Konu "Identity" için Edebiyat Fakültesi listeleme
Toplam kayıt 6, listelenen: 1-6
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Çerkes ve Abaza ( Abhaz) Kökenli Yazarların Romanlarında Millî Kimlik İnşası
(Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü, 2022)The thesis entitled The Construction of National Identity in the Novels of Writers Circassian Abhazian (Abhaz) Origin, examines the novels written by Circassians and Abhazian (Abhaz) writers in Turkish. In fifty-two novels ... -
Günümüz Siyaset Felsefesinde Kimlik Sorununa Alternatif Bakışlar: E. Levinas, J. Butler ve C. Taylor'da Kimlik ve Siyaset
(Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü, 2014)Identity is one of the fundamental concepts of several political movements in today s politics. Lots of people of different kinds of identity would like to be recognized as a subject, and stand against marginalization due ... -
Identity Formation against Oppression in Robert Bage's Man as He Is and Hermsprong; or, Man as He Is Not
(Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü, 2024)This thesis argues that Robert Bage (1730-1801) uses anti-colonial discourse and the identity formation of the protagonists in his novels Man as He Is (1792) and Hermsprong; or Man as He Is Not (1796) in order to criticize ... -
Sosyal Kimlik Kuramı Bağlamında Bireylerin Kimlik ve Aidiyet Tanımlamaları: Kocaeli Kafkas Kültür Derneği Örneği
(Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü, 2018-07-17)This study intends to contribute increasing literature on identity and ethnicity with a focus on Circassian identity that roots back to more than one hundred years in Turkey. Circassian identity is one of the major ethnic ... -
The Reflections of Protestant British Identity in Selected Works from the Nineteenth-Century British Travel Writing on Asia Minor
(Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü, 2018)Asia Minor, or Anatolia, was an attractive geography for many British travellers from the beginning to the end of the nineteenth century. Although British travellers put forward a different reason for their journeys depending ... -
Traces of Collective Memory in A. K. Ramanujan's Poetry
(Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü, 2024)This thesis employs the intersection of collective memory studies and postcolonial studies in examining selected poems from A. K. Ramanujan’s The Striders (1966) and Second Sight (1986). As such, it centres around two ...