking us. References to myths and symbols can be noticed in the movie. They bring with them, to be recognized by the viewer, issues related to the creation or metamorphosis, among others, as the Pygmalion and Galatea myth, which binds to artistic creation. Artistic metamorphosis operated equally by the filmmaker in his modern version of the doctor and the monster, for example, but, especially, in the rereading of the Jonquet’s novel. This study seeks to highlight some of the major myths and symbols inserted in Almódovar’s movie and what interpretations such insertions may ensue.
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This paper discusses how, through the creation of Embratur (Brazilian Tourism Company) in 1966, an idealized Brazilian female body was constructed and used to help manufacture a national identity, reinforcing the stereotype of the sexualized Brazilian woman. As it was often associated with sex tourism, this stereotype received much criticism and led to a negative image of Brazil abroad. However, in the 1990s the official tourism lobby softened the “sexy tone” of its discourse, and in 1999 Embratur received an award from the World Tourism Organization for its campaign to help fight the exploitation of children and youth by sexual tourism. In order to better understand how this change in the idealized Brazilian female body unfolded, it is important to deconstruct beauty standards – focusing on those that apply to Brazilian women as seen from abroad – and their relationship to modern consumer culture. Assuming that the cultural analysis of the female body emerges as an important issue in the field of Social Science, the focus on body image can be viewed as a key element in discussions about the construction of national identity.
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The aim of this study was to evaluate the level of physical activity confronting to the real and ideal body image of 65 individuals of both gender (27 women and 38 men) aged between 18 and 37 years old, all students of a Physical Education College of Santo André´s City - SP. The instruments used were the International Physical Activity Questionnaire, Short version (IPAQ, 2005) and Test for assessment of Body Image proposed by Stunkard et al., (1983) and adapted by Marsh and Roche (1996). According to the results, male subjects are more actives compared with female, as well as for the real and ideal body image males showed no significant difference, however, the females showed differences between the real and the ideal body image, between the gender no significant differences existed on the real and ideal body image. We can conclude that the students of this Physical Education College mostly presents in moderate or high level of physical activity, showing that the male are pleased with the real and ideal body image, and for a willing female body silhouette thinner ideal than real, with no significant differences between genders, and thus leading us to believe that the physical education College lead the students to experience practical activities becoming them lifestyle most active in search of a better quality of life and wellness.
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Pós-graduação em Estudos Literários - FCLAR
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Pós-graduação em Letras - IBILCE
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A debate about Caster Semenya's female sex began shortly after the South African runner won gold in the women’s 800m final at the 2009 Athletic World Championships held in Berlin. Her victory was disputed through questions about her right to compete as a ‘woman’, with the International Association of Athletics Federation (IAAF) announcing she would be required to undergo a gender verification test before her victory could be confirmed. Using the theoretical frame of social constructionism (Berger & Luckmann), poststructuralism (Foucault), gender- and postcolonial theories (Butler; Hall; Spivak) and the methodology of critical discourse analysis (Jaeger), the paper explores the way the possible intersexuality of Caster Semenya was contextualised in mainstream Swiss German-language print media. The analyses will firstly look at the way in which Caster Semenya was constructed as a ʻfallen hero’ and stigmatised as a double-dealer and unacceptable deviant body. The rumours amongst athletes and commentators became news in the media, which focused on descriptions of her habitus, her muscular body and her deep voice. Through theoretical discussion the paper argues that the media response to Caster Semenya exemplifies Butler’s claim that the discursive framework of gender constructs and naturalises sex. A key question is therefore whether the designation of deviant bodies to a ʻfield of deformation’ (Butler) works to pluralise the field of gender, or rather, as Butler suggests, it tends that those bodies might call into questions. The final part of the paper discusses how gender, ethnicity and sexuality combine to constitute the black female sporting body as a spectacle of otherness. It is evident that this otherness is made manifest through the function of those bodies as a site of transgression, as the boundary between male and female, and often as the boundary between culture and nature (Hall). Using the example of the controversy surrounding Caster Semenya, this paper aims to demonstrate how the post/colonial white female body is reproduced by western norms of gender, sexuality, beauty and sporting behaviour, in the sense of a feminine sporting genderperformance. The media controversy will be also read through the lens of the globalisation of certain ideas of normative bodies, sex, ethnicity and gender and the challenge of changing stereotypes through transgression. Keywords: gender- and postcolonial theories, discourse analysis, print media, Caster Semen-ya, deviant body, ethnicity, intersexuality
