Essays about: "radical hope"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 7 essays containing the words radical hope.
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1. Between hope and resignation. Three collective initiatives on climate change’s understandings of agency for societal transformation.
University essay from Lunds universitet/LUCSUSAbstract : Addressing climate change will entail groups of people working together to bring about changes in fundamental societal structures. This research investigates how the members of three collective initiatives on climate change in Sweden envision the process of change, based on their understandings of structures and agency. READ MORE
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2. The ito element: unravelling the thread in kanji
University essay from Lunds universitet/JapanskaAbstract : This paper is the first exhaustive investigation of a single kanji component: the ito element. Although, this element generally refers to thread or textile, the study examined this relationship and found a strong relationship to silk, cocoons, and craft—particularly weaving. READ MORE
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3. Yakushima Glocal Art Project
University essay from Lunds universitet/Humanekologi; Lunds universitet/Kulturgeografi och ekonomisk geografi; Lunds universitet/Institutionen för kulturgeografi och ekonomisk geografiAbstract : Aface the crashing wave of the global climate crisis, humans are struggling to stay afloat. Building a raft of sustainable environmental ethics whilst swimming in the dark waters of unsustainable “modernity” requires a herculean effort. And yet, here we are. READ MORE
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4. Aziza's Friendship Compendium, 1st Edition (Annotated and Expanded)
University essay from Konstfack/Institutionen för design, inredningsarkitektur och visuell kommunikation (DIV)Abstract : Aziza's Friendship Compendium, 1st Edition is my illustrated textbook that is part-compendium, part-manifesto. It provides a social, cultural and political analysis of friendship as an inherently anti-oppression, radical tool of resistance. READ MORE
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5. Imagining Somewheres: Obstruction as a Productive Force in Decolonial Visuality, Solidarities, and Asian American Futures
University essay from Lunds universitet/Avdelningen för konsthistoria och visuella studierAbstract : Through a decolonial lens, visual culture can offer a variety of methods for solidarity-, community-, and future-building among people of color and other marginalized identities through applied imagination. However, a common impulse in these community-building endeavors is to explain as much as possible or to direct the image to the white gaze––a colonial ideology––which can further marginalize and unintentionally other the depicted subjects. READ MORE