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- Title
- "Only the fourth chief" : conflict, land, and chiefly authority in 20th century KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
- Creator
- Kelly, Jill Elizabeth
- Date
- 2012
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
-
This dissertation examines the local nature of South Africa’s transition–era political violence (known in isiZulu as
uDlame ). While common explanations for the conflict focus on the struggle for political legitimacy between the rural and traditionalist Zulu ethnic nationalist movement Inkatha and the young and urban African National Congress (ANC), I argue that for the individuals and communities involved, politics were local. For the peri–urban Nyavu and...
Show moreThis dissertation examines the local nature of South Africa’s transition–era political violence (known in isiZulu asuDlame ). While common explanations for the conflict focus on the struggle for political legitimacy between the rural and traditionalist Zulu ethnic nationalist movement Inkatha and the young and urban African National Congress (ANC), I argue that for the individuals and communities involved, politics were local. For the peri–urban Nyavu and Maphumulo chiefdoms in the Table Mountain region outside of Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu–Natal, these larger struggles were embedded in a century–old debate over land and what it meant for a chief to be legitimate. Drawing on a rich combination of written and oral sources, the dissertation examines the role of colonial and apartheid governments in the appointment and succession of Zulu chiefs, the engendering of debates over legitimacy and chiefly authority, boundary conflicts, “faction fights,” and competing claims on land. In the Table Mountain region, the Nyavu, whose chiefdom predated the rise of the Zulu state under Shaka, made land claims based on their hereditary status against the chiefdoms established in the area by the British such as the Qamu, Gcumisa, and Maphumulo (chapter one). The construction of a dam during the segregation era and the establishment of Tribal Authorities and bantustans under apartheid exacerbated these contests over access to land and political legitimacy (chapter two). The rise of the ethnic nationalist movement Inkatha in the KwaZulu bantustan, forced relocations, and an increasing population meant many parties competed over scarce land in the Table Mountain region (chapter three). As political violence erupted across KwaZulu–Natal and in the Gauteng townships during the late 1980s, the Table Mountain region initially remained a haven of peace under the “peace chief” Mhlabunzima Maphumulo of the Maphumulo chiefdom. In offering himself as peacemaker and protector, Chief Mhlabunzima attracted new Maphumulo members onto the contested land, sparking the deadly transition–era violence with the neighboring Nyavu (chapter four). Maphumulo’s actions also caused a rift within his chiefdom (chapter five). Local actors used both the national and local contest between Inkatha and the ANC as an opportunity to decide the land dispute through violence. The final chapter (six) turns away from the male-dominated experience of the violence to analyze how women's discussions about it reveal both their claims on ethnicity and uses of Zulu culture as a coping mechanism.The historiographical significance of these findings is threefold. First, my dissertation builds on earlier concerns of African historians about the importance of land for chiefly legitimacy, but goes beyond them by examining other claims to authority, such as hereditary descent, resource allocation, and security and protection during conflict. Second, after the advent of democracy, historical research and public history in South Africa has emphasized commemorative liberation history that tends to overlook the relatively recent painful, divisive years of warfare that almost scuttled the 1994 elections. Third, my study has relevancy in contemporary South African and African human rights debates over state/peasant relations and the role of chiefs and land reform in postcolonial African politics and democracy.
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- Title
- "Open" sulfur heterocyclic analogs of the phenothiazines and related phenylthienyl systems
- Creator
- Okafor, Charles Okolo
- Date
- 1965
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "Our Utah girls" : girls and young women in the transitional Mormon Church
- Creator
- Rose, Natalie Kaye
- Date
- 2016
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
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How the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) transitioned from practicing the most unconventional marriage system in the nation to representing a model of family stability has surfaced as one of the most riveting and perplexing questions in the field of American religious history. A common explanation for this remarkable transition centers upon the assumption that church members were eager to be welcomed into and prove their allegiance to the United States after contending with...
