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Chance encounters: The construction of meaning through the process of assemblage in the boxes of Joseph Cornell and contemporary jewellery of Thomas MannFenn, Julia Geraldine 31 October 2006 (has links)
Student Number : 9406610A -
MA(FA) dissertation -
School of Fine Art -
Faculty of Arts / This thesis is a study of the box constructions of New York artist Joseph Cornell from the
early 1930s to the late 1960s, and the influence of his work on that of contemporary
American jeweller Thomas Mann, as well as my own artistic production. The key areas
of focus are the process of assemblage and the implications of the box format, with the
following themes being explored: miniature space and time; preciousness; fetishism and
voyeurism. These are followed through into the section on my own work, where the
additional subjects of the history of collecting, automata and the stop-frame animation
of filmmaker Jan Švankmajer are discussed. The conclusion that I reach is about the
potential power residing in found objects, which form the basis of Cornell’s, Mann’s and
my own work.
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Role OSS ve Vietnamu během druhé světové války / The OSS in Vietnam during the Second World WarDo, Phuong Thuy January 2020 (has links)
The United States engagement in Vietnam began during the Second World War. With military bases established in China, the U.S. took part in fighting the Japanese troops in the Pacific theatre. When France surrendered to Nazi Germany in 1940, Japan would take over the French Indochina and the war would spread to Vietnam as well. In order to collect intelligence on Japanese targets, the Americans needed to operate secret services on the ground. After the Japanese coup de main in 1945, they would eventually partner with Ho Chi Minh and his organization Viet Minh. The Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the wartime predecessor of the CIA, provided intelligence training and equipment, while the Viet Minh would assist with valuable information on Japanese troops. To some extent, the OSS helped Ho Chi Minh and Viet Minh accede to power in Vietnam after the war.
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