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“我群意识”与大唐帝国的崛起——兼论“我群意识”对西北地缘政治的影响
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作者 杜文玉 《陕西师范大学学报(哲学社会科学版)》 CSSCI 北大核心 2011年第4期106-113,共8页
"我群意识"的核心内涵是人们相互之间的共属感,也就是对本民族或国家的认同感和群体意识,具备了"我群意识"的民族,就会产生强烈的民族自豪感和凝聚力。在唐代不仅汉人而且内迁的少数民族和周边的不少民族也都具有... "我群意识"的核心内涵是人们相互之间的共属感,也就是对本民族或国家的认同感和群体意识,具备了"我群意识"的民族,就会产生强烈的民族自豪感和凝聚力。在唐代不仅汉人而且内迁的少数民族和周边的不少民族也都具有了这种意识,并且都以唐人而自居。"我群意识"所产生的强大凝聚力在大唐帝国的崛起和强盛的过程中,曾经发挥了重要的作用,是一股巨大的精神力量。在西北边疆实行与内地相同的正州府体制和羁縻体制的地区,"我群意识"的具备程度相差很大,直接影响到了唐朝在西北地区统治的稳定与否。 展开更多
关键词 我群意识 归属感 唐人 羁縻体制
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迁徙、延续与我群意识建构:美国旧金山湾区华人穆斯林研究
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作者 于嘉明 《北方民族大学学报(哲学社会科学版)》 CSSCI 2016年第6期36-41,共6页
20世纪80年代以降,以移居美国的华人穆斯林移民社群,在加利福尼亚州旧金山湾区逐渐形成特殊的发展态势。华人穆斯林虽然背景各异,但在美国的大环境中,共同面临文化与宗教传承的问题与挑战,他们在融入当地社会的过程中建构出了我群意识... 20世纪80年代以降,以移居美国的华人穆斯林移民社群,在加利福尼亚州旧金山湾区逐渐形成特殊的发展态势。华人穆斯林虽然背景各异,但在美国的大环境中,共同面临文化与宗教传承的问题与挑战,他们在融入当地社会的过程中建构出了我群意识的各种面向。 展开更多
关键词 华人穆斯林 迁徙 延续 我群意识
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基于社会认同论的民族意识结构分析框架研究 被引量:3
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作者 肖灵 《中南民族大学学报(人文社会科学版)》 CSSCI 北大核心 2018年第3期34-38,共5页
社会认同论是欧洲社会心理学一种重要的理论范式,该理论范式从群体视角研究社会认同,认为社会认同由类化、认同、比较的过程建立起来,服务于积极区分的动力目标。借助社会同论,可以将民族意识的内部结构再界定为我群意识、他群意识、群... 社会认同论是欧洲社会心理学一种重要的理论范式,该理论范式从群体视角研究社会认同,认为社会认同由类化、认同、比较的过程建立起来,服务于积极区分的动力目标。借助社会同论,可以将民族意识的内部结构再界定为我群意识、他群意识、群际关系意识三个方面。建立新的民族意识结构分析框架,能够为重新评价当前的民族意识、研发民族意识测量工具、解释民族意识变化的动力机制、完善民族意识调控机制,提供一种新的理论视角。 展开更多
关键词 社会认同论 民族意识 我群意识 意识 际关系意识
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台媒“污名化”大陆现象的动因分析
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作者 梁杰 《东南传播》 2017年第3期13-14,共2页
台湾媒体尤其是绿营媒体,在涉及大陆的报道及舆论导向方面,往往流露出刻意操作痕迹,显露了意识形态上的"污名化"倾向。这种"污名化"倾向其实有着深刻的政治、经济以及社会心理根源。本文试从传播学角度,剖析台湾&qu... 台湾媒体尤其是绿营媒体,在涉及大陆的报道及舆论导向方面,往往流露出刻意操作痕迹,显露了意识形态上的"污名化"倾向。这种"污名化"倾向其实有着深刻的政治、经济以及社会心理根源。本文试从传播学角度,剖析台湾"媒介污名"现象产生的社会根源、内在基源和技术来源,探讨在岛内媒体形塑良好舆论环境的重要性和迫切性。 展开更多
关键词 污名化 我群意识 形塑舆论环境 际互动
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The Joumey of the Magi: A Lyric Monologue for First and Second Voices and Three-in-One Character(s)
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作者 Robert Keir Shepherd 《Journal of Literature and Art Studies》 2017年第12期1511-1529,共19页
Although T. S. Eliot's "The Journey of the Magi" is a religious poem in the profoundest sense, the title of my paper is intended to give only a sly wink at Trinitarianism. My real object is to explain how Eliot con... Although T. S. Eliot's "The Journey of the Magi" is a religious poem in the profoundest sense, the title of my paper is intended to give only a sly wink at Trinitarianism. My real object is to explain how Eliot contrived to manufacture a poem which, at fu'st glance, resembles a dramatic monologue (generally understood as a poem for one voice----that of a historical/fictional/mythological character addressing a silent listener, group of listeners or reader), yet which is slowly revealed as a lyrical monologue (for the poet's own voice) which yet--and this quite intentionally----contains considerably more than mere echoes of another two speakers: namely a Magus and the biblical translator and, most famously, sermon writer Archbishop Launcelot Andrewes (1555-1626) court preacher to James 1 and Charles 1 of England. I wish to show how Eliot, in writing what is ultimately confessional verse, goes out of his way to hoodwink the reader by allowing the first two of his "{The} Three Voices of Poetry" (1957) to overlap with and then incorporate the third. His own descriptions of these voices are (i) lyric, defined as "the poet talking to himself", (ii) that of the single speakerwho gives a (dramatic) monologuel "addressing an {imaginary} audience in an assumed voice" and (iii) that of the verse dramatist "who attempts to create a dramatic character speaking in verse when he {i.e. the author} is saying.., only what he can say within the limits of one imaginary character addressing another imaginary character" yet adding "some bit of himself that the author gives to a character may be the germ from which that character starts" (Eliot, 1957, pp. 38, 40). The basis of my argument is that such an act of"giving of the self' as the raw material for the creation of a dramatic monologue persona as well as a character designed for the stage had been part and parcel of Eliot's modus operandi up to and including "Prufrock" and The Waste Land; further, that in "The Journey of the Magi" and his later commentary upon it he fmally comes out and admits the fact, and in far clearer a manner than he does when defining the Objective Correlative in his essays on Hamlet. Far from attempting to erase the sense of selfhood from his poetry, I believe that Eliot, consciously or not, ended up by demonstrating to those who worshipped the Romantics and their cult of personality just how difficult it was to express the purely subjective self in poetry. 展开更多
关键词 dramatic monologue dramatic poetry lyric monologue peritext subjective self
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