Show moreHow the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) transitioned from practicing the most unconventional marriage system in the nation to representing a model of family stability has surfaced as one of the most riveting and perplexing questions in the field of American religious history. A common explanation for this remarkable transition centers upon the assumption that church members were eager to be welcomed into and prove their allegiance to the United States after contending with intense persecution and ostracism. However, this dissertation complicates this narrative and explores how acclimation into the mainstream United States was not a swift process for the church’s youngest female members. My dissertation examines how the church’s young women contended with and pushed back against the leadership’s expectations during this transition. The LDS church leadership and influential membership exercised their expectations and anxieties for the future of Mormonism through attitudes and actions directed toward adolescent female church members. Mormon girls embodied multiple possibilities for the future of the religion in the minds of the church leaders and the wider community. In the most literal sense, they represented the continuation of the religion through their desire to marry and have children. The leadership envisioned that adolescent Mormon women held the ability to push the religion into the twentieth century while still maintaining sacred religious traditions. Young women could impede the leadership’s desires by choosing intermarriage, not marrying at all, and failing to want children. To counteract these possibilities, the leadership looked to methods such as the organization of youth groups and the development of prescriptive literature to outline their expectations of how girls should act as proper Mormon women. An exploration of young women’s diaries, letters, school notebooks, memoir, and other life-writings illuminates how young women used a variety of methods and spaces to assert their agency within Mormonism. While some young women developed autonomy within church structures like the auxiliary female groups, others depended on secular higher education and professional opportunities to embrace their agency outside of the church. Their acts of agency were not necessarily directed against the church, but a way for young women to grapple with changes in their church, families, and personal lives.
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- Title
- "Our word is our bond" : T.S. Eliot, Geoffrey Hill, and the (post)modernist problematics of language
- Creator
- Kim, Yangsoon
- Date
- 1998
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "Outsiders" and the crisis of identity : Bosnia-Herzegovina, 1990-1995
- Creator
- Ashbrook, John E.
- Date
- 1996
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "Paperless citizens" : perceptions and practices of citizenship among Salvadoran retornados
- Creator
- Maginot, Kelly Birch
- Date
- 2019
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
-
In this dissertation, I explore deported Salvadorans' experiences of detention, deportation, reception, and reintegration, with an emphasis on the structural barriers that they face and their strategies for surviving these barriers. I also examine returned Salvadorans' sense of belonging, perceptions of citizenship, and civic engagement practices in the United States and El Salvador in order to understand when and how deportees are able to express and enact agency. I argue that deportees'...
Show moreIn this dissertation, I explore deported Salvadorans' experiences of detention, deportation, reception, and reintegration, with an emphasis on the structural barriers that they face and their strategies for surviving these barriers. I also examine returned Salvadorans' sense of belonging, perceptions of citizenship, and civic engagement practices in the United States and El Salvador in order to understand when and how deportees are able to express and enact agency. I argue that deportees' extreme precarity and exclusion makes them "outsiders within" their sending and receiving states, which gives them valuable perspectives on citizenship and national belonging. Using in-depth, semi-structured interviews and observations with deported Salvadorans, I find that the Salvadoran deported population is segmented by migration history, gender, and age, producing distinct deported masculinities that foster-and more often constrain-deported Salvadoran men's ability to act as change agents. My fieldwork further reveals that Salvadoran men and women develop diverse, innovative strategies for coping with deportation-related challenges such as violence, un- and underemployment, and social exclusion. These strategies include both individual and collective actions, in addition to claims of belonging and deservingness in El Salvador and the U.S. Together, these findings exemplify the central role that neoliberal globalization plays in creating productive citizens and a disposable global workforce, as well as ways in which deportees use neoliberal ideologies to advance rights claims. This project thus extends theorizing around immigrant re/incorporation, citizenship, masculinities, and agency, in addition to highlighting important implications for migration scholars and practitioners in deportee-sending and receiving states.
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- Title
- "Passport" to improved retention
- Creator
- Thayer, Mary Ann
- Date
- 1998
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "Pictures...of a good subject" : friendship, the commonwealth, and the care of the self in early modern literature and culture
- Creator
- Kranzman, Andrew Scott
- Date
- 2015
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
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This dissertation argues that emphases on self-knowledge and duty within friendship discourse of the early modern period repudiates a common assumption that friendship is primarily a private, selfless, apolitical affair separate from public life. This discourse largelyhighlights fashioning the self as an ethical and political subject while the friend per se remains of secondary concern. As the Early Modern Research Group observes, “the commonwealth...act[s] as a language to articulate...
