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ASSESSMENT OF TOURISM EFFECTS ON GEOGRAPHICAL
ASSESSMENT OF TOURISM EFFECTS ON GEOGRAPHICAL

... Thereby observation, information and consciousness levels of tourism actors about changes will be clarified by taking their views through eleven questions. Obtained results will not only shed light to the effects of tourism on area in Bergama but also contribute to interchange of views between local ...
8.COM 7.a.1 - Intangible Cultural Heritage
8.COM 7.a.1 - Intangible Cultural Heritage

... Having recognized that objective threats confront many expressions of intangible cultural heritage worldwide and render their urgent safeguarding necessary, the Body as a whole was nevertheless not convinced by the arguments sometimes raised by one or another of its members that recommended disregar ...
Hybridity, or the Cultural Logic of Globalization
Hybridity, or the Cultural Logic of Globalization

... politico-economic context in which hybrid media programs are created and consumed. This chapter tackles the following questions: How do the structural features of the global and national media industries shape hybrid media texts? What motivates media companies to undertake what have been called post ...
Research Methods for Cultural Studies
Research Methods for Cultural Studies

... critical enquiry and investigation, but are now characterised just as much by the degree to which they draw on their neighbours and are informed by a range of different perspectives. Academic disciplines in the humanities and social sciences have, in other words, become increasingly interdisciplinary ...
Cultural Policy: Rejuvenate or Wither
Cultural Policy: Rejuvenate or Wither

... theatre promoted from the late 1940s and its results, particularly, high profile plays such as Ray Lawler’s Summer of the Seventeenth Doll. There was also the availability in other comparable countries of film support mechanisms justified via the “arts” matrix and logics of market failure. But in an ...
1 The archaeology of disasters: past and future trends
1 The archaeology of disasters: past and future trends

... McGuire, 1999; Schoch and Aquinas, 1999), one might assume that disasters have become fairly widely accepted as important agents of cultural change. We feel it is important to question whether the current popularity of external natural forces in accounting for human evolution and social change in th ...
1 Social status and cultural consumption
1 Social status and cultural consumption

... as a crucial component in social reproduction more generally. Largely under the influence of Bourdieu, sociological thinking about the relationship of social and cultural stratification did then tend to be dominated by notions of homology at least up to the 1990s. At this time, though, Bourdieu’s wo ...
Is it Ethical?
Is it Ethical?

... professional conduct • Provide practitioners with guidelines on how to behave / handle difficult situations • Enable professional societies to monitor professionalism or behaviour ...
On the affective ambivalence of living with cultural diversity
On the affective ambivalence of living with cultural diversity

... features of this concept that allow me to explore the affective dimension of living with cultural diversity. In everyday usage, common sense has acquired the primary meaning of prudence, of a sensible – albeit not very sophisticated – judgement on everyday matters. But the common sense that I am ref ...
Cultural Relativism
Cultural Relativism

... Political and moral conservatives tend to despair over the influence of cultural relativism on intellectual thought and the shift away from objective, identifiable standards as the measure for all truth-claims. Their concerns center on the way that cultural relativism makes it difficult for people t ...
Relativism - Creighton University
Relativism - Creighton University

... What about the claim that CR has the advantage of promoting tolerance? Rachels: One can criticize the moral values of other cultures & still be appreciative of many of their beliefs. [Cultural relativists are often very intolerant of those who claim that there are some universal moral truths. Ind ...
Cultural and Creative Index: an approach to Latin America and the
Cultural and Creative Index: an approach to Latin America and the

... development are complementary and dependent variables. We try to explain this by building synthetic indicators for cultural and economic development on the basis of a territorial disaggregation by country. Through this paper, we will demonstrate using empirical analysis of primary variables, the beh ...
Cultural industries and public policy
Cultural industries and public policy

... The critical innovation of such a definitional and conceptual shift is significant. Whereas previously only ‘cultural outputs’ were considered (and prior to this indirect impacts (Pratt 2001); the new approach is concerned more with process and context. This brings into view a range of institutional ...
here - Centre for Research on Socio
here - Centre for Research on Socio

... this discourse which have a negative effect of alternative ‘heritages’ and the identity formations associated with them (e.g. Indigenous Australians). Integral to the AHD for instance is 1. that heritage value is self apparent (aesthetic, particular versions of historic significance) 2. heritage is ...
A new perspective for the EU 2014-2020 structural funds programming
A new perspective for the EU 2014-2020 structural funds programming

... The consequences of the Culture 2.0-3.0 transition on structural funds programming Comparing the 2000-2006 and the 2007-2013 cycles of structural funds programming, it is relatively easy to notice a shift from a tourism-centered to a cultural industry centered perspective of the role of cultural and ...
Copyright, culture and development
Copyright, culture and development

... century. Culture may not exist and develop without this. ...
Popular Music Studies and the Problems of Sound, Society and
Popular Music Studies and the Problems of Sound, Society and

... although the words “anthropology” or “ethnography” appear (usually once) in hundreds of articles, and an increasing number of articles on non-Western popular musics written by ethnomusicologists grapple with anthropological theories and methods, with preciously few exceptions anthropology and ethnog ...
Rethinking Power Relations in Critical/Cultural Studies: A Dialectical
Rethinking Power Relations in Critical/Cultural Studies: A Dialectical

