Results for ' rural modernity'

979 found
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  1.  15
    Preparatory labor for chemical fertilizer: Rural modernity and the practices of South Korean farmers in the 1960s.Juyoung Lee - 2023 - History of Science 61 (4):588-607.
    This article examines preparatory labor practices that South Korean farmers had to undertake to use chemical fertilizers in the 1960s. Preparatory labor, such as learning about and acquiring fertilizers, that came prior to the use of chemical fertilizer in the field was mundane and often invisible. However, it was this logistical and emotional labor that was essential for the maintenance of South Korea’s chemical fertilizer system. In the system, which was part of the government’s efforts to establish rural (...) through increased crop productivity, the state looked down on farmers as the subject of edification. Nevertheless, the farmers were crucial maintainers of the state-led agricultural reform, realizing the government’s vision of modernity. To reveal the hidden relationship between farmers, technology, and the state, this article extensively uses diaries written by two farmers – Yoon Heesoo from Daecheon Village and Shin Kwonsik from Daegok Village. By doing so, this article aims to shed light on the voices of farmers and their roles in the agricultural reform of 1960s South Korea and, more broadly, of the Green Revolution. (shrink)
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  2.  18
    An Analysis of the Dilemmas in Rural Modernization From the Perspective of Organism Philosophy.Liu Hongzuo & Wang Qian - 2019 - Philosophy Study 9 (12).
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  3.  31
    “Modern” farming and the transformation of livelihoods in rural Tanzania.Katherine A. Snyder, Emmanuel Sulle, Deodatus A. Massay, Anselmi Petro, Paschal Qamara & Dan Brockington - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 37 (1):33-46.
    This paper focuses on smallholder agriculture and livelihoods in north-central Tanzania. It traces changes in agricultural production and asset ownership in one community over a 28 year period. Over this period, national development policies and agriculture programs have moved from socialism to neo-liberal approaches. Using a combination of qualitative and quantitative methods, we explore how farmers have responded to these shifts in the wider political-economic context and how these responses have shaped their livelihoods and ideas about farming and wealth. This (...)
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  4.  13
    Reimagining modern politics in the European mountains: confronting the traditional commons with the neo-rural conception of the common good.Ismael Vaccaro, Oriol Beltran & Camila Del Mármol - forthcoming - Theory and Society.
    Since at least the 1970s, the countryside of Western Europe has been the site of a myriad of “new” communal initiatives. Rural areas that were abandoned during the last century have witnessed the arrival of new inhabitants. These newcomers often flock to the mountains escaping urban lifestyles characterized by individualism, mass-oriented livelihoods, and isolation. Many of these individuals move to areas like the Catalan Pyrenees, where common property and communal institutions have had a strong historical presence. In embracing (...) life, these new inhabitants are looking for a more integrated social life in which the commons are, on the one hand, a form of collective private property, and, on the other, represent a more egalitarian way of life in which contributing to the collective effort is not only an efficient way of dealing with particularly harsh ecological conditions, but also an ideological statement that defines the community as something different: an alternative to urban capitalism. Two definitions of the commons are colliding in these mountains; two longstanding lines of political thought are converging and establishing a dialogue that is not always easy: (1) traditional ideologies of land ownership that defined common property over the centuries, not based on economic equality, but on private property and locally shared responsibility on the economic base of the community; and (2) utopian anti-capitalism that views the commons as an alternative mode of social organization and ownership based on egalitarianism. (shrink)
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  5.  21
    Regional Modernisms in Finland and Sweden: From Rural Death Traps to the Utopian Countryside.Iida Pöllänen - 2019 - Utopian Studies 30 (2):252-278.
    Det är stort, Europa, tycker urmakarn. Han har just inte tänkt på det förut. Tyskland, Frankrike, England, ett stycke Skandinavien, ett stycke Ryssland. Och gränserna förändras då och då; ljudlöst, nästan omärkligt på kartan, med buller och bråk där ute. Där ute—?... Långt uppe en liten prick, en liten stad. Hammar upptäcker att den verkligen hör till Europa, är en punkt i världen, ett litet centra, kring vilket en landsbygd sluter sig—en kärna.... Det är litet. Han måste erkänna, att det (...)
