929 resultados para Circle dances
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Pós-graduação em Ciências da Motricidade - IBRC
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Esta pesquisa prioriza abordagens que estudam a comunicação enquanto interação entre pessoas. O objetivo geral foi identificar, compreender e interpretar as interações que ocorrem nas danças circulares do Mana-Maní em Belém do Pará. Especificamente buscou-se identificar a dimensão comunicativa das ações individuais e coletivas que ocorrem na dança circular e verificar de que maneira a dimensão comunicativa das interações favorecem as interações simbólicas na dança circular, além de descrever as interações comunicativas que ocorrem nas danças circulares do Mana- Maní. O aporte teórico fundamentalmente discutiu dispositivos interacionais em José Luiz Braga; Espírito Comum e Sociedade Midiatizada em Raquel Paiva e Muniz Sodré e Comunidade Emotiva e Percepção do Mundo Sensível em Michel Mafessoli. Desse modo fez-se um tencionamento entre teorias e pesquisa empírica, sobre as observações em um contexto compreendido a partir de interpretações do pesquisador. Ao nível da abordagem metodológica, utilizou-se um enfoque prevalentemente qualitativo (interpretativo), que se pautou na abordagem fenomenológicopragmática, buscando revelar características intrínsecas, ações e reações que ora promovem, ora decorrem das interações observadas no contexto do grupo. Trabalhou-se com pesquisa bibliográfica e de campo, com a observação participante, diário de campo, entrevistas em profundidade e não estruturadas, aplicação de formulário semi-estruturado e coleta de depoimentos de participantes e ex participantes. Quanto às implicações práticas, buscou-se compreender formas de comunicação ocorridas partir de uma vivência sociocultural, dentro de um contexto especificamente observado, reconhecendo influências externas e internas que propiciam interações comunicativas. Quanto aos resultados, compreendeu-se que as interações ocorrem nas danças circulares do Mana-Maní a partir da inter-relação entre cinco elementos: 1) o eu, parte fundamental e insubstituível, que agrega motivações pessoais para vivenciar as danças circulares; 2) o outro – matéria-prima para as diversas interações, sempre de forma assimétrica, conforme o cabedal de conhecimento de cada um. Sem o outro, não há interação; 3) a ritualística das danças circulares no Mana-Maní, inspirada nas matrizes culturais da Amazônia, que com sua filosofia estimula e permite um espírito mais meditativo e interativo entre os participantes; 4) o cotidiano, por conta do reencantamento, a partir do prazer de participar e de ter inspirações para enfrentar dificuldades, desafios, limites físicos, psíquicos e comunicativos do comportamento pessoal; 5) a intersubjetividade, que ocorre de forma relevante e intensa, partir das dimensões simbólica e intersubjetiva, onde cada participante projeta seu mundo, sua subjetividade e entra em contato com a subjetividade dos demais, criando e ressignificando interações.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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A presente dissertação pretende avaliar como os membros das organizações relacionam a prática das danças circulares com elementos do comportamento organizacional. A pertinência desta investigação consiste no fato de estudos e intervenções direcionadas ao comportamento organizacional poderem impactar positivamente o desempenho tanto dos servidores quanto da organização como um todo. As organizações estão enfrentando desafios que demandam teorias e práticas que as fortaleçam, buscando-se atender às necessidades de todos que a compõe. A profundidade dessas mudanças faz com que seja necessário alinhar-se o esforço individual ao grupal. Necessita-se o aprendizado em grupo, o pensamento sistêmico. As danças circulares parecem proporcionar efeitos de bem-estar, segurança, solicitude, cooperação, abertura ao diálogo e eles são extremamente importantes em relação a diversos aspectos da organização, como liderança, hierarquia, motivação, poder, clima organizacional, cultura, comunicação, etc. Seus efeitos, por conseguinte, podem fazê-las importante instrumento que melhore os ambientes de trabalho, além de proporcionarem uma conscientização quanto à importância de levar às organizações o tema da sustentabilidade. A sustentabilidade insere-se no paradigma eco-humanista, alinhado, por sua vez, ao resgate da inteireza do homem. As danças circulares, podem expressar e materializar tal paradigma, de modo a favorecer o comprometimento, a