Bricolage - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bricolage , pronounced /ˌbriːkoʊˈlɑːʒ/, /ˌbrɪkoʊˈlɑːʒ/ is a term used in several disciplines, among them the visual arts and literature, to refer to the construction or creation of a work from ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bricolage
A selection of articles related to Bricolage - Culture ... In cultural studies bricolage is used to mean the processes by which people acquire objects from across social divisions to create new cultural identities. In particular, it is a feature of subcultures such as, for example, the punk movement.
www.experiencefestival.com/bricolage_-_culture www.experiencefestival.com/bricolage_-_culture
Grunge has not only been thoroughly appropriated, its style stolen in a media blitz, the term itself has been adopted by the culture industry as a metaphor for what cultural analysts like ourselves call bricolage.
legacy.lclark.edu/~soan370/glossary/bricolage.html legacy.lclark.edu/~soan370/glossary/bricolage.html
Bricolage has other meanings and related words in French, like bricole which is a triffle, a little thing. The verb bricoler can be translated as arranging, knocking up, tweaking, tinkering. The French lesson du jour will then be that renaming French toasts is both a bricole and a cultural bricolage.
padawan.info/en/2003/03/on-cultural-differences-and-bri... padawan.info/en/2003/03/on-cultural-differences-and-bricolage.html
Welcome! You've found the cultural studies meeting house. If you love to talk about, learn about, and enjoy contemporary culture, ... Cultural Studies today is a simmering stew of the ideas, voices, and lives of people all over the world. It's the things we use and the people we talk about. It's life and life only.
www.culturalstudies.net/ www.culturalstudies.net/
The last chapter offered some analogies between the cultural bricolage of human beings and the evolutionary design of natural selection without sug­gesting that the two are fundamentally the same kind of process.
www.yale.edu/lawweb/jbalkin/cs/cultural_software_chapte... www.yale.edu/lawweb/jbalkin/cs/cultural_software_chapter3.htm
In cultural studies bricolage is used to mean the processes by which people acquire objects from across social divisions to create new cultural identities. In particular, it is a feature of subcultures such as, for example, the punk movement.
www.artandpopularculture.com/Bricolage www.artandpopularculture.com/Bricolage
here's the final draft of my first essay. ... Many cultural studies scholars have focused on music as a particular kind of cultural form through which cultural flows, bricolage, pastiche, incorporation, and cross cultural and cross ethnic appropriations are accomplished.
aramsinnreich.typepad.com/aram_squalls/2005/04/first_es... aramsinnreich.typepad.com/aram_squalls/2005/04/first_essay_cul.html
Word of the Day - Learn one new word everyday on Dictionary.com ... I point out to my students that no one ever really reads Hamlet for the first time now; we've heard it all before in bits and pieces, cultural bricolage.
dictionary.reference.com/wordoftheday/archive/2001/04/2... dictionary.reference.com/wordoftheday/archive/2001/04/26.html
Diasporic identities emerge from a process of cultural bricolage that leads to cultural metissage and therefore hybridity and heterogeneity.
www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/recordDetail?accno=EJ8171... www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/recordDetail?accno=EJ817124
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