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  6.  18
    Mind the Gaps: Western Modernity, Chinese Feminine Subjectivity, and the Industrial-Rural Divide in Han Bo’s China Eastern Railway Poetics.Yuming Piao - 2022 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 12 (1):179-185.
    Abstract:“Modern Sexual Organicity” (《现代性器》 Xiàndài Xìngqì) and “Super Killer” (《大杀器》 Dà Shaqì) by Han Bo, which I translate and discuss here, unfold around the poet’s playfully sustained series of observations of the irreconcilable gaps and irreducible dissonances between Western modernity and Chinese contemporaneity. Focusing on the (post)structural dimension of the extreme intricacy and intensity of Han’s language game that polysemically intersects with traditional Chinese poetic moves as well, which itself mirrors the structurally (bi)polarized and gendered social realities in China, (...)
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  7.  29
    Resisting Development, Reinventing Modernity: Rural Electrification in the United States before World War II.Ronald R. Kline - 2002 - Environmental Values 11 (3):327-344.
    The essay examines local resistance to the New Deal rural electrification program in the United States before World War II as a crucial aspect of sociotechnical change. Large numbers of farm men and women opposed the introduction of the new technology, did not purchase a full complement of electrical appliances, and did not use electric lights and appliances in the manner prescribed by the government modernisers and manufacturers. These acts of 'transformative resistance' helped to shape artefacts and social practices.
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  8.  10
    Fertility control without modernization: evidence from a rural Indian community.Carol Vlassoff - 1979 - Journal of Biosocial Science 11 (3):325-339.
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  9. Escaping the 'modern' excesses of Japanese life : critical voices on Japanese rural cosmopolitanism.Àngels Trias I. Valls - 2012 - In Dimitrios Theodossopoulos & Elisabeth Kirtsoglou (eds.), United in discontent: local responses to cosmopolitanism and globalization. New York: Berghahn Books.
  10. Escaping the 'modern' excesses of Japanese life : critical voices on Japanese rural cosmopolitanism.Àngels Trias I. Valls - 2012 - In Dimitrios Theodossopoulos & Elisabeth Kirtsoglou (eds.), United in discontent: local responses to cosmopolitanism and globalization. New York: Berghahn Books.
  11.  10
    Escaping the modern'excesses of japanese life: Critical voices on japanese rural cosmopolitanism.Angels Trias I. Valls - 2012 - In Dimitrios Theodossopoulos & Elisabeth Kirtsoglou (eds.), United in discontent: local responses to cosmopolitanism and globalization. New York: Berghahn Books.
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  12.  21
    Formation of a new rural power structure and the failure of gender in utopia: lesbian image and its metaphors in Wildcat Lake.Dai Zhe & Wen Juan - 2022 - Trans/Form/Ação 45 (4):13-28.
    Resumo: Chen Yingsong criou Lago Gato Selvagem não apenas para contar uma história sobre lésbicas. Ao descrever como Xiang’er, uma mulher rural, torna-se lésbica nas aldeias, pode-se ver a “riqueza” e o “significado metafórico” do símbolo lésbico. No que diz respeito ao Lago Gato Selvagem, é mais interessante tratar como Xiang’er se torna lésbica, que não se refere apenas sobre sexo ou gênero, mas também sobre opressão política e econômica; assim, o chamado gênero, entendido utopicamente, poderá ser identificado. Além (...)
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  13.  14
    Correction to: Reimagining modern politics in the European mountains: confronting the traditional commons with the neo‑rural conception of the common good.Ismael Vaccaro, Oriol Beltran & Camila Del Mármol - 2024 - Theory and Society 53 (2):511-511.
