scholarly journals AN ANALYSIS ON THE FILM “A TALE OF THREE SISTERS” WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK OF HOME AND DETERRITORIALISATION

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (77) ◽  

Modern human who has witnessed the rise of rational thinking and technique was drifted in limbo suffering from numerous essential anxieties and problems through deracinating by means of movements of urbanization and migration. In order to explain the social outlook of the event of deracination, the concepts of “deterritorialisation” which has become clear thanks to the intensive efforts of Deleuze and Guattari as well as Heidegger frequently gains importance. In this study, the film of “A Tale of Three Sisters” (Kızkardeşler) (2019) by Emin Alper which has been observed to have the effects of the motherland and home Turkish cinema of the latest period was analyzed. In addition to the sociological analysis of the film, the film was analyzed using the philosophical conceptualization of deterritorialisation and home (haimat) which were presented by Heidegger, Deluze and Guattari through focusing on them. In conclusion, the reflections of deterritorialisation on the rural area different than that in cities were turned into a movies and it was imaged through characters in which the concept of home almost disappears in the modern world. In the films, the longing of three sisters for the city and the life style that city represents equals to the deterritorialisation in terms of the perspective of Deluze and Guattari, the rural area itself, on the contrary to the modern and progressive city, was given to the audience as a slow and cyclic heterotopy of the time. Keywords: Cinema, Sisters, Heidegger, Delueze, Deterritorialisation

Author(s):  
Oleksii Chepov ◽  

The qualitative and clear definition of the legal regime of the capital of Ukraine, the hero city of Kyiv, is influenced by its legislative enshrinement, however, it should be noted that discussions are ongoing and one of the reasons for the unclear legal status of the capital is the ambiguity of current legislation in this area. Separation of the functions of the city of Kyiv, which are carried out to ensure the rights of citizens of Ukraine and the functions that guarantee the rights of the territorial community of the city of Kyiv. In the modern world, in legal doctrine and practice, the capital is understood as the capital of the country, which at the legislative level received this status and, accordingly, is the administrative and political center of the state, which houses the main state bodies and diplomatic missions of other states. It is the identification of the boundaries of the relationship between the competencies of state administrations and local self-government, in practice, often raises questions about their delimitation and ways of regulatory solution. Peculiarities of local self-government in Kyiv city districts are defined in the provisions of the Law on the Capital, which reveal the norms of the Constitution in these legal relations, according to which the issue of organizing district management in cities belongs to city councils. Likewise, it is unregulated by law to lose the particularity of the legal status of the territory of the city. It should be emphasized that the subject of administrative-legal relations is not a certain administrative-territorial entity, but the social group is designated - the territorial community of the city of Kiev, kiyani. Thus, the provisions on the city of Kyiv partially ignore the potential of the territorial community.


2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 107-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Howard M Jones

Abstract By reference to a multi-caste and tribal village in southern Rajasthan the paper examines the degree to which caste and tribal membership impacts on different aspects of migration, e.g. commencement, form, destination, duration, and types of work undertaken. Using a livelihoods approach, supplemented by other perspectives and concentrating on four migration streams (three domestic, one international), data collected over a period of nearly thirty-five years indicates that patterns of migration are far from random. It is argued that the use of official stratification categories in migration surveys can obscure important differences within caste groupings. Short-term circular migration, underestimated in national surveys, is shown to be substantial, especially for the tribal migrants in the village. While position in the social structure differentially affects aspects of migration across the village hierarchy, examples are given of individual migrant agency overcoming structural constraints.


Author(s):  
Jamie Winders

Since the 1990s, immigrant settlement has expanded beyond gateway cities and transformed the social fabric of a growing number of American cities. In the process, it has raised new questions for urban and migration scholars. This article argues that immigration to new destinations provides an opportunity to sharpen understandings of the relationship between immigration and the urban by exploring it under new conditions. Through a discussion of immigrant settlement in Nashville, Tennessee, it identifies an overlooked precursor to immigrant incorporation—how cities see, or do not see, immigrants within the structure of local government. If immigrants are not institutionally visible to government or nongovernmental organizations, immigrant abilities to make claims to or on the city as urban residents are diminished. Through the combination of trends toward neighborhood-based urban governance and neoliberal streamlining across American cities, immigrants can become institutionally hard to find and, thus, plan for in the city.


