scholarly journals RASIONALISASI TINDAKAN SOSIAL MASYARAKAT SUKU SASAK TERHADAP TRADISI PERANG TOPAT (Studi Kasus Masyarakat Islam Sasak Lombok Barat)

2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 13
Author(s):  
Suparman Jayadi

Traditions Perang Topat in Lingsar Village has done tens of years. The ritual of progress remains a tradition by the Sasak community consisted of religious understanding difference, namely the Sasak Muslim and Hindus performed simultaneously at one time and the same place. In this study discusses how the process of implementation of a tradition of Perang Topat, then the history of the tradition of Perang Topat and also forms the rationalization of social action. Research using the instrumental rationalization and value theory of Max Weber’s approach to qualitative case studies in the tradition of Perang Topat. The results of this study indicate that on the rationalization of the social action community Sasak is two Shapes in the implementation of a tradition of Perang Topat are: social value and sacred value. The form of social value is first, tying religious solidarity. Second, create value tolerance and bring peace. Third the form of local wisdom in Sasak. While the shape of the sacred is the first, this form of gratitude to the ancestral spirits are spirits of ancestors or the death (God Almighty) upon which it was holy water in Llingsar and Kemaliq. Second, a form of communication to the ancestral spirits or spirits of the ancestors of the death (God).Keywords: Rationalization, Social Action, Community Sasak, and Topat War Tradition.

2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 13
Author(s):  
Suparman Jayadi

Traditions Perang Topat in Lingsar Village has done tens of years. The ritual of progress remains a tradition by the Sasak community consisted of religious understanding difference, namely the Sasak Muslim and Hindus performed simultaneously at one time and the same place. In this study discusses how the process of implementation of a tradition of Perang Topat, then the history of the tradition of Perang Topat and also forms the rationalization of social action. Research using the instrumental rationalization and value theory of Max Weber’s approach to qualitative case studies in the tradition of Perang Topat. The results of this study indicate that on the rationalization of the social action community Sasak is two Shapes in the implementation of a tradition of Perang Topat are: social value and sacred value. The form of social value is first, tying religious solidarity. Second, create value tolerance and bring peace. Third the form of local wisdom in Sasak. While the shape of the sacred is the first, this form of gratitude to the ancestral spirits are spirits of ancestors or the death (God Almighty) upon which it was holy water in Llingsar and Kemaliq. Second, a form of communication to the ancestral spirits or spirits of the ancestors of the death (God).Keywords: Rationalization, Social Action, Community Sasak, and Topat War Tradition.


Author(s):  
James McElvenny

This chapter sets the scene for the case studies that follow in the rest of the book by characterising the ‘age of modernism’ and identifying problems relating to language and meaning that arose in this context. Emphasis is laid on the social and political issues that dominated the era, in particular the rapid developments in technology, which inspired both hope and fear, and the international political tensions that led to the two World Wars. The chapter also sketches the approach to historiography taken in the book, interdisciplinary history of ideas.


2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-29
Author(s):  
Luisa Levi D’Ancona Modena

With a focus on art donations, this article explores several case studies of Jewish Italian patrons such as Sforni, Uzielli, Sarfatti, Castelfranco, Vitali, and others who supported artists of movements that were considered modern at their time: the Macchiaioli (1850-1870), the Futurists (1910s), the Metaphysical painters (1920s), the Novecento group (1920-1930s), and several post WWII cases. It reflects on differences in art donations by Jews in Italy and other European countries, modes of reception, taste, meanings and strategy of donations, thus contributing to the social history of Italian and European Jewry and the history of collections and donations to public museums.


HUMANIKA ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 47
Author(s):  
Sindung Tjahyadi

This article discusses about a paradigm shift in the social sciences based on "the history of science" perspective. The key question is how the recent development of the discourse about the paradigms of the social sciences. The paradigmatic and methodological development forward directed through a post-empirical approach to the exclusion of desire unification cause or structure as the objective theory of social action, and develop a multi-theoretical paradigms on the basis of variations in the structure that can be applied to the various regions and types of action. Furthermore, elaborated further needed is to develop methodological pluralism and theoretical unification in the social sciences are expected to confirm the two sides of the comprehensive-pluralistic approach in the philosophy of social sciences. The main thing about the legitimacy of the methodology underlying the study is to examine the criteria on what should have knowledge of it. Finally, that the dimensions of "ontological" social science should be "liberated" from the illusion of objectivism