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  14.  11
    Pollution from cooking in rural and poor urban households of Africa: A methodological review.Sasi Gangiah - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (2):11.
    The article examines the effect of cooking food in kitchens on the health of women, as women and children are at a greater risk to indoor air pollution (IAP). It is important to study the cooking practices and prevalent behaviours among African women to understand the magnitude of the danger they face. The study suggests that a decline in the combustion of solid fuels and the use of clean energy can improve health among women and children, as well as sustainability (...)
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  15.  8
    Rural Libraries in Youth Development in Nigeria.Obiozor-Ekeze Roseline Nkechi - 2015 - Open Journal of Philosophy 5 (2):152-155.
    Nigeria is a developing country with youths that have great potentials. They embrace new innovations easily. In Anambra State of Nigeria alone, there are eight (8) higher institutions. It was observed that in the rural areas recently, youths indulge in drug taking and other anti-social acts. Many of them are dropout from schools. The rural libraries could play big roles by reverting them to skillful living again that is by equipping the libraries with information resources that would interest (...)
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  16.  32
    Vast Tracts of Land: Rural Healthcare Culture.Craig M. Klugman - 2008 - American Journal of Bioethics 8 (4):57-58.
    Rurality in the modern United States (US) is characterized as a small population spread over a wide area of land. Only approximately 21% of the population lives in rural areas, which is defined as...
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  17. Rural Tourism as an Element of Sustainable Diversification of Economic Opportunities of the Region.Oleksandr Krupskyi, Nataliya Krasnikova & Victoriia Redko - 2019 - In V. M. Yatsenko (ed.), Determinants of Innovation and Investment Development of Multi- Branch Entrepreneurship, Tourism and Hospitality Industry. pp. 250-260.
    The collective monograph «Determinants of Innovation and Investment Development of Multisectoral Entrepreneurship, Tourism and Hospitality Industry» is devoted to the 20th anniversary of the Educational and Scientific Institute of Economics and Law of Cherkasy Bohdan Khmelnytsky National University and is a continuation of the research tradition on the development of entrepreneurship, innovation, finance, competition, accounting and auditing problems, tourism, hotel and restaurant business. The results of the scientific research presented in the collective monograph show the achievements of the representatives of (...)
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  18.  36
    European restructuring and changing agricultural policies. Rural self-identity and modes of life in late modernity.Reidar Almås - 1993 - Agriculture and Human Values 10 (4):2-12.
    The main idea of this article is to present various perspectives in order to analyze the recent crisis concerning the agriculture-based rural societies in the developed capitalist communities. In all of these countries there is a production crisis, resulting in too much food. But this is also an ideological crisis, because the consumer thinks that the food is produced at too high a price. And it is a political crisis as well because a major part of the voters think (...)
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  19.  39
    Homeworking Women: Gender, Racism, and Class at WorkHidden in the Home: The Role of Waged Homework in the Modern World EconomyHomeworkers and Rural Economic DevelopmentHomeworkers in Global Perspective.Joy Parr, Annie Phizacklea, Carol Wolkowitz, Jamie Faricellia Dangler, Christina E. Gringeri, Eileen Boris & Elisabeth Prugl - 1999 - Feminist Studies 25 (1):227.
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  20.  7
    Modernity, community, & place in Brian Friel's drama.Richard Rankin Russell - 2022 - Syracuse: Syracuse University Press.
    Modernity, Community, and Place in Brian Friel’s Drama shows how the leading Irish playwright explores a series of dynamic physical and intellectual environments, charting the impact of modernity on rural culture and on the imagined communities he strove to create between readers, and script, actors and audience.
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  21.  44
    Area variations in use of modern contraception in rural bangladesh: A multilevel analysis.Nashid Kamal, Andrew Sloggett & John G. Cleland - 1999 - Journal of Biosocial Science 31 (3):327-341.