Show moreThis dissertation argues that emphases on self-knowledge and duty within friendship discourse of the early modern period repudiates a common assumption that friendship is primarily a private, selfless, apolitical affair separate from public life. This discourse largelyhighlights fashioning the self as an ethical and political subject while the friend per se remains of secondary concern. As the Early Modern Research Group observes, “the commonwealth...act[s] as a language to articulate personal and public vices and virtues” (Early Modern Research Group 670). An emphasis on obligation and reciprocity for the common good or bonum commune, the importance of social hierarchy, obedience, and subordination, as well as a belief in moral discipline as the anodyne to social ills prove to be recurring components of this “language.”Some major concerns within friendship discourse and practice include: the realization of membership in a larger community; the importance of measure and mean to both individual and community well-being; the obligation to admonish community members who fail to upholdduties and shared moral standards; and the necessity of social concord across various classes. Moreover, period conceptions of friendship demonstrate that the formation of “good” and “dutiful” does not proceed without cognitive, moral, and emotional struggles, particularly, asregards indifference, selfishness, flattery, and resentment.Each chapter explores a specific facet of early modern friendship discourse and practice and places it in conversation with the “language” of the commonwealth: self-knowledge, the care of the self, frank speech, and gender. My first chapter argues that Tudor friendship pamphletsand Tottel’s Songs and Sonnets exploit the sentiment that self-knowledge fosters concord, where one learns to fashion the self into a dutiful subject to God and man. As I delineate in this chapter,discussions of self-knowledge frequently focus on the possibility of sedition arising from a lack of knowledge about one’s duty and obedience to the commonwealth. The second chapterexamines the disciplinary function of self-knowledge and duty within friendship discourse and The Two Gentlemen of Verona. Concerns surrounding self-love and temperance in friendship focus on the potential for disaster when one does not know the extent of their duties to thecommonwealth. As I demonstrate in my third chapter, which focuses on Plutarch and King Lear, the sense of duty to authority that guides self-fashioning in friendship and buttresses self-knowledgealso highlights the necessity of fashioned speech, particularly the tactful articulation of one’s conscience in order to preserve ethical bonds and duties within the community. However, as regards the practice of tactful antagonism, that is, “parrhēsia” or frank speech, concerns surface because it potentially disrupts social hierarchies and so closely resembles the very thing it supposedly combats: flattery. In my final chapter, I examine themes discussed in earlier chapters (i.e., self-knowledge, temperance, and admonishment) through the lens of gender and class. Amelia Lanyer’s poems, and early modern culture and literature in general, depict caritas, or friendship between the self and others mediated by Christ, as one way to cultivate private virtue and public concord that surpasses social divisions. As I argue, divisions andfaultlines that are mostly class-based, along with visions of a lack of social mobility, pressure the utopian idea of friendship among women put forth by Lanyer as well as general discussions of social concord among all classes in the commonwealth.
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- Title
- "Playin' ball" : the social organization of pickup basketball games
- Creator
- Nagy, Michael Peter
- Date
- 1973
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "Power of we" : effects of motivational self-talk and synchrony on performance, efficacy beliefs, and sense of unity in dyadic exercise
- Creator
- Son, Veronica
- Date
- 2013
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
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This dissertation investigated the effects of `individual-focused' versus `group-focused' self-talk and synchrony on performance, self-efficacy, collective efficacy, and sense of unity in a dyadic exercise setting. Additionally, this study sought to identify whether individualist and collectivist orientations influence the way in which self-talk strategies enhance performance and one's beliefs about one's own and one's team's capabilities. Previous research found that group-focused self-talk...