Author(s):  
Michel Biron

L’écrivain devient rarement écrivain par les voies traditionnelles de l’école. En ce sens, il constitue toujours à quelque degré un autodidacte. Toutefois, la valeur sociale d’une telle figure, qu’il s’agisse de l’écrivain lui-même ou d’un personnage de fiction, varie considérablement selon les cultures et les époques. Dans La Nausée de Jean-Paul Sartre, l’Autodidacte est un personnage complexé qui envie le savoir et la culture de Roquentin. À l’inverse, on trouve nombre de textes littéraires où la figure de l’autodidacte est valorisée. C’est particulièrement vrai dans l’histoire de la littérature québécoise, depuis le XIXe siècle jusqu’à aujourd’hui. Cet article propose d’en faire la démonstration à travers une série d’exemples tirés de chacune des périodes, mais en insistant sur la figure de « l’autodidacte exemplaire » propre à la Révolution tranquille, qui oppose la culture comme désir à la culture comme héritage scolaire. Abstract A writer becomes rarely a writer through studying at school. Speaking of a self-made writer would seem tautological since every writer could pretend to be one at some extent. Nevertheless, the social value of the self-made writer and of it’s literary representations vary a lot from a country to another, and from a period of time to another. In La Nausée from Jean-Paul Sartre, the character of “L’Autodidacte” envy Roquentin’s background and try to walk in his step. At the opposite, there are many examples of literary texts where the self-made is appreciated, if not admired as the true possessor of culture. It’s often the case in the history of Quebec’s literature, from 19th century up to now. This article try to demonstrate such fortune of the self-made by studying examples of Quebec literature chosen in each of the main periods, but especially during the “Révolution tranquille” around the “autodidacte exemplaire” who refuse the culture as inheritance and worship culture as personal desire.


Author(s):  
José Luis Retolaza ◽  
Leire San-José ◽  
Maite Ruiz Roqueñi

Over the last decade important efforts were made to integrate economic and social value in organizations within a unic report. This is significant because it reflects greater interest and demands in society concerning not just economic but social responsibilities of organizations.However, social organizations are finding problems to give value to their social contribution, mainly due to the prominence of financial economic indicators; which curiously only have instrumental value in this type of entities.The aim of this paper is to develop a social accounting model that allows incorporating the social value, in its monetized form, employing accounting standards; with the economic one. It is not possible to monetize full social value with this model, although it does show economic value with social impact, socio-economic return and specific social value.Application of this model makes possible the quantitative and monetized comparison of integrated value between companies, which would involve more efficient decision-making based on symmetry and more complete information (private organizations), more efficiency in consumption or investment decisions (private individuals) and efficient indicators for establishing public policies (public administration). Overall, it could prove to be a basic and valuable component of business reputation.


2014 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-94
Author(s):  
Naomi Elizabeth Nichols

In this paper, four qualitative case studies capture the complex interplay between the social and structural relations that shape community - academic partnerships. Collaborations begin as relationships among people. They are sustained by institutional structures that recognize and support these relationships. Productive collaborations centralize reciprocity, flexibility, and relationship building between individuals and institutions. Our findings also indicate a synergistic interaction between collaborative processes and outcomes: an equitable process supports the development of mutually beneficial outcomes, and the ability to sustain a collaborative process requires substantive progress towards shared change goals.  


2019 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Christopher J. Smith

This chapter defines the scope of the problem, and the central research question: Are there consistent patterns of political intent and impact in diverse public dance movements throughout the social history of the Americas? It surveys the existing literature from the fields of dance studies, anthropology, musicology, and cultural history. It lays out the argument, methodology, and disciplinary sources and explains the criteria for the selection of the specific case studies, linking the diversity of those case studies to the diversity of methodological tools necessary for their analysis and comparison.


2019 ◽  
pp. 1492-1509
Author(s):  
Igbinakhase Idahosa

This chapter critically examines social value creation in societies focusing on the “shared value” theory and stakeholders' “collective responsibility” hinged on social responsibility. The social value creation process is reviewed from the social entrepreneurship perspective considering the essential business/social inputs required to create social value for the business and the host society. The United Kingdom (UK) is used as a case study, depicting factors shaping the business environment. Other current meaningful developments, which include the Social Value Act 2012 that promotes social value creation in the country, are discussed. An analysis of the UK model of social value creation and why it will be difficult to implement in developing countries is also provided. Constraints such as poor infrastructure, corruption and other limiting factors are considered. Finally, social value creation is a sustainable process and every stakeholder benefits from its outcomes.


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