2011 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 99-106
Author(s):  
Agnieszka Ayşen Kaim

Contemporary cinematography reflects the dualism in modern Turkish society. The heart of every inhabitant of Anatolia is dominated by homesickness for his little homeland. This overpowering feeling affects common people migrating in search of work as well as intellectuals for whom Istanbul is a place for their artistic development but not the place of origin. The city and “the rest” have been considered in opposition to each other. The struggle between “the provincial” and “the urban” has even created its own film genre in Turkish cinematography described as “homeland movies”. They paint the portrait of a Turkish middle class intellectual on the horns of a dilemma, the search for a modern identity and a place to belong in a modern world where values are constantly shifting.


Author(s):  
Catherine Lejeune ◽  
Delphine Pagès-El Karoui ◽  
Camille Schmoll ◽  
Hélène Thiollet

AbstractGlobalization and migration have generated acute and often contradictory changes: they have increased social diversity while inducing global homogenization; they have sharpened differentiation of spaces and statuses while accelerating and amplifying communication and circulations; they have induced more complex social stratification while enriching individual and collective identities. These changes happen to be strikingly visible in cities. Urban contexts, indeed, offer privileged sites of inquiry to understanding the social dynamics of globalization, informal belonging and local citizenships, transient and multi-layered identities, symbolic orders and exclusionary practices. But cities are also material sites and they create multisensorial scapes that shape experiences of globalization and social change. They operate through multiple scales, connecting horizontal extensions and vertical layers of the city with generic, landmark, interstitial and neglected places. Far from being mere contexts, cities are both changing and being changed by migration and globalization.


Urban History ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 150-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
CHRISTIAN LIDDY ◽  
PAUL ELLIOTT ◽  
LOUISE MISKELL

This year's publications address seven broad themes: urban growth and migration; the social structure of late medieval towns; women and gender; political communication and the circulation of news; the church in the city; urban decline; and writing about the city.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Atiek Suprapti ◽  
Dhanoe Iswanto

The development of globalization has been encouraged social changing of the city. The  less social  behaviour occured in the daily of urban  community and has became a preferred  life style. This situation will be a seriouse threat for  the urban social life. A good city should be able to create many places for its people, that could make people feel comford and feel like home to live inside. A place expresses its local culture has potential to be a local identity. Locatity is  an imporant point that is needed by a nation to attrach  roles in globalization era.   The characteristic of muslim city is a place to muslim community live in that do the Idlamic shariah well. Since in the 11’th century the region of north coast of Java has been known as an entrance  gate of Islam teaching in Indonesia. The region of Demak and Kudus are the old city which are saving many artefact and tradition of living of muslim community. Kauman is an important place related to this case.  The purpose of this paper is to describe the phenomena of Muslim residence  present in Demak and Kudus, using descriptive qualitative methods. The result  is that the existence of Muslim residence in this region occured because  of the  strong support of coastal economic. There is a considerable difference between the Muslim residence  in Demak and in Kudus. The Muslim residence in Demak develops with the character of hierarchical, dependent society; while in Kudus develops an egalitarian and independent character of residence. In Kudus known the social kinship of  'Gusjigang', while in Demak emerged the Kasepuhan & Notobratan kinship which was the heir of Sunan Kalijaga. The characteristic of the two Muslim cities on the north coast of Java shows the uniqueness of Muslim cities that are not found in other areas.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (21) ◽  
pp. 132
Author(s):  
Miguel Ángel Daza Bernal

