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The status of Tibet in the diplomacy of China, Britain, the United States and India, 1911-1959 / Joseph Askew.Askew, Joseph Benjamin January 2002 (has links)
"June 2002" / Bibliography: leaves 229-270. / ix, 270 leaves ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / This thesis examines the changes in diplomacy of China, the West, Tibet and India from 1911 to 1951, while Tibet functioned as an independent country, and during 1951 to 1959 while under Chinese control. Tibet maintained its own currency, government, armed forces and way of life until 1959. The thesis also examines the cultural shifts in the political, social and military spheres in these countries. It assumes that the general world trend in political life has been towards increasingly intolerant and extreme politics. If Tibet remains part of China with little chance of resuming independence, it is because the Chinese government and people were quicker to adopt radical Western philosophies than the Tibetans were. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of History, 2002
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Site ORBE2 : an archaeological analysis of a construction disturbed siteCromwell, Robert J. 23 May 1996 (has links)
This thesis describes investigations of archaeological materials recovered from Site
ORBE2, an early-twentieth century historic site in Corvallis, OR. The archaeological
materials were found only after construction workers had excavated trenches underneath
the still-standing structure on the site in order to install a new foundation. Over 1500
artifacts were recovered from back-dirt piles which had been left surrounding the structure
from the construction worker's excavations. The analysis of the artifacts contributes to the
field of archaeology in four specific ways: 1) it performs an archaeological analysis on an
early-twentieth century Euro-American site, an era upon which few previous investigations
have been done. 2) it develops a history of the site, 3) it combines the results of the history
and the analysis of the archaeological data from functional and chronological perspectives,
determining possible past life-style information on these residents, and 4) it exhibits the
utility of performing an archaeological analysis on a site where the archaeological materials
were recovered from an urban renewal/construction zone, and has provenience limited to a
lot or site association. / Graduation date: 1997
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Jews in Leipzig: nationality and community in the 20th centuryWillingham, Robert Allen 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Pursuing celebrity, ensuing masculinity: Morris Ernst, obscenity, and the search for recognitionSilverman, Joel Matthew 28 August 2008 (has links)
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Corporate fictions: film adaptation and authorship in the classical Hollywood eraEdwards, Kyle D. 29 August 2008 (has links)
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All work and no play?: labor, literature and industrial modernity on the Weimar left / Labor, literature and industrial modernity on the Weimar leftKley, Martin, 1975- 29 August 2008 (has links)
My dissertation, entitled "All Work and no Play? Labor, Literature and Industrial Modernity," analyzes writing about work that was mostly published in communist and anarchist newspapers during the Weimar Republic. Discussing texts that have been almost fully neglected, my approach departs from existing scholarship on Weimar in two significant ways: First, I analyze these texts in the context of the period's dominant theories, practices, psychologies, and utopian ideas concerning labor. Due to the proximity of artistic and industrial 'production' particularly in the minds and practices of Weimar communists, I consider these literary treatments of work also within the framework of literary and artistic meta-discourses during the Weimar Republic (e.g. Expressionism, New Objectivity, and Productivism). Second, investigating such controversial issues as industrialization, the division of labor, technology, progress, etc., my dissertation leads to a transnational (hi)story in which Weimar Germany can be viewed in the larger context of American imports such as Taylorism and Fordism, their Soviet variants, and pre-industrial counter-models. Chapters One and Two scrutinize communist discourse on work, with Chapter One focusing on the situation in Germany (especially the rationalization drive sweeping the Weimar Republic after 1924 and its literary representations in the communist newspaper Die rote Fahne) and Chapter Two discussing the complex cross-fertilization between German and Soviet communist politics and culture (Egon Erwin Kisch, Sergei Tretiakov, et al.). In these two chapters, I put forth a critique of dominant Marxism-Leninism at the time. Its fetishization of labor and modernization can be found in the texts I discuss (although in highly contradictory terms), and was at the core of the worker-authors' self-understanding as "engineers" of socialism. Chapters Three and Four present the challenge to communism's labor theories and artistic models that arises from various anarchist and syndicalist factions at the time -- groups I summarily call 'anti-authoritarian socialism.' Proposing a veritable exodus from industrial modernity in texts published in Fritz Kater's Der Syndikalist and Franz Pfemfert's Die Aktion, anti-authoritarian socialists ventured to mostly pre-industrial settings both within Germany (e.g. in the case of Heinrich Vogeler's Barkenhoff commune) and Mexico (in this case, through the work of B. Traven). / text
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Nazi "chic"? : Fashioning women in the Third ReichGuenther, Irene 14 March 2011 (has links)
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Looking in/looking out : the intersection of race, subjectivity, and feelings in 1950s and 1960s U.S. photographyDuganne, Erina Deirdre 02 August 2011 (has links)
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Liang Sicheng, 1901-1972Ng, Wing-fai, 吳永輝. January 1991 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chinese Historical Studies / Master / Master of Arts
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The politics of non-assimilation : three generations of Eastern European Jews in the United States in the twentieth centuryVerbeeten, David Randall January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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