    This study in Bangladesh found that inter-cluster variation in the use of modern reversible methods of contraception was significantly attributable to the educational levels of the female family planning workers working in the clusters. Women belonging to clusters served by educated workers had a higher probability of being contraceptive users than those whose workers had only completed primary education. At the household level, important determinants of use were socioeconomic status and religion. At the individual level, the woman being the wife (...)
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  22.  15
    Renewable Energy for Rural Sustainability in Developing Countries.Judith Alazraque-Cherni - 2008 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 28 (2):105-114.
    This article establishes the benefits of applying renewable energy and analyzes the main difficulties that have stood in the way of more widely successful renewable energy for rural areas in the developing world and discusses why outcomes from these technologies fall short. Although there is substantial recognition of technological, economic, institutional, and other supply-side barriers that have generally interfered with success, the household and other stake-holders have been left outside the scope of evaluation. This article first discusses the usefulness (...)
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  23.  17
    Sparsely populated and rural areas in the United Kingdom: measures to solve governance challenges.Alexei Langinen - 2020 - Sotsium I Vlast 6:29-39.
    Introduction. The problems of state and local governance in sparsely populated and rural areas is relevant for the Russian Federation due to the presence of depressed areas, depopulation of the countryside, small towns, monotowns, migration of the rural population to large cities, regional capitals, other regions and abroad. These processes are typical for many other modern states. Solving the problems of rural and sparsely populated areas includes providing socially significant services, protecting the health and safety of residents, (...)
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  24.  9
    Liang the Rural Reformer.Ady Van den Stock - 2023 - In Thierry Meynard & Philippe Major (eds.), Dao Companion to Liang Shuming’s Philosophy. Springer Verlag. pp. 155-179.
    This chapter provides an overview of the historical background as well as philosophical outlook behind the twentieth-century Confucian thinker Liang Shuming’s 梁漱溟 (1893–1988) engagement with the movement for “rural reconstruction” (xiangcun jianshe 鄉村建設) which took off during the 1930s in Republican China. After situating Liang’s turn toward the countryside and his activities in Shandong province as leader of the Institute for Rural Reconstruction in their broader socio-political context and his own trajectory as an intellectual and reformer, I describe (...)
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  25.  79
    Sustainable energy for rural india.R. V. Ravikrishna - 2011 - Zygon 46 (4):942-956.
    Abstract This paper begins with an introduction to the ancient spiritual tradition of India. The focus is upon aspects of ancient Indian philosophy relevant to modern society. In the Indian context, science and spirituality are complementary. The application of ethical and religious motivations derived from these ideas is delineated with respect to the practical implementation of energy projects. The efforts of religious and social groups in promoting renewable energy in India are included. A few bioenergy technologies relevant to rural (...)
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  26.  26
    Emerging Ethics in Rural India.R. C. Sekhar - 2002 - Journal of Human Values 8 (2):145-155.
    This paper explores the ethical dimensions of some of the current issues engaging rural India, affecting 600 million people. It uses the evolutionary framework of Sri Aurobindo's integral yoga, and also tags on to it the rights concepts of Amartya Sen's ethics. It attempts to take a balanced view between Ambedkar's perception of the ancient Indian village as a sink of localism, a den of ignorance, narrow-mindedness and communalism, and the more common and traditional, but historically untrue, idealized view (...)
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  27.  39
    Bioethics Activities in Rural Hospitals.Ann Freeman Cook, Helena Hoas & Katarina Guttmannova - 2000 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 9 (2):230-238.
    Hospital ethics committees have evolved as a response to complicated legal, ethical, and social dilemmas that accompany modern medicine. In the United States, their growth has been augmented by Joint Commission for the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations standards and the Patient Self-Determination Act. There appears to be an implicit presumption that all clinical ethics consultation practices are relatively similar. Finally, there is heightened awareness of the needs for quality standards and assessment of the outcomes of ethics consultations.
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  28. The Religion of the Poor: Rural Missions in Europe and the Formation of Modern Catholicism, c. 1500-1800. By Louis Chatellier. [REVIEW]E. S. Pease - 2000 - The European Legacy 5 (3):468-468.
