Search results for "Identity"
showing 10 items of 1751 documents
Identity and War in Michael Ondaatje’s
2012
Abstract This paper addresses the issue of identity in relation to war through a close reading of Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient. It investigates the connections between war and the construction of identity, focusing on aspects such as violence and death. In his novel Ondaatje uncovers private histories alongside the framing events of World War Two. Kip’s perception of war and his way of living through it suggest that the engagement on the world’s battlefield is riddled with inner conflicts separating people or bringing them together. In The English Patient what is at issue is the quest for a redefinition of the self: Hanna, Kirpal Singh and Almásy attempt to liberate the self throu…
2006
The Strawson´s Basic Argument is the stronger against moral responsibility in Philosophy of action. One should be responsible of his identity to be moral responsible of his actions, but then nobody could be never responsible. In this article I criticize orthodox solutions to Strawson´s sceptical challenge and show how they share with the Argument the same theological notion of monadical agent. A new solution needs a new conception of agent..
Politics of Cultural Marking in Mini-Europe: Anchoring European Cultural Identity in a Theme Park
2012
Mini-Europe—a theme park in Brussels morally supported by the European Commission and the European Parliament—consists of around 350 models of different buildings and heritage sites from all the member states of the European Union. In addition the park includes an exhibition named the Spirit of Europe. The article explores how the European cultural identity is constructed and ‘sold’ in Mini-Europe, and how history, geography and local and regional traditions are intertwined into a politics of cultural marking, an ideology of European integration and a creation of shared symbols. European cultural identity has often been generated through appeals to an ancient or classical past, which is pro…
Rhetoric of unity and cultural diversity in the making of European cultural identity
2011
The fundamental aim of the cultural policy of the European Union (EU) is to emphasize the obvious cultural diversity of Europe, while looking for some underlying common elements which unify the various cultures in Europe. Through these common elements, the EU policy produces ‘an imagined cultural community’ of Europe which is ‘united in diversity’, as one of the slogans of the Union states. This discourse characterizes various documents which are essential to the EU cultural policy, such as the Treaty of Lisbon, the European Agenda for Culture and the EU’s decision on the European Capital of Culture program. In addition, the discourse is applied to the production of cultural events in Europ…
O evento na categorização de migrantes: Explorando questões de “eventfulness” nas Américas
2020
Abstract The categories that define people on the move must be understood as unstable, contingent, and provisional processes. This paper contributes to a growing body of scholarship that explores the lived complexities of migrant categorization and their social implications. Based on fieldwork in Brazil and Central America, the paper investigates the processual character of categorization by intertwining temporal and spatial dimensions, focusing on specific events to understand the occasions, circumstances, and intentions that bring about adapted or entirely new categories. An eventful notion of categorization demonstrates not only how categories come into being but also how categories rema…
Spaces of Identity: Gender, Ethnicity, and Race in Salome of the Tenements (1923) and Quicksand (1928)
2018
Abstract The 1920s marked a fervent time for artistic and literary expression in the United States. Besides the famous authors of the decade, including F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, and William Faulkner, Anzia Yezierska and Nella Larsen, among other female writers, also managed to carve “a literary space” for their stories. Yezierska and Larsen depicted the struggles and tribulations of minority women during the fermenting 1920s, with a view to illustrating the impact of ethnicity and race on the individual female identity. Yezierska, a Jewish-American immigrant, and Larsen, a biracial American woman, share an interest in capturing the nuances of belonging to a particular community…
Decolonizing Othello in search of black feminist North American identities: Djanet Sears' Harlem duet and Toni Morrison's Desdemona
2017
<p>The plays <em>Harlem duet </em>(1997) by African Canadian playwright Djanet Sears and <em>Desdemona </em>(2012) by Toni Morrison signify upon European texts aiming to carve out a new definition of what it means to be black in North America. Therefore both texts make for interesting reading in the study of (black) identity construction within US and Canadian contexts for, by revising Shakespeare’s <em>Othello</em>, they rethink and rewrite a social and racial reality unrelentingly disrupted by difference and hybridity. Sears’ play establishes a specific reading of Canadianness in dialogue with African America to erect a possibility of healing and …
Geopolítica, (de)colonialidad e identidad: la conciencia dividida de Rubén Darío / Geopolitics, (De)coloniality and Identity: the Divided Consciousne…
2017
Resumen: En este artículo, analizo los ensayos, crónicas y artículos periodísticos de Rubén Darío a través del marco de la colonialidad del poder y la colonialidad del saber desarrollado por Aníbal Quijano entre otros. Argumento que leyendo sus escritos políticos, observamos a un sujeto con una conciencia dividida. Por un lado, Darío reproduce el pensamiento eurocéntrico que caracteriza la colonialidad y por otro lado, critica y cuestiona tal paradigma. Para apoyar mi argumento, empleo las divisiones geopolíticas ‘Este/Oeste’ y ‘Norte/Sur’ para trazar las preocupaciones y pensamientos del poeta nicaragüense sobre los Estados Unidos y Europa. En otras palabras, examino desde dónde piensa Dar…
Los Coloquios Latinoamericanos de Fotografía : hacia una definición de la fotografía hecha en Latinoamérica
2020
En el presente artículo nos proponemos reflexionar sobre los Coloquios Latinoamericanos de Fotografía que tuvieron lugar entre los años 1978 y 1996, en los que se buscó definir y categorizar a la fotografía latinoamericana. Dichos Coloquios se propusieron situar a la fotografía latinoamericana en el contexto de las actividades de la fotografía internacional, y propiciar una reflexión crítica sobre la identidad visual de las prácticas fotográficas de la región. En este sentido, buscamos indagar los documentos y actas de los coloquios a fin de proporcionar una lectura sobre el pensamiento sobre la fotografía latinoamericana en aquel contexto, partiendo del Primer Coloquio Latinoamericano de F…
Appropriation and restitution in the Argentinian Dictatorship's Children of the Disappeared Narratives: The missing alive
2020
Junto con el secuestro y desaparición de personas, el terrorismo de Estado en Argentina –que operó en su mayor parte durante la dictadura (1976-1983)– puso en práctica un plan sistemático para la apropiación de sus hijos, ya sea aquellos niños de poca edad que estaban con sus padres en el momento del allanamiento de la casa o los que nacían en centros clandestinos de detención, producto del secuestro de mujeres embarazadas, a las que se solía cuidar hasta dar a luz para luego ser asesinadas. Se trata de los “niños apropiados” o los “desaparecidos vivos” que las Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo procuran encontrar para devolverles su identidad primera. En este artículo exploramos, a partir de un ampl…