842 resultados para Lived spaces
Resumo:
Vietnam has a unique culture which is revealed in the way that people have built and designed their traditional housing. Vietnamese dwellings reflect occupants’ activities in their everyday lives, while adapting to tropical climatic conditions impacted by seasoning monsoons. It is said that these characteristics of Vietnamese dwellings have remained unchanged until the economic reform in 1986, when Vietnam experienced an accelerated development based on the market-oriented economy. New housing types, including modern shop-houses, detached houses, and apartments, have been designed in many places, especially satisfying dwellers’ new lifestyles in Vietnamese cities. The contemporary housing, which has been mostly designed by architects, has reflected rules of spatial organisation so that occupants’ social activities are carried out. However, contemporary housing spaces seem unsustainable in relation to socio-cultural values because they has been influenced by globalism that advocates the use of homogeneous spatial patterns, modern technologies, materials and construction methods. This study investigates the rules of spaces in Vietnamese houses that were built before and after the reform to define the socio-cultural implications in Vietnamese housing design. Firstly, it describes occupants’ views of their current dwellings in terms of indoor comfort conditions and social activities in spaces. Then, it examines the use of spaces in pre-reform Vietnamese housing through occupants’ activities and material applications. Finally, it discusses the organisation of spaces in both pre- and post-reform housing to understand how Vietnamese housing has been designed for occupants to live, act, work, and conduct traditional activities. Understanding spatial organisation is a way to identify characteristics of the lived spaces of the occupants created from the conceived space, which is designed by designers. The characteristics of the housing spaces will inform the designers the way to design future Vietnamese housing in response to cultural contexts. The study applied an abductive approach for the investigation of housing spaces. It used a conceptual framework in relation to Henri Lefebvre’s (1991) theory to understand space as the main factor constituting the language of design, and the principles of semiotics to examine spatial structure in housing as a language used in the everyday life. The study involved a door-knocking survey to 350 households in four regional cities of Vietnam for interpretation of occupancy conditions and levels of occupants’ comfort. A statistical analysis was applied to interpret the survey data. The study also required a process of data selection and collection of fourteen cases of housing in three main climatic regions of the country for analysing spatial organisation and housing characteristics. The study found that there has been a shift in the relationship of spaces from the pre- to post-reform Vietnamese housing. It also indentified that the space for guest welcoming and family activity has been the central space of the Vietnamese housing. Based on the relationships of the central space with the others, theoretical models were proposed for three types of contemporary Vietnamese housing. The models will be significant in adapting to Vietnamese conditions to achieve socioenvironmental characteristics for housing design because it was developed from the occupants’ requirements for their social activities. Another contribution of the study is the use of methodological concepts to understand the language of living spaces. Further work will be needed to test future Vietnamese housing designs from the applications of the models.
Resumo:
Events that involve food and eating are important parts of the daily routine in which adults and children participate in child care settings. These events can be viewed as cultural practices because they involve certain everyday ways of acting, thinking or feeling (Grusec JE et al, Child Dev 71(1): 205–211, 2000). The cultural practices around food and eating symbolise and guide the social relations, emotions, social structures and behaviours of the participants. Identities and roles for the participants are created in these practices, marked by ambiguity, movement and fluidity through ongoing processes of negotiation (Punch S et al, Child Geogr 8(3): 227–232, 2010). The formal professional systems that guide these practices in early education and care programs often focus on the nutritional value of the food, while the children and teachers involved in these mealtime events account for the intersubjective experiences. Mealtimes provide opportunities for children and teachers to interact and co-construct meaning around the situations that arise. Of special interest in this research are teachers’ and children’s intentions for communication in the context of events involving food and eating and the kind of learning embedded in the communications that occur. Throughout this chapter, these events are referred to as mealtimes. This study is informed by phenomenological theory which aims to reach understandings about interactions and their meaning from the perspective of the participating individuals.
