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Voices Against an Era: Alternative Voices, Cultural Heroics, and the Impact of He Yong and Zhang Chu on Chinese Rock MusicMoncur, Peter J 09 August 2023 (has links) (PDF)
The music of He Yong and Zhang Chu, two of the Three Heroes of Magic Stone, has played an integral part in the development of Chinese rock. Often relegated to footnotes in the music’s history, this thesis aims to prove their cultural and musical significance during the late-eighties and early-nineties of China’s Reform and Opening period. The term “voices against an era” was chosen to define He Yong and Zhang Chu’s role as rock musicians with alternative voices during this historical period, with an investigation of the term’s role in creating an alternate dialogue. To do this, I first define what it means to be a “voice of a generation” and “cultural hero” and the mythicizing of these terms as a method of crafting a dominant discourse supporting the illusion of economic reform and globalization. He Yong and Zhang Chu’s implication in the myth is explored through their record company’s promotion of them as “heroes.” I follow this up by establishing the artists as alternative voices utilizing the tools of “noise” and “poetry” to present an alternative depiction of China’s Reform and Opening. Chinese societal issues such as identity loss, alienation, the negative effects of modernity, nature, freedom, and social pressure are then identified and analyzed as central themes in six of the artists’ songs. Lastly, I examine how He Yong and Zhang Chu navigated the paradox of fame to influence subsequent generations of rock musicians and fans through their musical legacy. By following a holistic approach that includes analysis of historical and cultural contexts, biographical information, artist interviews, music, lyrics, promotional material, music videos, and scholarly articles, this study proposes that the role of these two rockers was vital in shaping Chinese popular music and providing alternative interpretations of Reform and Opening.
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The American Way: What Superman, Batman, Spider-Man, and the X-Men Reveal About AmericaDarowski, Joseph J. 25 July 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Comic book superheroes have become adopted into American popular culture, and yet few have considered why these characters resonate with Americans. The first comic book superhero premiered in 1938 when Superman appeared on the cover of the first issue of Action Comics. For almost seventy years his adventures and the adventures of other costumed heroes have been continually published. Batman soon joined Superman as a popular costumed crime-fighter, and the early 1960s saw another generation of superheroes created that would be embraced in American culture. Among this new group of heroes were Spider-Man and the X-Men, who have proved as popular as Superman and Batman. The never-ending narratives of comic book characters provide a unique opportunity to analyze how superheroes have evolved across the decades to remain relevant for new generations of Americans. Superman, Batman, Spider-Man, and the X-Men are the most popular heroes, not only in comic books, but in other media adaptations. An exploration of why these specific characters have such resonance with Americans will provide insights into American mindsets, ideologies, and philosophies. Furthermore, comic books are uniquely positioned to allow a new historicist reading, as the characters' adventures have been published on a monthly schedule for decades. A consideration of the alterations made in the narratives to reflect the time periods is inherently enlightening.
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Captain John Smith And American Identity: Evolutions Of Constructed Narratives And Myths In The 20th And 21st CenturiesCorbett, Joseph 01 January 2013 (has links)
Historical narratives and anecdotes concerning Captain John Smith have been told and retold throughout the entire history the United States of America, and they have proved to be sacred, influential, and contested elements in the construction of the individual, sectional, regional, and national identity of many. In this thesis, I first outline some of the history of how narratives and discourses surrounding Captain John Smith were directly connected with the identity of many Americans during the 18th and 19th century, especially Virginians and Southerners. Then I outline how these narratives and discourses from the 18th and 19th centuries have continued and evolved in the 20th and 21st centuries in American scholarship and popular culture. I demonstrate how Captain John Smith went from being used as a symbol for regional and sectional identity to a symbol for broader national American identity, and how he has anachronistically come to be considered an American. I then show how Captain John Smith has continued to be constructed, to a seemingly larger degree than previous centuries, as a hero of almost mythic proportions. Finally I demonstrate how this constructed American hero is used as a posterchild for various interest groups and ideologies in order to legitimize the places of certain discourses and behavior within constructed and contested American identities.
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Characterization through character design in competitive multiplayer games : A comparative analysis of League of Legends and ValorantAhlgren, Robin, Rizal, Dani-Alys January 2023 (has links)
League of Legends (Riot Games, 2009) and Valorant (Riot Games, 2020) are both team-based competitive multiplayer games that do not feature any form of story-based game mode, but both feature a large cast of fleshed-out playable characters, each with their own design, backstory, and set of abilities. This study focuses on comparing both games’ approaches to characterization to understand how they incorporate elements of characterization in theircharacter design. This was done with the hope of informing future developers of multiplayer hero games, as well as identifying similarities in their character design despite how different both games are. This study compared two sets of two characters, one from each game, which featured similarities with each other. These similarities served as this study’s starting point to analyze, and then compare both games’ approach to characterization. Many similarities were found between both games in their approach to characterization, despite their core gameplay differences. But it also found many differences, both gameplay-dependent, and dependent on other factors.