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A debate about Caster Semenya's female sex began shortly after the South African runner won gold in the women’s 800m final at the 2009 Athletic World Championships held in Berlin. Her victory was disputed through questions about her right to compete as a ‘woman’, with the International Association of Athletics Federation (IAAF) announcing she would be required to undergo a gender verification test before her victory could be confirmed. Using the theoretical frame of social constructionism (Berger & Luckmann), poststructuralism (Foucault), gender- and postcolonial theories (Butler; Hall; Spivak) and the methodology of critical discourse analysis (Jaeger), the paper explores the way the possible intersexuality of Caster Semenya was contextualised in mainstream Swiss German-language print media. The analyses will firstly look at the way in which Caster Semenya was constructed as a ʻfallen hero’ and stigmatised as a double-dealer and unacceptable deviant body. The rumours amongst athletes and commentators became news in the media, which focused on descriptions of her habitus, her muscular body and her deep voice. Through theoretical discussion the paper argues that the media response to Caster Semenya exemplifies Butler’s claim that the discursive framework of gender constructs and naturalises sex. A key question is therefore whether the designation of deviant bodies to a ʻfield of deformation’ (Butler) works to pluralise the field of gender, or rather, as Butler suggests, it tends that those bodies might call into questions. The final part of the paper discusses how gender, ethnicity and sexuality combine to constitute the black female sporting body as a spectacle of otherness. It is evident that this otherness is made manifest through the function of those bodies as a site of transgression, as the boundary between male and female, and often as the boundary between culture and nature (Hall). Using the example of the controversy surrounding Caster Semenya, this paper aims to demonstrate how the post/colonial white female body is reproduced by western norms of gender, sexuality, beauty and sporting behaviour, in the sense of a feminine sporting genderperformance. The media controversy will be also read through the lens of the globalisation of certain ideas of normative bodies, sex, ethnicity and gender and the challenge of changing stereotypes through transgression. Keywords: gender- and postcolonial theories, discourse analysis, print media, Caster Semen-ya, deviant body, ethnicity, intersexuality
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Over sixty years ago, British high court judge Patrick Devlin and legal philosopher H.L.A. Hart fought out a famous debate over the legal enforcement of morality, which was generated by the question whether homosexuality should be legalized or not. Jurists agree that this debate was won by Hart, also evidenced in the fact that the state has since been retreating from its previous role of moral watchdog. I argue in this paper that the two most conflicted and essentially unresolved issues in the integration of Islam, the regulation of the female body and of free speech, have reopened this debate anew, pushing the liberal state toward the legal regulation of morality, thus potentially putting at risk its liberalness. I use the Hart-Devlin debate as a template for comparing and contrasting the Muslim quest for restricting free speech with the host-society quest for restricting the Islamic veil. Accordingly, there is a double threat to liberalism, which this paper brings into view in tandem, one originating from Islam and another from a hypertrophied defense of liberalism.
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The perception of the human body as container is widespread in cognitive linguistics, psychology and anthropology and is estimated to be universal. But what can we say about the specific context of the Hebrew Bible as well as Ancient-Near-Eastern texts and material culture, and more especially about anthropomorphic vessels in the Levant? Biblical, Egyptian and Mesopotamian texts compare the human body with pottery in order to emphasize its status of having been created (Geschöpflichkeit) on the one hand, and its fragility (Zerbrechlichkeit) on the other. Not in every case does the metaphor refer to an individual. Very often, however, it is used with relation to groups of people (nations) and requires particular caution when it comes to drawing a conclusion about the embodiment. The archaeological-iconographic record demonstrates that the human body, especially the female body, was imagined as a container. The fact that vessels in the shape of female bodies are the majority can partly be explained with the association between container and pregnancy. This essay aims at stimulating the discussion about embodiment in the Ancient Near East, concepts of emotion the body as a container in the Hebrew Bible, and its relation to the material culture.
