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Der geistige Gehalt im Britischen Imperialismus Beitrag zur Kulturkunde Englands im XX. Jahrhundet.Kleinschmit von Lengefeld, January 1928 (has links)
Habilitationsschrift--Marburg. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Communing with the gods body building, masculinity, and U.S. imperialism, 1875-1900 /Shukalo, Alice Marie, Davis, Janet M. January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2005. / Supervisor: Janet M. Davis. Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Der nationale gedanke und die kaiseridee in der historischen literatur Deutschlands zur zeit kaiser Ludwigs des Bayern T.I, kap. 2: die äusserungen des nationalgefühls in der historischen literatur Ober-Deutschlands und Böhmens ...Lucas, Paul Max Richard, January 1910 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Breslau. / Lebenslauf.
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Karl Kautsky's theories of imperialismPeterson, Brian Lee, January 1965 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1965. / eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Bibliography: l. [45]-46.
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Spiritual roots, ideology, and practices of Italian impero in East AfricaParroni, Albert, January 1967 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1967. / eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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Thinking imperially the policy of The times toward British expansion in Africa, 1884-1894.McCraw, Susan Morehead, January 1970 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1970. / eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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Beautiful Empire: Race, Gender, and the Asian/American Femme on U.S. Network TelevisionSeid, Danielle 06 September 2017 (has links)
Since the earliest days of broadcast television in the 1950s, network television has maintained a keen fascination with Asian/American women, who implicitly helped secure the boundaries of white women’s “empire of the home.” This dissertation inquires into when and how Asian/American women have been represented on U.S. network television. Bringing together questions and analyses of beauty, race, and gender to better understand how Asian/American femininity has been negotiated within the conventions of network television, I argue that the figure I call the Asian/American femme—suspended between feminine subject and feminized object—appeared on network television to mediate and obscure moments of U.S. national and imperial crisis.
In addition to analyses of specific programs and network television texts, this dissertation examines the racialized and gendered mistreatment that Asian/American performers have experienced working within the television industry. By combining textual analysis with analysis of industrial practices and performers’ star-texts, I work to understand how network television has imagined Asian/American women’s gender and sexual debts to the nation, as well as how key Asian/American performers, through their own feminine labor, enact the “resolution” of Asian/American women’s tenuous status in the nation. Far from advancing in a linear progression from stereotypical to more sensitive and complex representations, the Asian/American femme on U.S. network television, I argue, instead demonstrates how television, as a social and racial technology, accommodates shifting racial, gender, and sexual discourses in U.S. dominant culture. / 10000-01-01
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Gigante pela própria natureza: as raízes da projeção continental brasileira e seus paradoxosJesus, Samuel de [UNESP] 22 June 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-11T19:35:18Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0
Previous issue date: 2012-06-22Bitstream added on 2014-06-13T20:07:03Z : No. of bitstreams: 1
jesus_s_dr_arafcl.pdf: 1624564 bytes, checksum: 3cb0db8070847b2865475403e9186d37 (MD5) / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) / A presente pesquisa remonta a construção do mito brasileiro, o gigante pela própria natureza. Essa ideologia se origina a partir da fusão de dois mitos, o do bandeirante e o do indianismo. Buscamos paralelos entre o Brasil e a construção das ideologias estadunidenses tais como o destino manifesto e o mito da fronteira. No caso brasileiro, os ideais de bravura e pureza, assim como os laços criados entre os europeus e o brasileiro original, o índio. A visão dos brasileiros sobre si mesmos como membros de um país destinado à grandeza, se refletirá em sua organização social e política (interna e externa). O grande paradoxo da projeção continental brasileira reside no fato de que no plano externo o país busca a cooperação e integração com os outros países sul-americanos e no plano interno adota projetos, planos e estratégias que fomentam as desconfianças entre os países da Comunidade Sul Americana / This research goes back to building the Brazilian myth, the giant by nature. This ideology originates from the fusion of two myths, the pioneer and the Indian. We seek parallels between Brazil and the construction of ideologies such as the U.S. manifest destiny and the myth of the frontier. In Brazil, the ideals of bravery and purity as well as the ties created between the original Brazilian and European, the Indian. The vision of Brazilians on themselves as a nation destined for greatness is reflected in its social and political organization (internal and external). The great paradox of the Brazilian continental projection lies in the fact that externally it seeks cooperation and integration in the internal adopts projects, plans and strategies that foster mistrust between the countries of South America
