رکورد قبلیرکورد بعدی

" Byzantine perception of the outsider in the eleventh and twelth centuries : "


Document Type : Latin Dissertation
Record Number : 1095225
Doc. No : TLets388219
Main Entry : Smythe, Dion Clive
Title & Author : Byzantine perception of the outsider in the eleventh and twelth centuries :\ Smythe, Dion CliveMagdalino, Paul
College : University of St Andrews
Date : 1992
student score : 1992
Degree : Ph.D.
Abstract : This thesis examines the portrayal of outsiders in Michael Psellos's Chronographia, Anna Komnene's Alexiad, and Niketas Choniates's Narrative - using sociological theories of deviancy. The twofold aim is to "treat texts seriously", localized in Jakobson's speech-event nexus of addresser, context, content, contact, code and addressee; and secondly to understand the texts as statements of the ideology of the dominant elite. Outsiders are defined (using the labelling orientation) as people successfully defined as deviants; deviant behaviour is whatever they do. The dominant elite creates cultural boundaries, and places individuals in outsider roles on the other side of those boundaries. Outsiders can be understood only in terms of who defines them as deviant; there is no material reality to deviancy. Stereotypes, which identify social categories of people by evaluative trait-characteristics, are necessary elements of human cognition; they become prejudice only when they are overgeneralized, based on too limited data, applied too widely and maintained in the face of contrary empirical evidence. The analysis of the three texts in depth allows the identification of those groups labelled as outsiders by these expositors of the dominant ideology. My conclusion is that these authors portray a picture of the Byzantine outsider, which is coherent between this limited sample group, allowing for individual variation. These authors used stereotypes to conceptualize and encode in the linguistic and lexicographical complexities of their texts the outsiders they identified in their societies. Their presentation uses stereotypes, but does not descend to prejudice.
Subject : Byzantine Empire--History
: Byzantine Empire--Politics and government
: DF601.3S6
Added Entry : Magdalino, Paul
Added Entry : University of St Andrews
کپی لینک

پیشنهاد خرید
پیوستها
عنوان :
نام فایل :
نوع عام محتوا :
نوع ماده :
فرمت :
سایز :
عرض :
طول :
TLets388219_201496.pdf
TLets388219.pdf
پایان نامه لاتین
متن
application/pdf
25.52 MB
85
85
نظرسنجی
نظرسنجی منابع دیجیتال

1 - آیا از کیفیت منابع دیجیتال راضی هستید؟