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Over the rainbow : the Wizard of Oz as a secular mythNathanson, Paul, 1947- January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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The democratic order as a supra-civilization : novus ordo seclorumDuncan, Phillip Brooks 01 October 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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‘Romanizing’ Asia: the impact of Roman imperium on the administrative and monetary systems of the Provincia Asia (133 BC – AD 96)Carbone, Lucia Francesca January 2016 (has links)
The impact of Roman power on the pre-existing administrative and economic systems of the conquered provinces has been a significant issue of scholarly debate for decades. In the last two decades attention has shifted from the idea of Romanization as a top-down phenomenon to a much more articulated process, in which the element of cultural interaction between the conquering power and the conquered populations was central and led to the creation of locally hybrid cultural forms.
This dissertation analyzes the ways in which local cultures and identities interacted with Roman ones in the years between Attalus III’s testament and the end of the Flavian age. I chose to focus my research on these centuries as they include four key moments for the Provincia Asia: 1) the moment of its institution in 129/6 BC with the related issues due to Aristonicus’ rebellion and the necessity of establishing effective provincial administrative and economic structures; 2) the years between the Mithridatic wars and Caesar, when the province spiraled into debt and the Asian monetary system had to adapt to the extra taxation requested by Sulla and then to the change in the role of the societates publicanorum, who were deprived of the farming of the decuma by Caesar; 3) the years of the Civil War between Antony and Octavian and its aftermath, which gave increasing importance to the conventus and to the introduction of Roman currency into the province, both in the circulating monetary pool and as an account unit; 4) the post-Augustan age, which saw an increasing standardization in the ‘local’ monetary systems of the province, with respect to both silver and bronze coinage, and the final ‘victory’ of the conventus over the pre-existing administrative structures, as shown by the fact that even municipal taxation and local cults were by then organized according to the conventus system.
The model of ‘middle-ground imperialism’ is useful for understanding the process of progressive standardization of Asian administrative structures and monetary system, not as a top-down process but rather as a bilateral interaction between Roman and local cultures, as I have shown in the case of the progressive standardization of Asian provincial administrative structures (Chapters 1 and 2) and monetary systems (Chapters 3, 4, 5, 6).
According to this research the transformative age for the Romanization of the Provincia Asia was not the Augustan Age, but the Second Triumviral Age.
The main heuristic tools for drafting the picture of the administrative and economic life of Provincia Asia are a database of Asian civic issues (both silver and bronze) between 133 BC and AD 96 that I have constructed out of the data in BMC, SNG Copenhagen and SNG Deutschlands – van Aulock (for pre-Antonian issues) and in RPC I-II (from Mark Antony up to the Flavians), and three epigraphic databases that include the epigraphic attestations of denarii, assaria and drachmae in the province of Asia between the 2nd century BC and the 2nd century AD, for a total of 372 inscriptions. All these databases are included here as Appendices (I – X).
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Signs of the unself : a semiotic analysis of "clone" as a North American cultural constructMahnke, Gregory Neil. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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Printing culture in rural North ChinaFlath, James A. 11 1900 (has links)
This manuscript examines the cultural history of rural North China, as seen through
the production, circulation, content and interpretation of graphic wood-block prints, known
as nianhua. The spatial focus is on a fixed set of print producing villages on the North China
plain. The temporal focus encompasses the late 1800s through the early 1960s. In examining
how nianhua were produced and distributed in late 19th and early 20th century North China,
I show that the village print industry was prescriptive in organization. This organization was
a basic factor in delimiting form and iconography in print, since it imposed limits on the free
appropriation of texts, and directed the way in which they were read. Having accounted for
these factors, I consider how perceptions of the social, physical and ethical world were put
into print, and how print in turn configured perceptions of the world. Since print is thus
socially derived, print and its interpretation are considered in terms of responses to social
change, and the capacity of print to effect change. The environment in which village print is
structured is variously considered to be formed by the following: the physical space of the
home; late-imperial narrative structures (and their residual perpetuation beyond the decline of
the political regime); narrative structures produced through technological change and
expanded translocal experience; and state-centred reform beginning in the Republican era,
and reaching its conclusion under communism. I conclude that narratives which began as
superscriptive and authoritative structures, were appropriated and re-structured by the
specific conditions of the production, distribution, and display of print in the village.
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Signs of the unself : a semiotic analysis of "clone" as a North American cultural constructMahnke, Gregory Neil. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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L'individualisme, de la modernité à la post-modernité : contribution à une théorie de l'intersubjectivitéBonny, Yves January 1989 (has links)
This work attempts to examine the relevance of the conceptual opposition between modernity and postmodernity on the basis of a typological analysis of the modes of subjectivity and intersubjectivity which are implicated in the integration and the reproduction of a given form of society. We first show that traditional societies rest on concrete and particular modes of personal identity and of mutual recognition, which are integrated together within a common culture, whereas modern societies rest on an abstraction and universalization of forms societally legitimized of subjective identity and of intersubjective recognition. These we propose to designate by the concept of individualism. After presenting the main stages in the construction of modern individualism, we attempt to illuminate some of the implications, but also some of the aporias, that the modern conception of subjectivity and intersubjectivity presents. In the final part of this work, we seek to establish the validity of the notion of postmodernity to define contemporary society. We try to show that the universalist type of individualism, which characterizes modern society and provides its identity, gradually gives way to a "singularist" type of individualism. This latter form of individualism attests to a crisis of personal identity and is associated with the progressive dissolution of any collective identity, that is, of any a a priori intersubjectivity.
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Technology in the late twentieth century : humanism versus technocracy : a philosophical inquiry /Handler, Peter Moss. January 1983 (has links)
Thesis (M.F.A.)--Rochester Institute of Technology, 1983. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 83-84).
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Nietzsche et l'antiquite. Essai sur un idéal de civilisation.Nüesch, Elsa. January 1925 (has links)
Thèse--Faculté des lettres de l'Université de Neuchâtel. / "Ouvrages consultés": p. 427-434. Bibliographical foot-notes.
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Broadacre City : American fable and technological society /Shaw, William R. January 2009 (has links)
Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 109-114). Also available online in Scholars' Bank.
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