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Prophecies of Palestine: Geology and Intimate Knowledge of the SubterraneanAssali, Hadeel January 2021 (has links)
This dissertation examines the narratives deployed to produce space(s) and how they become imbued with the authority to do so. The narratives-as-knowledge considered here are grounded in a specific place: the Mediterranean Basin, within which the site of analysis, Palestine, sits. How, in this particular place, has the earth been read and translated into different narratives of the past and the present, how does one gain the authority to do so, and how does this authority enable prophesizing the future? I argue for the importance of understanding the foundations of the earth sciences, namely geology, which remains steeped in colonial and capitalist roots and the ideological logics of extractivism as opposed to mutuality.
Geology governs much of our understandings of the earth, space, and time. Archival research reveals that in Palestine, Biblical and geological narratives emerged concomitantly; both read the history of earth and mankind through its translation of the strata of the underground, which in turn granted the authority to prophesize the future. The local, intimate knowledge of the land, and thus the narratives of the land, are in contest in colonial contexts – colonial knowledge depends on and exploits local knowledge. The development of the modern-nation state enfolds the holders of this knowledge within its institutions as it seeks to make nature legible for extraction. In settler-states, however, the holders of intimate knowledge are excluded from the state.
This, I argue, can help us understand the impasse between Gaza’s tunnel diggers and the Israeli military and offers us a case study of the potential of subterranean knowledge to rethink the Earth Sciences and their colonial capitalist paradigms. Place matters, and I focus on the dueling narratives in Gaza that reproduce it. Through a combined methodology of historical research and ethnography with the local population, I first argue Gaza should be unmapped from “the Gaza Strip,” and counter-mapped (through history and ethnography) as Southern Palestine. After redefining the geography of Gaza, I focus in on daily life on the surface of a vibrant Gaza filled with unexpected relations. The dissonance of mainstream humanitarian discourse on Gaza is shorn of historical context of colonialism and prophesizes certain death, whereas the anti-colonial narrative of local resistance promises a liberated future. I then move underground to the tunnels of Gaza, where smuggling and the logics of capital accumulation – which per local analysts had only the certainty of social deterioration – butt up against the underground resistance’s liberatory discourse and reality on the ground. I detail how the “purity” of resistance and its intimate knowledge is contained and captured in the different nation-states dividing the region of southern Palestine, namely Israel and Egypt and the quasi-state status in Palestine – but not entirely.
Back above ground, social deterioration and state violence is mediated through conspiracy theories prophesizing an uncertain future for Gaza, namely the Deal of the Century that threatens to redraw the map of Gaza. Meanwhile, Egypt and Israel continue to deploy local knowledge for extractive industries. However, I argue, something fugitive remains that cannot be contained even by their powerful militaries. The dominant mainstream narratives of humanitarianism, climate catastrophe, the Deal of the Century, and so on only lead to catastrophe, whereas looking to local, intimate knowledge that is fugitive from containment or erasure offer a different reading of and relationship with the land and hence different, even liberatory possibilities for the future. Following assertions that we are a storytelling species and should re-write our origin stories and hence our prophecies, I conclude with a reflection on different subterranean poetics and land-human-animal relations to imagine what a critical geology might look like as a contribution toward new, all-inclusive theories of earth.
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Delineating Dominion: Cartography and the Conception, Conquest and Control of Eastern Africa, 1844-1914Clemm, Robert H. 16 August 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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