701 |
Bourgeoisie et révolution au Perou : une étude sur la politique du développement en pays dépendantFaucher, Philippe. January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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702 |
Strategies of the grotesque in Canadian fictionHutchison, Lorna. January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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703 |
Reshaping the nationalist appeal : public opinion, party strategy and the S.N.P.Levy, Roger Peter. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
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704 |
Where have all the Canadians gone? : frame resonance, transformation and institutionalization of the Canadianization movement, 1968-1985Cormier, Jeffrey, 1967- January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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705 |
The encyclopedic imagination in the Canadian artist figure /Purdham, Medrie January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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706 |
Islamization and the Khojah Ismāʻīlī community in PakistanRattansi, Diamond January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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707 |
New England in America literature since 1900.Calder, Alice Delphine. January 1933 (has links)
No description available.
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708 |
The savage within : anti-communism, anti-democracy and authoritarianism in the United States and Australia, 1917-1935Fischer, Nick, 1972- January 2001 (has links)
Abstract not available
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709 |
The Image StammersVictor, Suzann, University of Western Sydney, Faculty of Performance, Fine Arts and Design, School of Design January 1999 (has links)
Bodies, burdened with narratives and inscribed by laws, function as signifiers of the State propaganda and nationalisms that supercede the Individual. The Image Stammers discredits the seamless fusion of the body-politic of the Singapore state with that of the Individual. This paper looks at the State as its singular source of artistic stimulation and seeks to dislodge the ventriloquised voice of that State acting upon the art object and its producer, so as to liberate the image from the singular meaning the State imposes. To do this, the analysis in this paper intervenes in the State and its organ, the media, in their attempt to imprison the reality of the performance image so as to reverse the silence that has been demanded of the artist. By reinstating this voice into the visual work the author has produced in this text, based on theories of 'internalised' Orientalism discussed by Geraldine Heng and Janadas Devan, as well as notions of abjections in the work of Elizabeth Grosz anfd Julia Kristeva, this paper attempts to strip the State of its veneer of 'purity' to expose an underside that subjects female bodies to forms of nationalism which are now more codified than ever. This paper foregrounds textual and visual embodiment as a testimony of lived experience which may further entrench, notions of Singapore as an authoritarian state. The Image Stammers bears no pretension of objectivity nor a 'politically safe and correct' one within the context of this paper, but instead, strewns fragments of subjectivity throughout its textual landscape. It seeks to overturn the 'impurity' of the abject (signified by performance art and contemporary artists) as defined, loathed and expelled by the State, into the power of resistance and maintenance of the integrity of the Individual. The Image Stammers retrieves the abject as markers of the limits of State power to become signifiers of resistance for its reconstitution into allies of the artist / Faculty of Performance, Fine Arts and Design
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710 |
Beneath the surface : the role of intuition in the creative processMillward, William H., University of Western Sydney, Faculty of Performance, Fine Arts and Design January 1998 (has links)
One question raised when creating, evaluating and appraising art work is 'How do we know what we know?' This exegesis attempts to answer this by establishing the important role intuitive knowledge plays in decision making in general, and within the author's own art practice specifically. The study reviews some of the literature on intuition from philosophical and psychological perspective in order to validate intuitive knowledge and intuitive decision making within contemporary art practice. However, just because intuition may drive the process, it does not mean that the product of intuitive practice is necessarily good or has any value. Consequently, the importance of aesthetics, and the values of integrity, honesty and truth are explored from a philosophical perspective. These are discussed in relation to the art practice of other artists from this century as well as that of the writer. Having constructed a philosophical framework to work within and be guided by, the final part of this study documents the development of the practical work and how this framework influences the art practice and the outcomes of that practice. It is hoped that the results of the study will reassert the validity and relevance of this form of art practice and philosophy within contemporary art practice. / Master of Arts (Hons) (Visual Art)
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