Spelling suggestions: "subject:"file"" "subject:"pile""
1 |
Rethinking Everyday Public Spaces: Mapping the Informal Markets in MumbaiKadoo, Gargi R. 09 November 2017 (has links)
No description available.
|
2 |
Erotik, trauman och rädslor : En folkloristisk intervjustudie om sägentraditionen bland bosnier i Sverige / Erotica, trauma and fears : A folkloristic interview study about the legend tradition among Bosnians in SwedenTurcinovic, Ajdin January 2020 (has links)
Different cultures have legends which affect the people and societies in which these legends are traded. Most legends are ecotypified, but some legends can survive even when those who tell them move. The aim of this study is to identify some characteristic features of the legend tradition within the Bosnian diaspora in Sweden, and to identify which type of legends that live on in the Swedish environment. The study is conducted as an interview study and the results analyzed with a hermeneutic approach. The study identifies five different types of legends that are categorized into three different categories: erotic, trauma and fear. The results show a fear among the respondents that if the legends disappear, a loss of part of their Bosnian identity will follow. The conclusion show that the category of fear lives on in the Bosnian diaspora, whilst legends building on trauma and eroticism are at risk of disappearing in a Swedish environment.
|
3 |
The Value of Attending University: An Analysis on the Novels of Evelyn Waugh and their AdaptationsMolineux, Evan J 01 January 2016 (has links)
An analysis on Evelyn Waugh's novels: Brideshead Revisited, Decline and Fall, and Vile Bodies as well as their film and television adaptations. The paper relates all of these works to Waugh's idea that the true value and reason why students should attend university is not because their degree will earn them a massive salary, but because it allows for another four years of sequestered development away from adult society. Waugh stated that the true value of his time as an undergraduate at Oxford was because it provided him with the opportunity to drink, throw parties, discover art, etc...which therefore gave him an appropriate amount of time to grow up gradually. All of these novels, films, and television series provide substantial evidence as to why Waugh's point was correct and is still valid.
|
Page generated in 0.0235 seconds