... been (mis)appropriated in this literature as the panacea to account for power-related dynamics, even allowing a revisiting of other influential notions for critical/cultural work, such as Gramsci’s “hegemony”—a move that, in my view, has set important limits to the phenomena that we study, as well a ...
The Psychology of Cultural Experience - Assets
The Psychology of Cultural Experience - Assets

... experiences act to motivate and shape the content of social movements. In the final part, authors Danziger, and Munroe and Munroe articulate the need for a reinvigorated comparative perspective in contemporary psychological anthropology. Their data demonstrate that it is possible to be sensitive to ...
- Rivisteweb
- Rivisteweb

... genres like soul and funk, is the one that begins with the industry-based form, and then transforms to the scene-based form and further to the traditionalist form. As Lena notes, this second trajectory is a surprise of sorts, because it contradicts in a way the romantic notion about artistic innovat ...
with Dilip Gaonkar - Elizabeth A. Povinelli
with Dilip Gaonkar - Elizabeth A. Povinelli

... required transportable and transposable forms in which this new type of consciousness could be both embedded and extracted. For Anderson (1991), novels and newspapers are ideal-typical forms that act as not-quite-silent pedagogies constituting a reading public of strangers. They do so by offering pe ...
Understanding Cultural Relativism in a Multicultural World
Understanding Cultural Relativism in a Multicultural World

... values and presuppositions, and not those of another. Only through such an approach will its contributions be understood. This principle of evaluating other perspectives on their own merits is important for all disciplines and not just for ethics versus the social sciences. The usual approach is the ...


... to John Friedmann, "Intellecutals in Developing Societies," Kyklos, Vol. XIII, 1960, Fasc. 4. Friedmann argues persuasively that intellectuals must be seen as key figures in mediating change and describes a four step process of intellectual revolution that has interesting implication for the Latin A ...
Winning hearts and minds
Winning hearts and minds

... Category I linguists usually are hired locally and require vetting. They do not have a security clearance. They are the most abundant resource pool; however, their skill level is limited. Category II linguists are U.S. citizens with a secret clearance. Often they possess good oral and written commun ...
Using mixed methods for analysing culture: The cultural capital and
Using mixed methods for analysing culture: The cultural capital and

... Both European and American scholars of stratification found the survey flawed in various ways, disparaged his preferred technique for survey analysis, and suggested that the statistical associations that he reported were weak and unreliable. The other elements and forms of evidence reported in Disti ...
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Cultural studies

Cultural studies is a field of theoretically, politically, and empirically engaged cultural analysis that was initially developed by British academics in the late 1950s, '60s and '70s, and has been subsequently taken up and transformed by scholars from many different disciplines around the world. Cultural studies is avowedly and even radically interdisciplinary and can sometimes be seen as antidisciplinary. As cultural studies scholar Toby Miller has written, ""cultural studies is a tendency across disciplines, rather than a discipline itself."" Although most practitioners of cultural studies are professional academics, Gilbert Rodman has argued in his 2015 book, Why Cultural Studies?, that the field must be understood to include some non-academic cultural analysts and practitioners as well as academic ones. A key concern for cultural studies practitioners is the examination of the forces within and through which socially organized people conduct and participate in the construction of their everyday lives.The field of cultural studies encompasses a range of theoretical and methodological perspectives and practices. Although distinct from the disciplines of cultural anthropology and ethnic studies, cultural studies draws upon and has contributed to each of these disciplines. Cultural studies concentrates upon the political dynamics of contemporary culture, its historical foundations, defining traits, and conflicts. CS researchers generally investigate how cultural practices relate to wider systems of power associated with or operating through social phenomena, such as ideology, class structures, national formations, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender and generation. Cultural studies views cultures not as fixed, bounded, stable and discrete entities, but rather as constantly interacting and changing sets of practices and processes.Cultural studies combines a variety of politically engaged critical approaches drawn from and including semiotics, Marxism, feminist theory, critical race theory, poststructuralism, postcolonialism, social theory, political theory, history, philosophy, literary theory, media theory, film/video studies, communication studies, political economy, translation studies, museum studies and art history/criticism to study cultural phenomena in various societies and historical periods. Thus, cultural studies seeks to understand how meaning is generated, disseminated, contested, bound up with systems of power and control, and produced from the social, political and economic spheres within a particular social formation or conjuncture. Important theories of cultural hegemony and agency have both influenced and been developed by the cultural studies movement, as have many recent major communication theories and agendas, such as those which attempt to explain and analyze the cultural forces related to processes of globalization. Somewhat distinct approaches to cultural studies have emerged in different national and regional contexts such as the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Latin America, Asia, Africa and Italy.During the rise of neo-liberalism in Britain and the US, cultural studies both became a global force/movement, and attracted the ire of many conservative opponents both within and beyond universities for a variety of reasons. Some left-wing critics associated particularly with Marxist forms of political economy also attacked cultural studies for allegedly overstating the importance of cultural phenomena. In 2002, the Department of Cultural Studies at the University of Birmingham in the UK, which was descended directly from the university's world famous Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies (CCCS), the world's first institutional home of cultural studies, was closed due to the result of the Research Assessment Exercise of 2001. The RAE, a holdover initiative of the Margaret Thatcher-led UK government of 1986, determines research funding for university programs. While cultural studies continues to have its detractors, the field has become a kind of world-wide movement that is to this day associated with a raft of scholarly associations and programs, annual international conferences, publications, students and practitioners, from Taiwan to Amsterdam and from Bangalore to Santa Cruz.
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