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Der Berliner Musikdruck von seinen anfängen bis zur mitte des 18. Jahrhunderts ...Lenz, Hans Ulrich, January 1932 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Rostock. / Lebenslauf.
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Technology transfer centre /Kagelmacher, Falk. January 1996 (has links)
Thesis (M. Arch.)--University of Hong Kong, 1996. / Special report study entitled: Speed and space. Includes bibliographical references.
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East Berlin, 1945-1961 : ideology, politics, identity, and the urban landscape /Stangl, Paul Alfred, January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2001. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 591-614). Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
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What's so German about it? : cultural identity in the Berlin hip hop sceneTempleton, Inez H. January 2006 (has links)
Literature on the appropriation of hip hop culture outside of the United States maintains that hip hop engenders local interpretations no longer reliant on African-American origins, and this research project is an attempt to determine the extent to which this is the case in a specific local context. My thesis is an effort to move beyond the rhetoric of much of what constitutes the debates surrounding globalisation, by employing a research strategy combining theoretical analysis and direct engagement with the Berlin hip hop scene. My project not only aims to uncover the meanings young people in Berlin give to their hip hop practices, but intends to do so within a framework that does not ignore the discursive spaces in which these young people are operating. This is particularly relevant because of the complex ways in which race and ethnicity are related to German national identity. Furthermore, this thesis is concerned with the ways in which the spaces and places collectively known as Berlin shape the cultural practices found there. While hip hop belongs to global culture, it is also the case that the city of Berlin plays a significant role in determining how hip hop is understood and reproduced by young people there.
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The humorous and grotesque elements in Döblin's Berlin Alexanderplatz/Schoonover, Henrietta Szold January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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All of Those Yesterdays: News media and the fall of the Berlin Wall in Russian and German cultural memoryCline, Shawn Unknown Date
No description available.
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The Ha'amek Davar of Naftali Zevi Yehuda Berlin /Oser, Asher Charles. January 2007 (has links)
Rabbi Naftali Zevi Yehuda Berlin's commentary to the Pentateuch, Ha'amek Davar, was first published in Vilna in 1879-1880. The work grew out of a daily class that Berlin taught at the famed yeshiva Etz Hayyim of Volozhin, where he was dean from 1853-1893. This study of Ha'amek Davar focuses on Berlin's exegesis of Noah's three sons. Because Berlin often conceals his sources and their previous discussions, one of the great challenges of working with Ha'amek Davar is trying to recognize which interpretations were original to Berlin and which were adapted from elsewhere. Because my discussion was limited to a few passages, it was possible to outline how different aspects of Berlin's exegesis interacted. The historical context of Nineteenth Century Czarist Russia had a strong impact on Ha'amek Davar, and some of Berlin's comments are viewed in light of what was being written in the Russian Jewish press of the time.
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The Cold War and the change in the nature of military powerPeterson, Lee M. January 1999 (has links)
The fall of the Berlin Wall on November 9, 1989 was called by many observers of international affairs the end of the Cold War. However, fifteen years earlier, commentators such as Alistair Buchan had also declared the end of the Cold War. Was this just an premature error on Buchan's part or is there a link between the events of the early 1970s, which is referred to as the era of detente and those leading up to the collapse of the Berlin Wall. It is the intention of this thesis to argue that these periods are integrally related mainly by the fact that they were each periods when one of the two superpowers was forced to reevaluate their foreign policies. The re-evaluations were brought about by changes in the international arena, most importantly a change in the nature of military power. Because the two superpowers were to recognize the change in the nature of military power at different times, it was not until both the United States and the Soviet Union had re-evaluated and altered their foreign policies was the Cold War really over. This thesis will firstly discuss the theoretical approaches to International Relations and the issue of power. It will then identify and define this change in the nature of military power by tracing the evolution of war and conflict in the past century. The thesis then trace the development of both US and Soviet foreign policy from the origin of the Cold War, through its various stages until the fall of the Berlin Wall. Through materials obtained from both US and Soviet archives, as well as interviews, this thesis will argue that this change in the nature of power was a central factor in altering the thinking of American and Soviet leaders at the time they brought drastic change to their foreign policies. Finally, this thesis will briefly look at the future role of military power as the world moves into the twenty-first century.
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The evolution of urban retail systems in Germany, 1848 to 1914 : an historical-geographical perspectiveColes, Timothy Edward January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Recapturing moral freedomMartin, Robin Lynn January 1993 (has links)
Abstract Not Available.
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