Results 171 to 180 of about 13,836 (222)
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2010
The Sahrawi and Afghan refugee youth in the Middle East have been stereotyped regionally and internationally: some have been objectified as passive victims; others have become the beneficiaries of numerous humanitarian aid packages which presume the primacy of the Western model of child development. This book compares and contrasts both the stereotypes
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The Sahrawi and Afghan refugee youth in the Middle East have been stereotyped regionally and internationally: some have been objectified as passive victims; others have become the beneficiaries of numerous humanitarian aid packages which presume the primacy of the Western model of child development. This book compares and contrasts both the stereotypes
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Deterritorializing collective biography
International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 2012This paper proposes a new move in the methodological practice of collective biography, by provoking a shift beyond any remnant attachment to the speaking/ writing subject towards her dispersal and displacement via textual interventions that stress multivocality. These include the use of photographs, drama, and various genres of writing.
Gannon, Susanne (R10967) +3 more
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Health and Social Care Chaplaincy, 2016
One of John Swinton’s objectives in his recent book, Dementia: Living in the Memories of God (2012), is to “deterritorialize” dementia: dementia is not the privileged domain of the neurologist. Following Tom Kitwood (1997), Swinton argues that dementia is as much relational and social as it is neurological.
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One of John Swinton’s objectives in his recent book, Dementia: Living in the Memories of God (2012), is to “deterritorialize” dementia: dementia is not the privileged domain of the neurologist. Following Tom Kitwood (1997), Swinton argues that dementia is as much relational and social as it is neurological.
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Deterritorializing Disciplinarity
Cultural Studies ↔ Critical Methodologies, 2014This article speculates on the pedagogical consequences of deterritorializing disciplinary knowledge. I suggest a move from knowledge as discipline to knowledge as an emergent potential of a field. Through this move, I propose an immanent pedagogy, based on the work of Deleuze and Guattari, in which students and teachers become active participants in ...
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Immanence and Deterritorialization
1998In academic philosophy the writings of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari are still treated as curiosities and their importance for philosophical discussions is not recognized. In order to remedy this, I demonstrate how the very concept of philosophy expounded by the two contributes to philosophical thinking at the end of the twentieth century while ...
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Deterritorialized in the Homeland
Journal of Middle East Women's StudiesAbstract This essay juxtaposes an English translation of the Urdu short story “Toba Tek Singh” (1955) and the Arabic film Al-Hudoud (The Borders, 1984). The texts’ fictional characterizations de-naturalize the construct of the “citizen” and critique relations between subjects and states, which this work analyzes through the lenses of ...
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Deterritorializing "Deterritorialization": From the "Anti-Oedipus" to "A Thousand Plateaus"
SubStance, 1991EIGHT YEARS AFTER THE ANTI-OEDIPUS, the long-awaited second volume of Capitalism and Schizophrenia appeared under the title A Thousand Plateaus.? It hardly seemed to belong with the earlier volume, in one respect: the points of departure in Marx and Freud that made "capitalism and schizophrenia" a fitting rubric for the Anti-Oedipus all but disappear ...
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Deterritorialization in The Sacred Fount
The Henry James Review, 2003Focusing on how "deterritorialization" (Deleuze and Guattari) is played out in The Sacred Fount, this essay argues that the oblique quality of James's novel arises from the problem of how knowledge should be organized, whether events can be categorized in terms of their own immanent dynamic or whether they become susceptible to redescription by a ...
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Deterritorialization and workplace culture
American Ethnologist, 2002In this article, I ask what happens to the moral economies and rhetorical frameworks that govern employment relations when labor markets become global. In particular, I examine the argument that globalization undermines the institutions and practices that govern local labor markets—eroding “locality.” I present the results offieldwork in knitwear firms
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Towards a theory of diaspora formation through conflict deterritorialization
Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism, 2021ÉLise FéRon, Sofiya Voytiv
exaly

