Showing 961 - 980 results of 1,098 for search '"bourgeois"', query time: 0.10s Refine Results
  1. 961

    The Soviet approach to the Lithuanian partisan movement (1944-1990) by Darius Juodis

    Published 2024-01-01
    “…Soviet propaganda referred negatively and contemptuously to anti-Soviet Lithuanian partisans, and the terms ‘bandits’ and ‘bourgeois nationalists’ came into force to describe them. …”
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  2. 962

    Humorn i stadens mångstämmiga rum by Massimo Ciaravolo

    Published 2023-04-01
    “…Bergman’s humour is marked by pessimism, and the writer is ambivalent towards the apparently solid, bourgeois world prior to World War I which he comes from and depicts in his novel. …”
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  3. 963

    Theodore Dreiser as a “Soviet Foreign Classic”

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…The case study of Theodore Dreiser (who was criticized as a “petty- bourgeois individualist” in the 1920s but gained a reputation of the greatest twentieth- century American classic and the best friend of the Soviet Union by the early 1930s) allows the researchers to uncover and analyze the mechanism of emergence of such a phenomenon as “a Soviet foreign classic”. …”
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  4. 964

    Eesti nõukogude loojak by Märt Väljataga

    Published 2024-02-01
    “…Generally, in the official Soviet jargon, ‘decadence’ was a highly derogatory term, used during Stalin’s rule to stigmatize all of Western bourgeois culture. Consequently, patriotic scholars, even in the face of easing circumstances, were hesitant to associate early 20th century artists with decadence, as that would have meant condemning them. …”
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  5. 965

    Pasolini: Fascism – Consumism – Catholicism: And a Search for Life by Georg Seeßlen

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…In this situation, Pasolini’s texts and films are searching for a way to counter the horror of a new fascism in the form of the petit bourgeois “consumistic” rule with a “force of the past”. …”
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  6. 966

    THE SOCIAL THEORY OF MAX WEBER IN CONFLICT OF INTERPRETATIONS by Zenonas Norkus

    Published 1999-01-01
    “…The confrontation of the system functionalism and conflict sociology during the first post-war decades led to "translation wars" in USA and gave rise to two competing images of Weber - a theorist of social order painted by T. Parsons and as "bourgeois Marx" defended by H. Gerth, C. W. Mills, R. …”
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  7. 967

    Establishment of the University System in France During the Reign of Napoleon I: Goals and the Results by Elena P. Piskunova

    Published 2020-04-01
    “…Analysis. The Great French Bourgeois Revolution completely destroyed the old educational system. …”
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  8. 968

    Vectors, Stages and Problems of Nonortodoxal Foundations of Economic Science Formation by Ya. S. Yadgarov, D. R. Orlova

    Published 2022-09-01
    “…In particular, the author’s position is argued that the examples of postulating judgments about the presence and coexistence of “Western-non-Western”, “bourgeoisnon- bourgeois” economic science, which are still found in Russian economic literature, are based solely on the classformational research approach and therefore are completely untenable. …”
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  9. 969

    A Cultural Materialist Approach to Gender Relations in Ibsen’s A Doll’s House by Şebnem Düzgün

    Published 2018-12-01
    “…The play deals mainly with the oppression of a bourgeois woman named Nora, who forges her father’s signature to save her husband’s life. …”
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  10. 970

    The Cavern of Antimatter: Giuseppe "Pinot" Gallizio and the Technological Imaginary of the Early Situationist International by Pezolet, Nicola

    Published 2010
    “…In the first installments of the Internationale situationniste, alongside articles by Asger Jorn, Giuseppe “Pinot” Gallizio, and others are several unsigned articles, most of which were written by the editor, Guy-Ernest Debord, advocating the “destruction of the subject” and the use of contemporary machines to systematize and consciously organize “what the Surrealists had still experienced as random, as the marvelous.”1 According to Debord, the surrealists originally provided useful insights in their indictment of bourgeois society but soon regressed into an occultist movement that failed to recognize the potential of modern “conditioning techniques.”2 As a response to such a deterioration of surrealism’s subversive potential and its cooptation by commercial interests, Gallizio’s “industrial paintings” were championed by Debord as a new technological form of creativity that would bring a fatal blow to the outdated avant-garde and that could be used to create liberating, transitory “situations” signaling the emergence of a revolutionary movement.3 By using “industrial painting”—as well as détournement and several other technological and scientific metaphors—Debord attempted to work through the influential practices of André Breton’s group, which still occupied a prominent role in postwar Europe.…”
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  11. 971

    DAMPAK PROPAGANDA GERAKAN MENABUNG JEPANG TERHADAP POLA PENYIMPANAN UANG MASYARAKAT INDONESIA (1942-1945) by , MUFIDHA BRILIAN IRIANTI, , Dr. Agus Suwignyo, MA.