Resumo:
En pleno proceso de corrimiento de la frontera productiva y emergente disputa por el uso y apropiación de los recursos, la intervención de distintos sujetos sociales en el oeste de La Pampa está redefiniendo las prácticas productivas-reproductivas de los crianceros campesinos y, en consecuencia, la construcción social del espacio. Desde la finalización de las campañas militares contra las sociedades indígenas diferentes agentes, mediante el ejercicio de poder, construyeron determinadas representaciones territoriales y pusieron en acción prácticas tendientes a articular el oeste pampeano con la economía nacional. Sin embargo la escasa valorización de este espacio posibilitó el desarrollo de cierta autonomía en las formas de organización socio-productivas y simbólicas. Ante la expansión de la frontera ganadera, el impuso hidrocarburífero en la región y creciente presencia de nuevas lógicas territoriales crecen las confrontaciones por el desigual acceso a los recursos naturales, por la apropiación del espacio y la construcción de territorialidades. En este marco, el artículo focaliza la mirada en la organización interna de los asentamientos rurales y en los usos sociales de los espacios a través del tiempo, en dos áreas del "extremo" oeste: La Humada y Chos Malal. De este modo se pretende establecer cómo se organizaron diacrónicamente los espacios doméstico, peridoméstico y monte y qué sentidos expresan los sujetos en torno a los espacios de vida y lugares en tiempos de expansión de la frontera productiva. El nuevo campo social generado producto del avance del capitalismo sobre las unidades campesinas se expresa, no sólo en las modificaciones en las formas de manejo del ganado, organización de la producción y construcción social del espacio, sino también en las formas de sociabilidad y estrategias de resistencia colectivas. Este proceso, que se está gestando en la región, tiene un desarrollo similar en otros espacios donde el avance productivo se ha generado con anterioridad o a un ritmo más acelerado. Para la realización de la investigación se articulan diferentes estrategias de metodología cualitativa que combinan el estudio de caso con historias de vida, entrevistas en profundidad y análisis de fuentes documentales.
Resumo:
En pleno proceso de corrimiento de la frontera productiva y emergente disputa por el uso y apropiación de los recursos, la intervención de distintos sujetos sociales en el oeste de La Pampa está redefiniendo las prácticas productivas-reproductivas de los crianceros campesinos y, en consecuencia, la construcción social del espacio. Desde la finalización de las campañas militares contra las sociedades indígenas diferentes agentes, mediante el ejercicio de poder, construyeron determinadas representaciones territoriales y pusieron en acción prácticas tendientes a articular el oeste pampeano con la economía nacional. Sin embargo la escasa valorización de este espacio posibilitó el desarrollo de cierta autonomía en las formas de organización socio-productivas y simbólicas. Ante la expansión de la frontera ganadera, el impuso hidrocarburífero en la región y creciente presencia de nuevas lógicas territoriales crecen las confrontaciones por el desigual acceso a los recursos naturales, por la apropiación del espacio y la construcción de territorialidades. En este marco, el artículo focaliza la mirada en la organización interna de los asentamientos rurales y en los usos sociales de los espacios a través del tiempo, en dos áreas del "extremo" oeste: La Humada y Chos Malal. De este modo se pretende establecer cómo se organizaron diacrónicamente los espacios doméstico, peridoméstico y monte y qué sentidos expresan los sujetos en torno a los espacios de vida y lugares en tiempos de expansión de la frontera productiva. El nuevo campo social generado producto del avance del capitalismo sobre las unidades campesinas se expresa, no sólo en las modificaciones en las formas de manejo del ganado, organización de la producción y construcción social del espacio, sino también en las formas de sociabilidad y estrategias de resistencia colectivas. Este proceso, que se está gestando en la región, tiene un desarrollo similar en otros espacios donde el avance productivo se ha generado con anterioridad o a un ritmo más acelerado. Para la realización de la investigación se articulan diferentes estrategias de metodología cualitativa que combinan el estudio de caso con historias de vida, entrevistas en profundidad y análisis de fuentes documentales.