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  29.  31
    Traditional and ancient rural economy in Mediterranean Europe: plus ça change?Paul Halstead - 1987 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 107:77-87.
    The study of recent ‘traditional’ Mediterranean rural economy has long been a predilection of ancient historians and archaeologists working in that area. Traditional practices and production norms have been used by ancient historians in the interpretation of the often enigmatic testimony of the ancient agronomic writers, while archaeologists have used the same information to fill in the many gaps in the material record supplied by the spade. Much of the relevant data on traditional rural economy are gleaned from (...)
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  30.  24
    Scientific-Technological Progress in Agriculture and Questions of Socialization to Work Attitudes and of Vocational Guidance in the Rural School.I. G. Tkachenko - 1976 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 15 (1):66-68.
    The rural general, work, polytechnic school holds a prominent place in the life of the modern socialist village. As one of the sources from which collective and state farms get trained personnel, equipment operators, for example, the rural school is meant to train a comprehensively developed younger generation capable of creatively applying to its work the latest achievements of science, engineering, and progressive technology and of presenting models of a communist attitude toward work.
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  31.  30
    Moving away from technocratic framing: agroecology and food sovereignty as possible alternatives to alleviate rural malnutrition in Bangladesh.Manoj Misra - 2018 - Agriculture and Human Values 35 (2):473-487.
    Bangladesh continues to experience stubbornly high levels of rural malnutrition amid steady economic growth and poverty reduction. The policy response to tackling malnutrition shows an overwhelmingly technocratic bias, which depoliticizes the broader question of how the agro-food regime is structured. Taking an agrarian and human rights-based approach, this paper argues that rural malnutrition must be analyzed as symptomatic of a deepening agrarian crisis in which the obsession with productivity increases and commercialization overrides people’s democratic right to culturally appropriate, (...)
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  32.  28
    Bābā Jai Gurudev in the Qasbā: The Ruralization of a Modern Religion. [REVIEW]Daniel Gold - 2013 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 17 (2):127-152.
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  33.  15
    The New Ruralism: An Epistemology of Transformed Space.Joan Ramon Resina & William Viestenz (eds.) - 2012 - Iberoamericana-Vervuert.
    Presents new ways of understanding the old dichotomy city vs country in an effort to think through the epistemological and artistic implications of the modern antinomy's demise, whereby the non-city ceases to be the city's absolute other.
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  34.  38
    “Our Modern Priapus”: Thauma and the Isernian Simulacra.Sarah Carter - 2020 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 39:55-77.
    In 1781, British Envoy Sir William Hamilton wrote to Joseph Banks of an astonishing discovery in rural Abruzzo. The inhabitants of Isernia offered wax phalluses as votives to Catholic shrines during the annual Fête of St. Cosmo and Damiano. The waxen vows were evidence that the cult of Priapus persisted in the modern world, and their appearance produced thauma or wonder in antiquarian circles. Moving from Hamilton’s letter to Richard Payne Knight’s A Discourse on the Worship of Priapus (1786), (...)
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  35.  20
    Theorising the Image as Act: Reading the Social and Political in Images of the Rural Eastern Cape.Candice Steele - 2020 - Kronos 46 (1):221-242.
    Certain anthropological narratives of South Africa's Eastern Cape province, such as Monica Hunter's 1936 Reaction to Conquest and Philip Mayer's 1963 Townsmen or Tribesmen, persist as potent referential 'bodies of knowledge'. By laying down the coordinates of Black rural and urban experience, such studies continue to animate concepts of tradition and modernity, effectively conjuring up notions of 'the border', both literally and metaphorically. Encountering Pauline Ingle's photographic collection amidst these circuits of knowledge and ways of seeing is to (...)