Show moreThis dissertation investigated the effects of `individual-focused' versus `group-focused' self-talk and synchrony on performance, self-efficacy, collective efficacy, and sense of unity in a dyadic exercise setting. Additionally, this study sought to identify whether individualist and collectivist orientations influence the way in which self-talk strategies enhance performance and one's beliefs about one's own and one's team's capabilities. Previous research found that group-focused self-talk was effective in enhancing performance and both self- and collective efficacy (Son, Jackson, Grove, & Feltz, 2011). Synchrony research has also demonstrated its positive impact on fostering relative team outcomes (e.g., relationship quality, sense of unity, and satisfaction; Vacharkulksemsuk & Fredrickson, 2011; Wiltermuth & Heath, 2009). Participants were 346 undergraduate students who were randomly assigned to a same-gender dyad. Dyads were allocated to one of 12 conditions in a 3 (self-talk condition: I version, we version, control) x 2 (synchrony: synchronous activity, asynchronous activity) x 2 (task type: additive, coactive condition) x 2 (block) design with repeated measures on the last factor. Participants completed one block of an abdominal plank exercise alone and the second as a part of a dyad. Participants also completed questionnaires regarding their individualistic and collectivistic orientations, self-efficacy, collective efficacy, and sense of unity. Between the two blocks a self-talk intervention was implemented. Using ANCOVAs with baseline measures as a covariate, although no significant effects for individualistic or collectivistic orientations were found, participants using individual-oriented self-talk reported greater performance improvement compared to those in the control condition. Stronger sense of self-efficacy and greater enjoyment in working as a group was found in the group-focused self-talk condition compared to the control condition. Individuals in the additive condition reported greater performance improvement and higher levels of collective efficacy than did those in the coactive condition. Lastly, synchrony produced greater performance improvement and stronger sense of unity compared to the asynchrony condition. Findings of the study contribute to the self-talk and synchrony literature in team sport and exercise contexts and how these strategies can be effectively implemented to enhance performance and efficacy beliefs.
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- Title
- "Preposterous and parallel" : realist disorientation in Mona Caird's The daughters of Danaus
- Creator
- Whitney, Katherine M.
- Date
- 2007
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "Razing" adults and illegible children : narratives of (im) maturity during America's progressive era
- Creator
- Astle, Kirk Andrew
- Date
- 2005
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "Readin' sistahs after school : counterstories from an all black girl book club"
- Creator
- Carey, Carleen
- Date
- 2015
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
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This study uses ethnographic tools to analyze one after-school Black girl book club. It addressesthe question, “How do the students construct raced and gendered identities as they engage withtexts?” While some studies highlight the need for teachers to employ culturally relevantcurricula, more studies are required to illuminate how students themselves define which texts areculturally sustaining. Drawing on Gee’s model of discourse as type of toolkit, this studyinvestigates the stories...
Show moreThis study uses ethnographic tools to analyze one after-school Black girl book club. It addressesthe question, “How do the students construct raced and gendered identities as they engage withtexts?” While some studies highlight the need for teachers to employ culturally relevantcurricula, more studies are required to illuminate how students themselves define which texts areculturally sustaining. Drawing on Gee’s model of discourse as type of toolkit, this studyinvestigates the stories narrated by six female African American1 seventh-graders over the courseof one school year in a large Midwestern city. Using critical discourse analysis, this studyillustrates how written and oral story-telling can support students’ critical literacy development.This dissertation expands the literature on identity and literacy. It expands our knowledge aboutan oral narrative in conversational response to text, thus uncovering the potential of narrative andconversational response to text as a tool for both young adult identity development and teachereducation, especially among young women of color studying English in urban settings.
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- Title
- "Responsibly inventing history" : the work of Tim O'Brien
- Creator
- McNerney, Brian Cole
- Date
- 1994
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "Right way/wrong way" presentations : the use of common errors in instructional videos for procedure learning
- Creator
- McCarthy, Tom
- Date
- 1991
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "S.W.A.G. = Style With a Goal" : exploring fashion/style as a critical literacy of Black youth in urban schools
- Creator
- Hayes, Sherrae M.
- Date
- 2015
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
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This study is a multi-method, qualitative project using Youth Participatory Action Research through ethnographic design to examine the uses of fashion/style by Black youth as a form of critical literacy. Taking place in the setting of an urban, public, Midwestern middle school, the work outlines the ways these students communicated through their fashion sense and thus made sense of their identities and the identities of others as messages critically coded and decoded daily. This work examines...
