Showing 4,441 - 4,460 results of 5,073 for search 'PATRI*', query time: 0.07s Refine Results
  1. 4441

    Domestic abuse : through the eyes of the people managing it. by Lee, Charlene Shu Ling.

    Published 2011
    “…My research shows that existence and perpetuation of domestic abuse is rooted in patriarchal practices, legal initiatives of the state and the social construction of the meanings of domestic abuse. …”
    Get full text
    Final Year Project (FYP)
  2. 4442
  3. 4443
  4. 4444

    An altered perspective. by Kwan, Sandy Cui Yu.

    Published 2011
    “…In Tiempo and Polotan's texts, the authors seem to place emphasis on the eternal entrapment of women in the patriarchal system. Essentially, the authors bring forth the notion of women's sealed fate as being submissive individuals who will forever be incarcerated and banished into the world of subservience. …”
    Get full text
    Final Year Project (FYP)
  5. 4445

    Mary Wollstonecraft : a feminist and/or misogynist of her time? by Ong, Charissa Xiu Ling.

    Published 2011
    “…Through an analysis of these three works, it will be shown that Wollstonecraft is primarily interested in achieving social equality by reforming patriarchal family structures into egalitarian ones. …”
    Get full text
    Final Year Project (FYP)
  6. 4446

    Unsettling silences : the trauma of witnessing in Manto's "cold meat" and "open it". by Lim, Rebecca Sim Ming.

    Published 2011
    “…This paper also explores the ways in which these silences interact with the words that surround them to impose an ethical call upon its readers to bear witness to the traumatic consequences of the Partition of India, and thus addresses the ways in which the paradox of witnessing leads to discomfort and irresolution as the testimonies that we encounter direct us towards questioning, displacing and breaking down a host of related issues expressed through the silences, including undercutting the reliability of hegemonic authority, the fragility of gender relations and the patriarchal institution, as well as exposing the senselessness of violence. …”
    Get full text
    Final Year Project (FYP)
  7. 4447

    The hunter and the wolf : male gender roles in little red riding hood by Au, Dawn

    Published 2011
    “…Perrault’s appropriation of the Little Red Riding Hood tale, which was originally told by female peasants to socialise their daughters into an exclusively feminine tradition, resulted in a written version incorporating the patriarchal upper class ideology of the French court. …”
    Get full text
    Final Year Project (FYP)
  8. 4448
  9. 4449

    Are films inherently masculine? – the camera and representation of women as an act of terrorism. by Teo, Katherine Cheng Hoon.

    Published 2011
    “…So, when and how does patriarchal oppression take place? It takes place when men attempt to suppress women by subjugating them to a separate sphere and by defining them. …”
    Get full text
    Final Year Project (FYP)
  10. 4450

    Female struggle and appetite/body autonomy in The Bell Jar. by Heng, Grace Hui Mien.

    Published 2011
    “…In precisely the same way females with eating disorders such as bulimia and anorexia deny themselves the fulfilment of their appetites to retain their waistlines in order to prevent themselves from getting larger than society deems, so do women who restrict their metaphorical appetites and desires do so in order to trim themselves down to the ideals of femininity set out for them by patriarchal society.…”
    Get full text
    Final Year Project (FYP)
  11. 4451
  12. 4452
  13. 4453

    Societal factors and the inescapability of Chinese female oppression by Wang, Carmen Onggo Jiawen

    Published 2011
    “…There is no sense of female camaraderie, because the only reality that women have been exposed to is from an artificial male construct and as such they too become perpetrators of patriarchal society. Also, women too do not feel a sense of camaraderie just because they are women, but rather because of class as well. …”
    Get full text
    Final Year Project (FYP)
  14. 4454

    More than meets the eye: reconstructing women in women’s cinema. by Nurul Musfirah Abdul Talib.

    Published 2011
    “…I have chosen to discuss Gurinder Chadha’s Bend It Like Beckham and Mira Nair’s Monsoon Wedding to show that on the subject of women’s identity and sexuality, these female directors are able to disregard the conventional patriarchal cinematic codes that states women to be “obsessively subordinated to the neurotic needs of the male ego” (Herndi, 447), while incorporating the themes of diaspora and modernity to highlight how women’s identities are shaped upon their intercultural experiences within a modern, unbounded environment of possibilities. …”
    Get full text
    Final Year Project (FYP)
  15. 4455

    We are one, other and the same : the need for alter egos in the perfection-obsessed world of Mildred Pierce and Black Swan. by Shereen Naaz Charles Syariff.

    Published 2011
    “…Instead, they had to conform, mostly, to a patriarchal society’s expectations of them. In a bid to be who they wanted to be, my paper examines the idea of the alter ego or the ‘Other’. …”
    Get full text
    Final Year Project (FYP)
  16. 4456

    Early writings contributing to social change & shaping works in the 21st century. by Lee, Denise Jia Ying.

    Published 2011
    “…Slowly breaking away from patriarchal traditions, women are more educated and politically savvy, playing a more active role in society. …”
    Get full text
    Final Year Project (FYP)
  17. 4457
  18. 4458
  19. 4459
  20. 4460

    Superbodies : between freedom and subjugation by Pang, Natalie

    Published 2011
    “…This essay will aim to show how the body can be liberated and yet at the same time still be bound by patriarchy, using the cyborg and the human in Mamoru Oshii’s Gōsuto In Za Sheru (1995, Ghost in the Shell) and Ryu Murakami’s Ōdishon (1999, Audition) respectively.…”
    Get full text
    Final Year Project (FYP)