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  36.  34
    Revolution and Reaction in Early Modern EuropeCapitalism and Material Life: 1400-1800The Dutch Rural Economy in the Golden Age, 1500-1700.The German Military Entrepreneur and his Work Force: A Study in European Economic and Social History.The Modern World System: Capitalist Agriculture and the Origins of the European World Economy in the Sixteenth Century.The Imperial Theme in the Sixteenth Century. [REVIEW]M. D. Feld, Fernand Braudel, Miriam Kochan, Jan De Vries, Fritz Redlich, Immanuel Wallerstein & Frances A. Yates - 1977 - Journal of the History of Ideas 38 (1):175.
  37.  16
    A Framework for Sustainable Energy Development Beyond the Grid: Meeting the Needs of Rural and Remote Populations.Lawrence Agbemabiese - 2009 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 29 (2):151-158.
    Advances in energy access in developing countries over the past 25 years have been remarkable with more than 1 billion unserved people gaining access to electricity and modern fuels. However, as impressive as this may sound, large gaps remain: 1.6 billion people still lack access to electricity and another 2.5 billion continue to rely on traditional biomass fuel for cooking and heating. The problems of access are greater in rural areas than in urban areas. If today's energy policies and (...)
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  38.  9
    Women Developing Women: Islamic Approaches for Poverty Alleviation in Rural Egypt.Sherine Hafez - 2011 - Feminist Review 97 (1):56-73.
    Through an ethnographic account of a social reform project led by Islamic activist women in the village of Mehmeit in rural Egypt, this article analyses women's Islamic activism as a form of worship. Women's experiences of activism are at the centre of this account, which highlights their attempts to economically and socially develop a destitute rural community. Their development ideals mirror the embedded principles of liberal secular modernity and offer a tangible example of the concomitance of these (...)
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  39.  16
    Exploring socioeconomic inequality in educational management information system: An ethnographic study of China rural area students.Qing Ye - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    There is currently enough systematic literature presents about socioeconomic inequalities across different disciplines. However, this study relates socioeconomic inequality to rural students educational management information systems in different schools in China. The dynamic force of information technology could not be constrained in the modern techno-based world. Similarly, the study was qualitative and ethnographic. Data were collected through an interview guide and analyzed with thematic scientific analysis. Ten male and ten female students were interviewed based on data saturation point. The (...)
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  40.  4
    Architectural Art in Wuyuan: Cultural Identity and Re-invention of Tradition in the Context of New Rural Construction in China.Hu Yu & Wuthipong Roadkasamsri - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:777-790.
    This qualitative research study explores the cultural identity and artistic creation of traditional architecture in the Wuyuan area within the context of China's new rural construction. The research focuses on the reinvention of tradition and its impact on Wuyuan's architectural art, highlighting the conflict and change between traditional culture and modernization. By maintaining the traditional look, Wuyuan's architectural art has become representative of China's rural landscape, embodying rich historical and cultural heritage. The study aims to provide insights on (...)
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  41.  9
    Recovering Buddhism in Modern China.Jan Kiely & J. Brooks Jessup (eds.) - 2016 - Cambridge University Press.
    Modern Chinese history told from a Buddhist perspective restores the vibrant, creative role of religion in postimperial China. It shows how urban Buddhist elites jockeyed for cultural dominance in the early Republican era, how Buddhist intellectuals reckoned with science, and how Buddhist media contributed to modern print cultures. It recognizes the political importance of sacred Buddhist relics and the complex processes through which Buddhists participated in and experienced religious suppression under Communist rule. Today, urban and rural communities alike engage (...)
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  42.  77
    Cardboard Houses with Wings: The Architecture of Alabama’s Rural Studio.Thorsten Botz-Bornstein - 2010 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 44 (3):16.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Cardboard Houses with Wings:The Architecture of Alabama's Rural StudioThorsten Botz-Bornstein (bio)IntroductionThe Rural Studio, which was founded by Samuel Mockbee in 1992 and lead by him until his death in 2001, continues its activities. Its specialty is, now as before, the design of innovative houses for poor people living in Alabama's second-poorest county, Hale County, by relying largely on donated and salvaged materials. The houses are made of (...)
