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Ordinary socialism? : communication, comprimise, and co-existence in the GDR : a case study of four social groups, 1971-1989Madarasz, Jeannette Zsusza January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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The grands travaux : the politics of Francois Mitterrand's architectural projects in ParisCollard, Susan Patricia January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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British perspectives on the Ostpolitik 1955-1967Hughes, R. Gerald January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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East German cabaret from the end of the GDR to the presentBland, Richard Julian January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Neue Sachlichkeit 1918-33 : unity and diversity of an art movementPlumb, Stephen January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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Bismarck in Weimar : Germany's first democracy and the civil war of memories (1918-1933)Gerwarth, Robert January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Between art and reality : a comparison of the ideological development of Ernst Toller and Georg KaiserHarrison, John Frederick Anthony January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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Plato's Republic V: The Problem Of Women And PhilosophyJanuary 2015 (has links)
If we take the hermeneutic challenge of Socratic irony seriously, what are we to make of Socrates’ proposal in the Republic that the women of the guardian class are to be educated and rule alongside the men (451c-457c)? Historically, the proposal has inspired controversy, whether as too great a departure from the customary, or as insufficiently just to woman-kind. But Socrates’ proposal is only the first of a trio of plans, known as the Three Waves, an image for the waves of laughter Socrates fears will greet them. His second proposal recommends that the guardians be bred together, with children raised by all in ignorance of their parents; the third proclaims the rule of philosophers as kings. Readers usually link the first two, insofar as both involve plans for women. But while the discussion of the Second Wave is spurred by Socrates’ interlocutors, Socrates introduces the First and Third Waves on his own initiative. The aim of this study is to argue that the First and Third Waves have the deeper connection: the political problems of women and of the philosopher share a pattern in common, as Socrates’ image of philosophy as a maiden in distress illustrates (495c). Both women and philosophy exist in tension with the city under its customary laws, and Socrates’ solution for both, namely rule of the city and education at its hands, is likewise the same. My interpretation of the First Wave seeks to take seriously its seriously funny aspects, such as naked exercise for both sexes, together (452a), and Glaucon’s attachment to the principle that women be taken as weaker and men as stronger (452c); but these must be taken alongside the appeal of Socrates’ corresponding recommendation that women be clothed in “robes of virtue” (457a). By examining such aspects of the women’s law, and suggesting how they shed light on the philosopher-king, this study aims to do justice to the irony of Socrates’ “best city in speech,” recognizing both the appeal of his proposals and the political problems they make manifest. / 1 / Mary Morrison Townsend
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Black Activism in the Red Party: Black Politics and the Cuban Communist Party, 1925-1962January 2018 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu / In 1933, the Cuban Communist Party experienced a change in leadership from the white poet and lawyer Rubén Martínez Villena to a black former shoe repairman from Manzanillo, Blas Roca. This shift marked the beginning of a new era in Cuban politics. This thesis argues that the Communist Party was an unparalleled space for black political activism in Cuba’s late republic period due to the unique convergence of black actors within its ranks. The Party reflected a singular intersection of labor leaders, members of black fraternal organizations, and black intelligencia. This group of black political actors fought for an end to racial discrimination throughout the history of the Party and successfully reintroduced a public engagement with race in Cuban political rhetoric during the 1940 Constitutional Assembly. Unlike other contemporary political parties, the Communist Party created a space for simultaneous expressions of blackness and Cubanness that drew black Cubans into its ranks. The Party’s decades long struggle for anti-discrimination legislation ultimately failed, but their prolonged struggle for greater equity on the island disrupted domestic politics and distinguished the Cuban Party from other contemporary Communist parties. / 1 / Kaitlyn D Henderson
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A history of the Grand Army of the Republic in Ohio from 1866 to 1900 /Noyes, Elmer Edward, January 1945 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 1945. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 266-279). Available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center.
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