Dreams : a sociological analysis.
This exploratory study investigates the imprint of dreaming experiences on waking life. Specifically, it seeks to describe and analyze ethnographic cases of how Hindus in Singapore, through narration or performance integrate dreaming and waking life. Based on in-depth interviews and dream records co...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-149662019-12-10T11:28:20Z Dreams : a sociological analysis. Hemavalli Singaram Padmanathan. Tan Joo Ean School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology::Communities, classes and races This exploratory study investigates the imprint of dreaming experiences on waking life. Specifically, it seeks to describe and analyze ethnographic cases of how Hindus in Singapore, through narration or performance integrate dreaming and waking life. Based on in-depth interviews and dream records collected as part of this study, I extend to a theory of the visionary episteme (Foucault 1980:197). I organize this discussion around three basic themes – that dreams and/or dreaming (a) have strongly influenced the beliefs and practices of those studied, (b) and reason are not mutually antagonistic, and, (c) is a primal wellspring of religious experience. With the development of sociological approaches that examine topics previously defined as psychological, such as the sociology of emotion and cognition, the seemingly idiosyncratic components of these nocturnal productions should not exclude them from social analysis. Bachelor of Arts 2009-03-17T06:39:45Z 2009-03-17T06:39:45Z 2009 2009 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14966 en 38 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology::Communities, classes and races Hemavalli Singaram Padmanathan. Dreams : a sociological analysis. |
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This exploratory study investigates the imprint of dreaming experiences on waking life. Specifically, it seeks to describe and analyze ethnographic cases of how Hindus in Singapore, through narration or performance integrate dreaming and waking life. Based on in-depth interviews and dream records collected as part of this study, I extend to a theory of the visionary episteme (Foucault 1980:197). I organize this discussion around three basic themes – that dreams and/or dreaming (a) have strongly influenced the beliefs and practices of those studied, (b) and reason are not mutually antagonistic, and, (c) is a primal wellspring of religious experience. With the development of sociological approaches that examine topics previously defined as psychological, such as the sociology of emotion and cognition, the seemingly idiosyncratic components of these nocturnal productions should not exclude them from social analysis. |
author2 |
Tan Joo Ean |
author_facet |
Tan Joo Ean Hemavalli Singaram Padmanathan. |
format |
Final Year Project |
author |
Hemavalli Singaram Padmanathan. |
author_sort |
Hemavalli Singaram Padmanathan. |
title |
Dreams : a sociological analysis. |
title_short |
Dreams : a sociological analysis. |
title_full |
Dreams : a sociological analysis. |
title_fullStr |
Dreams : a sociological analysis. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Dreams : a sociological analysis. |
title_sort |
dreams : a sociological analysis. |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14966 |
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1681048588373721088 |