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  43.  46
    Rural Roads to Security. [REVIEW]J. Q. Lauer - 1940 - Modern Schoolman 17 (4):79-79.
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  44.  25
    Foundations of modernity: human agency and the imperial state.Isa Blumi - 2012 - New York: Routledge.
    Investigating how a number of modern empires transform over the long century (1789-1914) as a consequence of their struggle for ascendancy in the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East, Foundations of Modernity: Human Agency and the Imperial State moves the study of the modern empire towards a comparative, trans-regional analysis of events along the Ottoman frontiers: Western Balkans, the Persian Gulf and Yemen. This inter-disciplinary approach of studying events at different ends of the Ottoman Empire challenges previous emphasis on Europe (...)
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  45.  38
    From Urban Radical to Rural Revolutionary: Mao From the 1920s to 1937.Brantly Womack - 2011 - Modern Philosophy 5:010.
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  46.  33
    Modern cities modelled as “super‐cells” rather than multicellular organisms: Implications for industry, goods and services.Jie Chang, Ying Ge, Zhaoping Wu, Yuanyuan Du, Kaixuan Pan, Guofu Yang, Yuan Ren, Mikko P. Heino, Feng Mao, Kang Hao Cheong, Zelong Qu, Xing Fan, Yong Min, Changhui Peng & Laura A. Meyerson - 2021 - Bioessays 43 (7):2100041.
    The structure and “metabolism” (movement and conversion of goods and energy) of urban areas has caused cities to be identified as “super‐organisms”, placed between ecosystems and the biosphere, in the hierarchy of living systems. Yet most such analogies are weak, and render the super‐organism model ineffective for sustainable development of cities. Via a cluster analysis of 15 shared traits of the hierarchical living system, we found that industrialized cities are more similar to eukaryotic cells than to multicellular organisms; enclosed systems, (...)
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  47.  10
    How Does Social Insurance Affect the Social Interactions of Rural Residents in China: Study on the Impact of Rural Formal Social Security System on Informal Social Security Mechanism.Ming Zhang, Lan Yuan, Zhanlian Ke, Juanfeng Jian, Hong Tan & Gangwu Lv - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    With the increasing mobility of the rural population in China and the growing number of residents moving to the cities for work or study, rural society is forming a pluralistic, interest-centered, “open” social networks relations that follows the modern rule of law contract. Based on Chinese General Social Survey data, the results of the empirical study finds that social insurance can significantly enhance the social interactions of rural residents in China, that is, formal social security system in (...)
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  48.  28
    Islamic Traditions of Modernity: Gender, Class, and Islam in a Transnational Women’s Education Project.Ayesha Khurshid - 2015 - Gender and Society 29 (1):98-121.
    Women’s education has been central to discourses that have sought to modernize developing and Muslim societies. Based on ethnographic data collected from women teachers from rural and low-income communities of Pakistan, the article shows how being a parhi likhi woman implies acquiring a privileged subject position making claims to middle-class and Islamic morality, and engaging in specific struggles within, rather than against, the institutions of family, community, and Islam. This focus on the lived experiences of educated Muslim women complicates (...)
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  49. A Buddhist Response to Modernization in Thailand.Carla Deicke Grady - 1995 - Dissertation, University of Hawai'i
    Several studies conducted in the 1970's by western analysts concluded that Buddhism is the main obstacle to economic development in Thailand. This view typifies the reasoning of mainstream modernization and development practices in Third World countries. Yet in recent years, Post World War II policies based upon the goal of modernization have been under attack for the environmental disasters they have generated, for their failure to improve human conditions where they have been implemented, and for their assumption that the western (...)
     
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  50. The significance of the villages and small towns in rural Ireland during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.Susan Hood - 2002 - In Hood Susan (ed.), Provincial Towns in Early Modern England and Ireland: Change, Convergence and Divergence. pp. 241-260.
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