Show moreThis study is a multi-method, qualitative project using Youth Participatory Action Research through ethnographic design to examine the uses of fashion/style by Black youth as a form of critical literacy. Taking place in the setting of an urban, public, Midwestern middle school, the work outlines the ways these students communicated through their fashion sense and thus made sense of their identities and the identities of others as messages critically coded and decoded daily. This work examines current texts/theories surrounding characteristics of uniform policy, critical literacy, and identity development through fashion/style. Ultimately, through this study’s action-orientation, this work highlights how students participated in student-led development of a uniform/dress code policy that incorporated their own critical fashion literacies. Critical Fashion Literacy, a particular form of critical literacy this work seeks to contribute to literacy studies at large, is centered upon the notion of how we each possibly read and write messages and meanings through fashion/style daily. Essentially, this study works to center youth voices with a potential impact on possibilities for their future as change agents in education in their own right – moving beyond fashion statements to the statements they are making through fashion.
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- Title
- "Scandinavian preferred" : Nordic ethnic identity, gender, and work within Chicago, 1879--1933
- Creator
- Jackson, Erika Kathleen
- Date
- 2010
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "Scientists don't talk about underground rivers" : (e)merging water and development discourse in Quintana Roo, Mexico
- Creator
- Amato, Jessica Vernieri
- Date
- 2012
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Description
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The provision and maintenance of water for the growing tourist and resident populations of Quintana Roo present a formidable challenge to the Caribbean coastal town of Akumal, Mexico. Despite being given much attention at the 2006 Fourth World Water Forum in Mexico City, water contamination throughout southeastern Quintana Roo is now nearing a crisis. In Akumal, mismanaged municipal and state-level attempts to "develop" have increased the amounts of contaminated groundwater, untreated...
Show moreThe provision and maintenance of water for the growing tourist and resident populations of Quintana Roo present a formidable challenge to the Caribbean coastal town of Akumal, Mexico. Despite being given much attention at the 2006 Fourth World Water Forum in Mexico City, water contamination throughout southeastern Quintana Roo is now nearing a crisis. In Akumal, mismanaged municipal and state-level attempts to "develop" have increased the amounts of contaminated groundwater, untreated wastewater discharge, and unregulated nutrient runoff into the Caribbean Sea. These unsustainable efforts are chief contributors to the overall poor water quality, according to environmental scientists who monitor Akumal's coastal zone. Despite lacking the infrastructure to support a booming tourism industry, Akumal is poised to "develop" faster and more profoundly in the near future than it has in the past 20 years.As part of Quintana Roo state, Akumal is positioned for redevelopment as "Nuevo Akumal," part of a regional tourism development plan that will raise the number of hotel rooms and condominiums from 20,000 currently to over 250,000 by the year 2025 (Basave 2001). Within state-development planning processes, there is a strong disconnect between the economic need to refashion Akumal as a major tourism engine of Quintana Roo, and the desire to limit growth and maintain Akumal's global reputation as an "ecotourist" destination. The urgency to mediate these divergent positions has resulted in the creation of local conservation efforts in Akumal. The growing call for sustainable, controlled, and ecologically-aware development comes from local as well as transnational actors. Some of these ancillary programs supplement state efforts and stem from the actions of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in Quintana Roo.For NGO stakeholders in Akumal, these actions have not resulted in greater bargaining power over the choices being made, but rather position NGOs as expert informants to the "real" decision-makers of the state. Seats at the development table are granted based on the perceived authority and expertise of scientists. This perception gains currency by packaging and repackaging NGO conservation efforts as alternative economic investments infused with the infallibility of western science.Adopting the grounded theoretical framework of political ecology, this dissertation explores how NGO claims of scientific expertise emerge and define the routes to sustainable development in Akumal. Through an in-depth examination of a local water conservation program in Akumal, NGO discourses are analyzed as structuring practices that create "authentic," and therefore valued, responses to development. As part of this analysis, this dissertation presents the results and interpretation of ethnographic field research to explore, more broadly, the cumulative role of science, expertise and authority as preconditions for creating local alternatives to state-level development. Identifying and discussing how these "givens" travel discursively through varying cultural and political venues addresses the multi-scalar power relationships that compete within Akumal's high-speed tourism development process.
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- Title
- "Shall ill-gotten gains be sought for Christian purposes?," Washington Gladden's "tainted money" address, Seattle, September 15, 1905
- Creator
- Conley, James Harvey
- Date
- 1969
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Title
- "Signpost up ahead?" : intersections of print and the televisual, narrative and the archive in The twilight zone
- Creator
- Costello, Michele Ashley
- Date
- 2007
- Collection
- Electronic Theses & Dissertations