Resumo:
En pleno proceso de corrimiento de la frontera productiva y emergente disputa por el uso y apropiación de los recursos, la intervención de distintos sujetos sociales en el oeste de La Pampa está redefiniendo las prácticas productivas-reproductivas de los crianceros campesinos y, en consecuencia, la construcción social del espacio. Desde la finalización de las campañas militares contra las sociedades indígenas diferentes agentes, mediante el ejercicio de poder, construyeron determinadas representaciones territoriales y pusieron en acción prácticas tendientes a articular el oeste pampeano con la economía nacional. Sin embargo la escasa valorización de este espacio posibilitó el desarrollo de cierta autonomía en las formas de organización socio-productivas y simbólicas. Ante la expansión de la frontera ganadera, el impuso hidrocarburífero en la región y creciente presencia de nuevas lógicas territoriales crecen las confrontaciones por el desigual acceso a los recursos naturales, por la apropiación del espacio y la construcción de territorialidades. En este marco, el artículo focaliza la mirada en la organización interna de los asentamientos rurales y en los usos sociales de los espacios a través del tiempo, en dos áreas del "extremo" oeste: La Humada y Chos Malal. De este modo se pretende establecer cómo se organizaron diacrónicamente los espacios doméstico, peridoméstico y monte y qué sentidos expresan los sujetos en torno a los espacios de vida y lugares en tiempos de expansión de la frontera productiva. El nuevo campo social generado producto del avance del capitalismo sobre las unidades campesinas se expresa, no sólo en las modificaciones en las formas de manejo del ganado, organización de la producción y construcción social del espacio, sino también en las formas de sociabilidad y estrategias de resistencia colectivas. Este proceso, que se está gestando en la región, tiene un desarrollo similar en otros espacios donde el avance productivo se ha generado con anterioridad o a un ritmo más acelerado. Para la realización de la investigación se articulan diferentes estrategias de metodología cualitativa que combinan el estudio de caso con historias de vida, entrevistas en profundidad y análisis de fuentes documentales.
Resumo:
There is a growing body of literature within social and cultural geography that explores notions of place, space, culture, race and identity. The more recent works suggest that places are experienced and understood in multiple ways and are embedded within an array of politics. Memmott and Long, who have undertaken place-based research with Australian Indigenous people, present the theoretical position that ‘place is made and takes on meaning through an interaction process involving mutual accommodation between people and the environment’. They outline that places and their cultural meanings are generated through one or a combination of three types of people–environment interactions. These include: a place that is created by altering the physical characteristics of a piece of environment and which might encompass a feature or features which are natural or made; a place that is created totally through behaviour that is carried out within a specific area, therefore that specific behaviour becomes connected to that specific place; and a place created by people moving or being moved from one environment to another and establishing a new place where boundaries are created and activities carried out. All these ideas of places are challenged and confirmed by what Indigenous women have said about their particular use of, and relationship with, space within several health services in Rockhampton, Central Queensland. As my title suggests, Indigenous women do not see themselves as ‘neutral’ or ‘non-racialised’ citizens who enter and ‘use’ a supposedly neutral health service. Instead, Aboriginal women demonstrate they are active recognisers of places that would identify them within the particular health place. That is, they as Aboriginal women didn’t just ‘make’ place, the places and spaces ‘make’ them. The health services were identified as sites within which spatial relations could begin to grow with recognition of themselves as Aboriginal women in place, or instead create a sense of marginality in the failure of the spaces to identify them. The women’s voices within this paper are drawn from interviews undertaken with twenty Aboriginal women in Rockhampton, Central Queensland, Australia, who participated in a research project exploring ‘how the relationship between health services and Aboriginal women can be more empowering from the viewpoints of Aboriginal women’. The assumption underpinning this study was that empowering and re-empowering practices for Aboriginal women can lead to improved health outcomes. Throughout the interviews women shared some of their lived realities including some of their thoughts on identity, the body, employment in the health sector, service delivery and their notions of health service spaces and places. Their thoughts on health service spaces and places provide an understanding of the lived reality for Aboriginal women and are explored and incorporated within this paper.