motivação e a participação nas organizações. / This dissertation aims evaluate how the members of organizations relate the practice of circle dances with elements of organizational behavior. Its importance derives in the fact that studies and interventions addressed to the organizational behavior may impact positively both the performance of the workers as well of the organization as a whole. The organizations are facing challenges that need theories and practices to strengthen them, in order to fill the needs of all its members. The depth of the changes makes it necessary to encompass the individual and the grupal efforts. It is necessary the group learning and the systemic thinking. The circle dances seems to provide effects such as well being, security, solicitude, cooperation, openness to dialogue and they are extremely important related to various aspects of organization, as leadership, hierarchy, motivation, power, organizational climate, culture, communication, etc. Its effects, thus, may make them important tool to the betterment of the work environment, besides allow the awareness of the importance to bring to organizations the theme of sustainability. The sustainability is a part of the eco-humanistic paradigm, related to the integrity of man. The circle dance may express and materialize this paradigm, helping commitment, motivation and participation in the organizations.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Story Circle is the first collection ever devoted to a comprehensive international study of the digital storytelling movement. Exploring subjects of central importance on the emergent and ever-shifting digital landscape-consumer-generated content, memory grids, the digital storytelling youth movement, and micro-documentary- Story Circle pinpoints who is telling what stories, where, on what terms, and what they look and sound like.
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Bananas are hosts to a large number of banana streak virus (BSV) species. However, diagnostic methods for BSV are inadequate because of the considerable genetic and serological diversity amongst BSV isolates and the presence of integrated BSV sequences in some banana cultivars which leads to false positives. In this study, a sequence non-specific, rolling-circle amplification (RCA) technique was developed and shown to overcome these limitations for the detection and subsequent characterisation of BSV isolates infecting banana. This technique was shown to discriminate between integrated and episomal BSV DNA, specifically detecting the latter in several banana cultivars known to contain episomal and/or integrated sequences of Banana streak Mysore virus (BSMyV), Banana streak OL virus (BSOLV) and Banana streak GF virus (BSGFV). Using RCA, the presence of BSMyV and BSOLV was confirmed in Australia, while BSOLV, BSGFV, Banana streak Uganda I virus (BSUgIV), Banana streak Uganda L virus (BSUgLV) and Banana streak Uganda M virus (BSUgMV) were detected in Uganda. This is the first confirmed report of episomally-derived BSUglV, BSUgLV and BSUgMV in Uganda. As well as its ability to detect BSV, RCA was shown to detect two other pararetroviruses, Sugarcane bacilliform virus in sugarcane and Cauliflower mosaic virus in turnip.
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Personal reflections on the We Al-Li Program
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Many fashion businesses in New Zealand have followed a global trend towards inexpensive off shore manufacturing. The transfer of the production of garments to overseas workers has had consequences for the wellbeing of local businesses, fashion designers and garment makers. The gradual decline of fashion manufacturing also appears to have resulted in a local fashion scene where many garments look the same in style, colour, fabric, cut and fit. The excitement of the past, where the majority of fashion designers established their own individuality through the cut and shape of the garments that they produced, may have been inadvertently lost in an effort to take advantage of cost savings achieved through mass production and manufacturing methods which are now largely unavailable in New Zealand. Consequently, a sustainable local fashion and manufacturing industry, with design integrity, seems further out of reach. This paper is focussed upon the thesis that the design and manufacture of a fashion garment, bearing in mind certain economic and practical restrictions at its inception, can contribute to a more sustainable fashion manufacturing industry in New Zealand.