    Published 2014
    “…There is also arguing that during that period, the bank customers are dominated by common people instead of bourgeois and aristocracy. It is the concern of this project, to understand the change of peopleâ��s behavior in saving money, correlated with Japan p ropaganda program in Indonesia, 1942-1945. …”
    Thesis
  12. 972

    Orchards to cement: an ethnography of Jaffa's urban borderlands by Hart, JR

    Published 2020
    “…It illustrates how the urban borderlands of Jaffa – a mixed Jewish- Palestinian city in contemporary Israel – were transformed from were transformed from a landscape of citrus orchards populated by Palestinian bourgeois families and peasant farmers into the most densely populated neighbourhoods of Tel Aviv- Jaffa (the city was annexed by Tel Aviv in 1950). …”
    Thesis
  13. 973

    Consensus in conflict - the making of a common intellectual culture in Germany, c. 1920-1950 by Unger, S

    Published 2018
    “…<p>This study analyses intellectual continuities in bourgeois periodicals from Weimar to the early post-war period. …”
    Thesis
  14. 974

    Aspects of Richard Strauss's late aesthetic by Tan, EXX

    Published 2018
    “…Of all the music examined in the course of the dissertation <em>Metamorphosen</em> is the only work to bring liberal humanism and musical modernism together in a progressive way and it has therefore been positioned centrally in the structure, which falls into three unofficial sections: Chapters 2 and 3 ‘bourgeois music’, Chapter 4 ‘radical music’, Chapters 5 and 6 ‘late music’.…”
    Thesis
  15. 975

    The history of Thessaly, 1266-1393 by Magdalino, P

    Published 1976
    “…</p> <p>Maritime commerce was in the hands of the Italian traders, who with the Jews seem to have monopolised the only 'bourgeois' settlement for which there is evidence - Almyros.…”
    Thesis
  16. 976

    The incarnate God from Hegel to Marx by Sullivan, S

    Published 1993
    “…While hostile to institutional religion, Marx inherits the incarnation thematic via: 1) Feuerbachian christological love as communal being; 2) a proletarian rather than statist embodiment of freedom; 3) the communist transcendence of Judaeo-Kantian bourgeois Liberalism. Conclusions explore other variants of the incarnation thematic in political thought and argue that since the Second World War, liberal and secular prejudices have obscured the speculative theological and Christo-Germanic dimension of the Hegel-Marx lineage.…”
    Thesis
  17. 977

    Vernacular culture and musical life in suburban Vienna, 1870-1914 by Weir, JM

    Published 2023
    “…The main themes covered in my four chapters are: a study of sound and noise abatement campaigns in relation to political theatre and social crisis, moving from the voices of working-class communities to the musical experimentation of suburban enclaves; an extended biography of the Schrammelmusik phenomenon, its position on the threshold of two musical worlds, and its urban-rural networks that contributed to a blurring of boundaries between mythology and reality; an analysis of Wienerlied texts which provide sharply etched commentaries on metropolitan life at the edge of liberal bourgeois experience and their role in tracing the shifting subjectivities of suburban dwellers; and a portrait of clocks and barrel organs that channels the familiar image of the organ grinder through the idea of fractured temporalities, as revealed in different approaches to time synchronisation and urban rhythms.…”
    Thesis
  18. 978

    Heralds of change? On the societal function of Weimar Republic journals, 1918-1933 by Hanisch, P

    Published 2016
    “…Together, these journals cover a wide range of bourgeois communities, exemplifying a multiplicity of strategies in order to negotiate the challenges posed by modernisation to their communal identities as well as to the individual identities of their creators and readers. …”
    Thesis
  19. 979

    Citizen Marx: the relationship between Karl Marx and republicanism by Leipold, B

    Published 2017
    “…He now argued that the republic would be a bourgeois republic, which would subject the proletariat to the capitalist. …”
    Thesis
  20. 980

    LANDVOGTS IN THE VOLHYNIAN TOWNS OF THE 16TH AND THE FIRST HALF OF THE 17TH CENTURIES: COMPOSITION, PERSONALITIES, FUNCTIONS by Andriy Zayats

    Published 2018-11-01
    “…Of the six Kovel landvogts, two were gentry, and the others were bourgeois Ukrainians. The author provides data on the cases of the combination of the Lentwite government with the Rhei / Burmistrovsky. …”
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