Resumo:
The Australian beach is a significant component of the Australian culture and a way of life. The Australian Beachspace explores existing research about the Australian beach from a cultural and Australian studies perspective. Initially, the beach in Australian studies has been established within a binary opposition. Fiske, Hodge, and Turner (1987) pioneered the concept of the beach as a mythic space, simultaneously beautiful but abstract. In comparison, Meaghan Morris (1998) suggested that the beach was in fact an ordinary or everyday space. The research intervenes in previous discussions, suggesting that the Australian beach needs to be explored in spatial terms as well as cultural ones. The thesis suggests the beach is more than these previously established binaries and uses Soja's theory of Thirdspace (1996) to posit the term beachspace as a way of describing this complex site. The beachspace is a lived space that encompasses both the mythic and ordinary and more. A variety of texts have been explored in this work, both film and literature. The thesis examines textual representations of the Australian beach using Soja's Thirdspace as a frame to reveal the complexities of the Australian beach through five thematic chapters. Some of the texts discussed include works by Tim Winton's Breath (2008) and Land's Edge (1993), Robert Drewe's short story collections The Bodysurfers (1987) and The Rip (2008), and films such as Newcastle (dir. Dan Castle 2008) and Blackrock (dir. Steve Vidler 1997). Ultimately The Australian Beachspace illustrates that the multiple meanings of the beach's representations are complex and yet frequently fail to capture the layered reality of the Australian beach. The Australian beach is best described as a beachspace, a complex space that allows for the mythic and/or/both ordinary at once.
Resumo:
This paper argues that the staffroom is an important professional learning space where beginning teachers interact to understand who they are and the nature of their professional work. The authors highlight the theoretical importance of space and place in the construction and negotiation of beginning teacher subjectivities. To illustrate the staffroom as a particular place where important professional learning could occur the authors use two narratives based on the lived experiences of two beginning teachers, one in a primary context, the other secondary. The authors conclude by calling for greater research attention to the significance of the staffroom and its interaction with teacher subjectivities. At the level of practice we also call for the teaching profession to recognise staffrooms as important sites of professional learning and places that should support induction and mentoring of beginning teachers. Such recognition could enhance the retention, satisfaction, and effectiveness of new and experienced teachers alike.
Resumo:
The Northern Ireland conflict is shaped by an ethno-national contest between a minority Catholic/Nationalist/Republican population who broadly want to see the reunification of Ireland; and a majority Protestant/Unionist/Loyalist one, who mainly wish to maintain the sovereign connection with Britain. After nearly three decades of violence, which intensified segregation in schooling, labour markets and especially housing, a Peace Agreement was signed on Good Friday 1998. This paper is concerned with the peace process after the Agreement, not so much for the ambiguous political compromise, but for the way in which the city is constitutive of transformation and how Belfast in particular, is now embedded with a range of social instabilities and spatial contradictions. The Agreement encouraged rapid economic expansion, inward investment, especially in knowledge–intensive sectors and a short-lived optimism that markets and the neo-liberal fix would drive the post-conflict, post-industrial and post-political city. Capital would trump ethnicity and the economic uplift would bind citizens to a new expression of hope based on property speculation, tourism and global corporate investment.
Resumo:
This paper investigates processes and actions of diversifying memories of division in Northern Ireland’s political conflict known as the Troubles. Societal division is manifested in its built fabric and territories that have been adopted by predominant discourses of a fragmented society in Belfast; the unionist east and the nationalist west. The aim of the paper is to explore current approaches in planning contested spaces that have changed over time, leading to success in many cases. The argument is that divided cities, like Belfast, feature spatial images and memories of division that range from physical, clear-cut segregation to manifested actions of violence and have become influential representations in the community’s associative memory. While promoting notions of ‘re-imaging’ by current councils demonstrates a total erasure of the Troubles through cleansing its local collective memory, there yet remains an attempt to communicate a different tale of the city’s socio-economic past, to elaborate its supremacy for shaping future lived memories. Yet, planning Belfast’s contested areas is still suffering from a poor understanding of the context and its complexity against overambitious visions.
Resumo:
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-08