El presente trabajo de investigación  apunta a la determinación de los cambios, transformaciones o  modificaciones que se van presentando en la identidad cultural de los jóvenes universitarios que migran desde el campo hacia la ciudad de Sucre con motivos de estudios Universitarios.La investigación es cualitativa, al tener connotaciones bastante subjetivas, pues lo que se analizan  son las transformaciones en cuanto a los valores, creencias, ritos, idiomas, costumbres, comportamientos  que los jóvenes traen consigo del campo a la ciudad, y cómo estos pueden ir transformándose de acuerdo a una realidad diferente y a situaciones específicas dentro del ámbito social y universitario, creando limitaciones en lo social y académico.Se utilizaron principalmente las técnicas de grupos focales, historias de vida y entrevistas a profundidad para la realización del trabajo de campo; mediante estas se pudo llegar a los resultados más relevantes, entre los que se destaca una coincidencia de criterios sobre todo en cuanto al aspecto tecnológico, los hábitos alimenticios, los cambios en cuanto a la vestimenta, el idioma, la música y tradiciones, así también los valores como el respeto hacia todas las personas, la confianza, la colaboración comunitaria y hasta los hábitos en el deporte y actividades de confraternización.Palabras claveIdentidad, cultura, identidad cultural y migración. AbstractThis research work aims to determine the changes, transformations or modifications that are presented in the cultural identity of university students, who migrate from the countryside to the city of Sucre for university studies.The present study is qualitative, its content presents quite subjective connotations because what are analyzed are the transformations in terms of values, beliefs, rituals, languages, customs, behaviors that young people bring with them from the countryside to the city, and how they can be transformed according to a different reality and to specific situations within the social and university environment, creating social and academic limitations.Focal groups techniques, life stories and in-depth interviews were mainly used to carry out the field work. Through these, it was possible to reach the most relevant results, among them it is stood out a coincidence of criteria especially in terms of technological aspects, eating habits, changes in terms of clothing, language, music and traditions, as well as values such as respect for all people, trust, community collaboration and also sports habits and socialization activities.Key wordsIdentity, Culture, cultural identity and migration.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florin Constantin MIHAI

Rural and urban development in sustainable context is a complex processthat requires an improvement of the existing situation and a removing ofthe dysfunctions. Over time, the rural area was not addressed as much asurban area, rural analysis is often fragmentary explained and incompleteargued. The system of values owned by rural area is overshadowed by aneconomic, social and cultural subordination to the city. The connectionthat is established is asupport for the systems analysis of settlements and is the consequence ofthe functional differentiation between cities and villages, evidenced bythe natural, social and economic aspects representative for each system.Our researchhighlights the relationship, to the social, economic and cultural level,between the municipality of Piatra Neamţ and Gârcina commune, situated inproximity. The dependence of rural areas to the city is evident due to thevery smalldistance between them, the existing phenomena causing significant changesin both sides. The population is an important indicator of sustainabledevelopment, the demographic relationship between urban and rural areaconsistingintake of labor resources and sources of supply organic food. Thedemographic, economic, administrative, educational, cultural and sanitaryrelations will be highlighted based on statistical data, through graphs andmaps, their interpretation referring in the same time to the situation ofcounty level. The partnership established between rural and urban areaslead to the development of urban system and a rural preservation, so newconcepts of sustainable development is essential in the exploitation oflocal resources.


Review of The Countryside of Medieval England, by Grenville Astill and Annie Grant; The Common Fields of England, by Eric Kerridge; Historic Landscapes of Britain from the Air, by Robin Glasscock; The European City, by Leonardo Benevolo; Mission and Method: The Early-Nineteenth-Century French Public Health Movement, by Ann F. La Berge; Terra Cognita: The Mental Discovery of America, by Eviatar Zerubavel; Landscape and Material Life in Franklin County, Massachusetts, 1770-1860, by J. Ritchie Garrison; The Persistence of Ethnicity: Dutch Calvinist Pioneers in Amsterdam, Montana, by Rob Kroes; The Pennsylvania Barn: Its Origin, Evolution, and Distribution in North America, by Robert F. Ensminger; The Edges of the Earth in Ancient Thought, by James S. Romm; Salt and Civilization, by S. A. M. Adshead; Meleagrides: An Historical and Ethnogeographical Study of the Guinea Fowl, by Robin A. Donkin; War and the City, by G. J. Ashworth; Medicine and Charity before the Welfare State, by Jonathan Barry and Colin Jones; The Company Town: Architecture and Society in the Early Industrial Age, by John S. Garner; The Savage Within: The Social History of British Anthropology, 1885-1945, by Henrika Kuklick; Policing and Decolonisation: Politics, Nationalism and the Police, 1917-65, by David M. Anderson and David Killingray; Empire Boys: Adventures in a Man's World, by Joseph Bristow; The Representation of the Past: Museums and Heritage in the Post-Modern World, by Kevin Walsh; Community and Commerce in Late Medieval Japan: The Corporate Villages of Tokuchin-ho, by Hitomi Tonomura; Liquor and Labour in Southern Africa, by Jonathan Crush and Charles Ambler

1993 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 463-488
Author(s):  
Leonard Cantor ◽  
Della Hooke ◽  
Richard Lawton ◽  
Anthony Sutcliffe ◽  
Miles Ogborn ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document