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Indian art as dialogue the tricky transgressions of Bob Haozous /Morris, Traci L., January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Arizona, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 115-118).
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Music, politics and violence : a study of calypso and steelband from Trinidad, reggae from Jamaica and their impact on a multi-ethnic community in London in the late 20th centuryClarke, Claudia Lilian January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Androgyny, glamor, fetishism, and urbanity an analysis of Bob Fosse's choreography /Milovanovic, Dara. Sommer, Sally R. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Florida State University, 2003. / Advisor: Dr. Sally R. Sommer, Florida State University, School of Visual Arts and Dance, Department of Dance. Title and description from dissertation home page (viewed Sept. 24, 2003). Includes bibliographical references.
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Studium vlivu zkrmování luskovin na užitkovost prasatChyba, David January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Ověření nutriční hodnoty bobu obecnéhoGeršiová, Jana January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Dynamika růstu bobu v podmínkách různého stupně utužení půdy po zasetíBrychtová, Marie January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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Vliv zkrmování různých odrůd bobu na kvalitu masa brojlerůChalupová, Kateřina January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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I've Been Reading About Disaster LatelyMcMurtray, Lisa Catherine 12 May 2012 (has links)
I’ve Been Reading About Disaster Lately is a collection of original poetry which focuses on how identity and agency are shaped through personal and public circumstance, through the intersection of the human and animal, and through the development of language and personal mythology. This collection is preceeded by a critical introduction which analyzes how poets mediate public and private disaster. The introduction specifially focuses on the eight poems written by Bob Hicok in the aftermath of the Virginia Tech Shooting, and examines how language, either in its presence or absence, functions to resolve the disconnect between pre-disaster and post-disaster.
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Tradition and the individual talents : Dylan, Eliot, and DeLilloTremel, Justin Robert 04 January 2013 (has links)
Drawing from a variety of multimedia and archival materials, my dissertation involves a three-figure examination of Bob Dylan, T.S. Eliot, and Don DeLillo. These three figures are linked, (as some other critics have noted) through scattered intertextual allusions. But I argue that a more telling correlation exists in the manner in which all three managed to rise to the apex of their respective fields. I examine this phenomenon and in so doing, my project seeks out a composite theoretical model, better suited to explain the multiform artistry of Dylan and to account for the related transformative cultural navigation of Eliot and DeLillo at key points their careers.
My dissertation sheds light on these authors drawing on Bourdieu’s model of “the field of cultural production” and Bolter and Grusin’s concept of “remediation:” how print, photography film, and other media appropriate, influence, and reconstitute each other. I reconfigure their concept to focus on individual agency and situate these three as consummate remediators of their own and each other’s work, their individual legacies, and ultimately the very “field of cultural production” itself.
This reading recasts our understanding of each author: I position Dylan as a major contemporary literary figure; Eliot as a consummate public performer and recording artist; and DeLillo as a visionary cultural remixer. This analysis provides fresh perspectives on the idea of authorship, canonicity and textuality, as it suggests that a vigorous literary analysis requires us to move beyond a specific medium associated with an author toward a dynamic field of multimodal intertextuality. Literary research and pedagogy in the media-saturated 21st century classroom demand a canon unbound. Such a canon, I argue, should include figures like Dylan, as it should also provoke a fuller, more vital engagement with “the literary tradition” within which we place figures like Eliot and DeLillo. My work, situated at the crossroads between American literature, cultural studies, and the emerging field of the digital humanities, thus produces a more nuanced understanding of the authors in question, the canonical heritage to which they contribute, and the scholarly methods by which we appraise and teach their works. / text
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Against the Manufacture of Washing Machines: Maoist Materialist Dialectics, Poststructuralist Feminism and the Liberation from MetaphysicsKnehans, Greg January 2007 (has links)
This dissertation attempts to contribute to the literature on the transformation of gender relations and patriarchy by creating a discursive nexus between two seemingly incompatible paradigms: materialist dialectics as interpreted by Mao Tsetung and poststructuralist feminism. Despite the important differences between the two traditions, it argues that they have important ontological similarities. This creates the potential for a fecund cross-fertilization, a potential which has been largely unrecognized by scholars. This dissertation argues that Mao's ontology of ceaseless transformation arising from universal and concrete contradictions provides an essential foundation for any progressive praxis of social transformation. It examines aspects of how the maoist approach to materialist dialectics was put into practice in revolutionary China, along with a summary of some of the recent contributions to this paradigm by Bob Avakian. It examines the historical experience of transforming patriarchal relations and ideas under Mao and argues that, though there were real shortcomings, the historical experience of revolutionary China remains an essential foundation and contribution to transforming patriarchal gender relations and identities. Focusing on the writings of Judith Butler, it discusses the contributions of poststructuralist feminist, particularly its thorough critique of essentialism and the deconstruction of the categories and conceptual foundations of feminism. Butler's emphasis on the cultural production of gender and sex, along with the need to destabilize the regulatory functions and frameworks which police them, are invaluable in developing the ability of maoist materialist dialectics to transform gender relations. The dissertation includes a discussion of sexuality, violence and democracy as way of pointing towards a thoroughly materialist and dialectical method and approach which can move beyond the anchors of metaphysics while embracing thinking from a wide spectrum, including Queer theory. The dissertation concludes with a brief discussion on how such abstract theoretical concerns are relevant to current political realities.
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