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Holding Out For A Female Hero: The Visual And Narrative Representation Of The Female FBI Agent In Hollywood Psychological Thrillers From 1991-2008Lafferty, Sarah 05 April 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Fault LinesSchnelle, Robert C., Jr. 11 October 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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The Warrior Gets Married: Constructing the Masculine Hero in Beowulf and Chr¿¿¿¿tien de Troyes’ Erec et EnideFritts, David C. 11 September 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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The Poet as Hero : A Study of the Clash Between the Hero and the First World War in British Trench Poetry, and Its Use in the Swedish School System Within the Subject of English. / Poeten som hjälte : En studie av konflikten mellan hjälten och det första världskriget i Brittisk skyttegravspoesi, och dess användning i det svenska skolsystemet inom ämnet Engelska.Olsson, Carl January 2018 (has links)
This thesis studies the clash between the hero and the First World War in the works of Rupert Brooke, Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen. It explores the impact on their poetry and attitude towards the concept of the hero as it applied to them as people and poets. The study shows that over prolonged contact with the horrors of the First World War, it is evident in both literary sources and their poetry that both Sassoon and Owen changed their attitudes negatively towards both the idea of heroes and heroism, as well as the War as a just and glorious cause. However, the myth of the hero was still a core belief of their society, and in order to not be branded cowards and discarded along with their warnings, they had to become heroes in the eyes of their society, to openly attack the concept and the war it fueled. This thesis then studies how and why First World War poetry and literature should be utilized within the subject of English in the Swedish School System, as a means to provide a multicultural and critical education.
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Major General Sir Henry Timson Lukin (1860-1925) : the making of a South African heroNortier, Erasmus Wentzel 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MMil (Security and Africa Studies. Military History)--University of Stellenbosch, 2005. / Henry Timson Lukin was born and educated in Britain. After completion of his schooling at the
Merchant Taylor’s School in 1875 he had hoped to enter the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, but
failed the entry examinations. However, seizing the moment of a war in South Africa, he left in
1879 for Natal, where he worked first as a road foreman, but soon, with the help of a cousin,
Lieutenant Jack Spurgin, he was commissioned into the 77th Regiment and under the command of
Major H.M. Bengough and saw service during the Anglo-Zulu War. Having distinguished himself in
the field in Zululand, Lukin was commissioned as a lieutenant in the Cape Mounted Riflemen
(CMR) and served with this outfit in the Basuto War (1881), the Langeberg campaign (1896-97)
and the South African War (1899-1902). During the South African War he received the
Distinguished Service Order (DSO) for the defence of Jammersbergdrift and played an important
role in capturing key rebel commando leaders, including Commandant Johannes Lötter and
Commandant Gideon Scheepers. After the war he received the Commander of the Order of St
Michael & St George (CMG) and was appointed as the Commandant General of the Cape Colonial
Forces. He played an important role in establishing the structures of the Union Defence Forces
(UDF) and was appointed as Inspector General of the Permanent Force in 1912. He influenced the
debate on colonial warfare with the writing of the maxim handbook and a training pamphlet,
Savage Warfare: Hints on Tactics to be adopted and Precautions to be taken and during the First
World War distinguished himself as commander of a force of the South African troops in German
South-West Africa (1914-1915) and as commander of the South African Brigade in Egypt (1916)
and in France (1916-17). He was promoted to Major General when he assumed the command the
9th Scottish Division in December 1916. In 1917 one of the highest honours was bestowed upon
him when he was knighted. The illness of his wife, Annie Marie (Lily) necessitated a transfer to
Britain, where he commanded the 64th Division until the end of the war. He retired from the military
shortly after the Armistice and returned with his wife to South Africa, where he remained active in a
variety of ex-servicemen’s organisations, including that of 1 South African Infantry Brigade. He was
also a guest speaker at various functions, including the unveiling of monuments and memorials,
and served on the Defence Commission of Enquiry (1924). Major General Sir Henry Timson Lukin
died after a full, varied and distinguished military career in December 1925. Lukin and the Brigade
had an enormous impact on the creation of a new South African identity during the First World War
and period immediately after and played an important role in the formation of a new South African
military organisation and culture.
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A Love Affair: Feminist Voice and Representation in the Romance Fiction NarrativeLoughridge, Anna L 01 January 2015 (has links)
I focus on the changing and now contemporary feminist conceptualization of romance fiction. Through the genre’s mass-market success and complicated history, a definition of ro·mance (genre) is conjured. By depicting a fantasy world for the female reader to escape to, feminist critics and romance academics have found the genre’s influence to be an effective one. In an analysis if popular romance fiction author, Emily Giffin, and her most recent novel The One & Only, I demonstrate what has now resulted in the modern romance and further, how the modern heroine is understood today.
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