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This exhibition engages with one of the key issues facing the fashion textiles industry in terms of future sustainability: that of the well being of fashion industry workers in Australia and New Zealand (people). This collection formed the basis of my honours dissertation (completed in New Zealand in 2008) which examines the contribution that design can make to sustainable manufacturing; particularly design for local production and consumption. An important aspect this work is the discussion of source, the work suggests that the made in China syndrome (in reference to the current state of over-consumerism in Australia and New Zealand) could be bought to a close through design to minimize waste and maximize opportunity for ‘people’: in this case both garment workers and the SMEs that employ them. The garments reflect the possibilities of focusing on a local approach that could be put into practice by a framework of SMEs that already exist. In addition the design process is highly transferrable and could be put into practice almost anywhere with minimal set up costs and a design ethos that progresses at the same pace as the skills of workers. This collection is a physical and conceptual embodiment of a source local/make local/sell local approach. The collection is an example of design that demonstrates that this is not an unrealistic ideal and is in fact possible through the development of a sustainable industry, in the sense of people, profit and planet, through adoption of a design process model that stops the waste at the source, by making better use of the raw materials and labour involved in making fashion garments. Although the focus of this research appears to centre on people and profit, this kind of source local/make local/sell local approach also has great benefits in terms of environmental sustainability.
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The ‘Dream Circle’ is a space designed by and operated through Indigenous educator footprints as a safe space for the school’s deadly jarjums (Indigenous children). The ‘Dream Circle’ uses a kinnected methodology drawing on the rich vein of Murri cultural knowledges and Torres Strait Islander supports within the local community to provide a safe and supportive circle. The ‘Dream Circle’ operates on a school site in the Logan area as an after school homework and cultural studies class. The ‘Dream Circle’ embodies practices and ritualises processes which ensure cultural safety and integrity. In this way the ‘Dream Circle’ balances the measures that Sarra (2005) purports are the stronger, smarter realities needed for positive change in Indigenous education.
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This article considers the implications of the decision in Paroz v Clifford Gouldson Lawyers [2012] QDC 151, which examined provisions of the Legal Profession Act 2007 (Qld) dealing with costs disclosure and assessment, and also considered associated provisions of the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 1999 (Qld).
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Newman and Nelson (2012) describe three ‘dances’ to explain the vacillating psychological states of trauma survivors: the dance of approach and avoidance; the dance of fragmentation and integration; and the dance of resilience and vulnerability. The first pair of seemingly opposite responses describes how survivors at times cope by ‘approaching’ the trauma, for example by gathering information about what happened; whilst at other times, the same person will cope by ‘avoiding’ the trauma by engaging in activities which distract them from the memory of the trauma or having to deal with the consequences of it. The ‘dance’ of fragmentation and integration describes the opposing individual or group experiences encountered after traumas or disasters. Individuals may experience fragmentation, or emotional disconnection, from the trauma as an adaptive means of survival. The ‘dance’ of resilience and vulnerability refers to an individual’s ability to ‘process’ trauma and return to a resilient state in which they re-learn to trust people and the world around them and ‘bounce back’ to a state of being resilient again. This paper will illustrate how an understanding of the three dances can be used to enable survivors of child sexual assault to engage with the media to tell their stories. I will give current examples from six months of journalism research, collaboration and writing of a series of news stories and features which broke an exclusive story simultaneously in The Australian and The Times in London during 2013.
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Research background: Circle Stories was a live performance curated by Brydie-Leigh Bartleet, Naomi Sunderland, Gavin Carfoot and the Winanjjikari Music Centre as part of the Desert Harmony Festival 2013. The performance was the culmination of five years of research into intercultural performing arts practice, undertaken in partnership with Barkly Regional Arts. This work has built on existing scholarly work in community service learning by Marilynne Boyle-Baise, approaches to intercultural music making with Australian First Peoples by Karl Neuenfeldt, and studies of Indigenous popular music by Peter Dunbar-Hall and Chris Gibson. The performance followed the popular songwriters’ circle approach, in which Aboriginal musicians and elders presented their songs along with tertiary music students, as part of a broader dialogue with each other and the audience. Each performance provided an opportunity to highlight the importance of music in the development of intercultural knowledge and understanding. The project asked the research question, how can collaborative music performance foster mutual learning, intercultural knowledge and reconciliation? Research contribution: The project development and performance of Circle Stories identified that mutual learning and intercultural knowledge can result most effectively through long-term and meaningful relationships underpinning collaborative creative practice. Research significance: Following a general call for proposals, the performance was peer reviewed and selected for inclusion in the Desert Harmony Festival program. The research context of the work is detailed in Brydie-Leigh Bartleet and Gavin Carfoot 2013. "Desert harmony: Stories of collaboration between Indigenous musicians and university students." International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives 12 (1): 180-196.