Spelling suggestions: "subject:"multionational characteristics""
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Branding "nation brand"Outhavong, Sounthaly. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of Texas at Austin, 2007. / Adviser: Neal M. Burns. Includes bibliographical references.
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A comparative study of conformism in Japan and the United StatesYoshida, Yoshinori January 1976 (has links)
Photocopy of transcript. / Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1976. / Bibliography: leaves 313-326. / Microfiche. / vi, 326 leaves
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The stimulation-seeking motive in Germans and AmericansMueller, Carol Anne Bloomquist. January 1977 (has links)
Thesis--Wisconsin. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 47-50).
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Some psychological differences between Arabs and Englishmen relevant to Arab-English encountersCollett, Peter January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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A theology of nationalityLlywelyn, Dorian January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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The survival of Celtic identities from the eighteenth century to the present dayBrancaz, Lauren Anne-Killian January 2014 (has links)
How have the Scots, Irish, Welsh, Cornish, Manx and Bretons built and maintained their Celtic identities over the last three centuries? The Celtic revivals which Scotland, Ireland, Brittany and Wales started experiencing in the eighteenth century were not confined to these regions. They were supported by London and Paris, where expatriate Celts had settled. A comparison of the revivals demonstrates that the search for a distinct national voice encouraged the Welsh and Bretons, and subsequently the Scots, Irish, Manx and Cornish, to form a pan-Celtic union consolidated by three major Celtic congresses. Since the revivals, the Celtic regions have come closer together thanks to the ongoing influence of the Celtic languages, whose revitalisation has enabled the Celtic cultures to overcome attacks meant to eradicate them. Once regarded as backward and inadequate for economic prosperity, the Celtic tongues have adapted to modernity through the passage to writing and print, and through their extension to new fields. As a bridge between past and present, they form the memory of modern Celticism, annually reawakened during a festival like Pan Celtic. Comparatively, Galicia has fused memory and imagination together because this region no longer speaks any Celtic language. The Celticity Galicia began imagining in the mid-nineteenth century has given birth to Galician nationalism, embodied within an autonomous community. Similarly, the six Celtic regions have invented a Celtic ethnicity for themselves, since there is no continuity between the ancient and the modern Celts. The latter's ethnogenesis has developed into nationalisms that strengthen their distinctiveness from their dominant neighbours. Nationalism has exported Celticism beyond the geographical boundaries of the Celtic regions. The construction of Celtic Scottishness, a case study, results from a partnership between Scotland, the initiator of tartans, clan gatherings and Scottish Gaelic, and North America, which has made these aspects internationally popular. Diasporic versions of Scottish Celtic culture have been introduced into the homeland, so that original and diasporic Celtic Scottishness have blended together. The diaspora Celts give Celtic identities new forms of expression.
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Desperately seeking a national identity : an examination of narrative in the Heartland television series and its influence in defining New ZealandersSmith, Philippa Unknown Date (has links)
Television permeates our daily lives. Ninety seven per cent of New Zealand households have a television set and the average watching time is estimated at 20 hours per week (Grimes and Tyndall, 1999). This exposure to television has been recognised as an important factor in the way we see and identify ourselves as a nation - how we seek to find signs and symbols that construct a shared identity and culture that make us New Zealanders and distinguish us from other nations.Using narrative theory combined with critical discourse analysis this thesis aims to show that, even in factual programmes, stories can be constructed that convey messages of nationhood and belonging, creating and recreating a national identity that present New Zealanders in a positive way and seek to bind them as a nation.Three episodes of the television series Heartland, a popular documentary in the mid-1990s that explored the people and lifestyles in different locations around New Zealand, were selected for analysis focusing on narrative structure, the social actors and the role of the narrator. Critical discourse analysis was employed to look at the connection between language, image and text, and discursive practices as well as the relationship the text has in a socio-cultural context.The analysis found that the programmes followed a similar narrative structure to that of a fictional story involving changes in states of equilibrium that created a sense of concern or anxiety associated with what it means to be a New Zealander. However the subsequent resolution of these anxieties combined with the entertaining role of the programme presenter Gary McCormick and the involvement of social actors, resulted in a version of New Zealand's national identity being represented as a reality through a positive discourse of the population working towards a socially and culturally harmonious society.
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Das Autostereotyp des Schweizers erhoben bei jungen Arbeitern, Studenten und Bauern.Sigg, Rolf. January 1970 (has links)
Originally presented as the author's thesis, Zürich. / Bibliography: p. 318-324.
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The Australian legendWard, Russel Braddock. Hirst, J. B. January 1900 (has links)
A revision of the author's thesis, Australian National University. / DatabaseACLS Humanities E-Book. With a new introduction by John Hirst. Includes bibliography (p. 262-275) and index.
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A national front? : masculinity and national identity in the writing of Hanif Kureishi /Nelms, Emma. January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M. Phil)--University of Queensland, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references.
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