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En este artículo se aborda la primera versión de la Educación Sexual Integral para la ciudad de Buenos Aires. El objetivo es analizar los mecanismos discursivos y de poder que se han puesto en juego en su delimitación como un dominio curricular específico. Concretamente, se analiza el modo en que el cuerpo y la sexualidad infantil y femenina fueron especificados como objetos de saber y de intervención en los documentos curriculares editados en 2007 por el Gobierno de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires a partir de la sanción de la Ley de Educación Sexual Integral. Se señalan los criterios normalizantes a partir de los que se delimitó la inteligibilidad, por un lado, del cuerpo y la sexualidad infantil como un dominio de pureza, inocencia e incompletitud. Y, por el otro lado, del cuerpo y la sexualidad femenina como dominio biologizado y sujeto a un destino reproductivo y heterosexual.
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El presente trabajo aborda un análisis hermenéutico del cuerpo femenino de las deportistas pioneras del estado de Colima a partir de testimonios orales de las protagonistas, familiares, entrenadores y amistades de las mismas. La textualidad que proporcionan los testimonios permite un acercamiento a la reconstrucción y explicación del discurso deportivo y el entendimiento del uso del cuerpo en actividades inapropiadas para una sociedad de inicios del siglo XX
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En este artículo se aborda la primera versión de la Educación Sexual Integral para la ciudad de Buenos Aires. El objetivo es analizar los mecanismos discursivos y de poder que se han puesto en juego en su delimitación como un dominio curricular específico. Concretamente, se analiza el modo en que el cuerpo y la sexualidad infantil y femenina fueron especificados como objetos de saber y de intervención en los documentos curriculares editados en 2007 por el Gobierno de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires a partir de la sanción de la Ley de Educación Sexual Integral. Se señalan los criterios normalizantes a partir de los que se delimitó la inteligibilidad, por un lado, del cuerpo y la sexualidad infantil como un dominio de pureza, inocencia e incompletitud. Y, por el otro lado, del cuerpo y la sexualidad femenina como dominio biologizado y sujeto a un destino reproductivo y heterosexual.
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El presente trabajo aborda un análisis hermenéutico del cuerpo femenino de las deportistas pioneras del estado de Colima a partir de testimonios orales de las protagonistas, familiares, entrenadores y amistades de las mismas. La textualidad que proporcionan los testimonios permite un acercamiento a la reconstrucción y explicación del discurso deportivo y el entendimiento del uso del cuerpo en actividades inapropiadas para una sociedad de inicios del siglo XX
Resumo:
En este artículo se aborda la primera versión de la Educación Sexual Integral para la ciudad de Buenos Aires. El objetivo es analizar los mecanismos discursivos y de poder que se han puesto en juego en su delimitación como un dominio curricular específico. Concretamente, se analiza el modo en que el cuerpo y la sexualidad infantil y femenina fueron especificados como objetos de saber y de intervención en los documentos curriculares editados en 2007 por el Gobierno de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires a partir de la sanción de la Ley de Educación Sexual Integral. Se señalan los criterios normalizantes a partir de los que se delimitó la inteligibilidad, por un lado, del cuerpo y la sexualidad infantil como un dominio de pureza, inocencia e incompletitud. Y, por el otro lado, del cuerpo y la sexualidad femenina como dominio biologizado y sujeto a un destino reproductivo y heterosexual.
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El presente trabajo aborda un análisis hermenéutico del cuerpo femenino de las deportistas pioneras del estado de Colima a partir de testimonios orales de las protagonistas, familiares, entrenadores y amistades de las mismas. La textualidad que proporcionan los testimonios permite un acercamiento a la reconstrucción y explicación del discurso deportivo y el entendimiento del uso del cuerpo en actividades inapropiadas para una sociedad de inicios del siglo XX