Results 251 to 260 of about 346,082 (310)
Ambivalent laughter : comic sketches in CCTV\u27s Spring festival eve gala = 曖昧的笑聲 : 中央電視台春節聯歡晚會的小品
LIU, Jin
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Society, 2010
Although the idea of a celebrity has been around for a long time, its mutation into an important cultural force is a relatively recent development. In recent decades the meaning of a celebrity has altered and is now often applied to those who are famous for being famous.
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Although the idea of a celebrity has been around for a long time, its mutation into an important cultural force is a relatively recent development. In recent decades the meaning of a celebrity has altered and is now often applied to those who are famous for being famous.
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Celebrating cultural democracy
2022This chapter contains two case studies which highlight best practice in supporting and celebrating cultural democracy and practical insights for arts programs with young people. The case studies include Propel Youth Arts WA (Western Australia), which is an arts-based youth advocacy organisation, and SWAN Youth Service (Ireland), which devises programs ...
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Celebrating cultural diversity
International Journal of Palliative Nursing, 2001Recognition and promotion of cultural diversity is a central theme in many areas of modern life: health care, sport, politics, religion, education, industry and society at large. Cultural diversity is no more than rhetoric, however, unless people understand and appreciate diversity so that every cultural group is able to participate and develop ...
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Celebrating the Culture of Science
Science, 2011There is an increasing worldwide consensus on the vital importance of Science for personal, social, economic, and political development. This has spurred many countries to increase their investments in science and technology. But funding research is not enough: Nations must also promote cultures that celebrate science and its values of reasoning ...
John, Durant, Alaa, Ibrahim
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Celebrating imperfection: sport, disability and celebrity culture
Celebrity Studies, 2012In recent years, discourses of celebrity surrounding sports stars have provided fruitful ground for critiquing the role of sport in late-capitalist culture. Seldom, however, has this critical gaze been directed at the Paralympic movement. Drawing on a critical anthropology of Paralympic sport, this paper argues that celebrity status is situated at the ...
P. David Howe, Andrew Parker
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2014
Abstract The Victorian period saw the power and mystique of ‘celebrity’ become an established part of cultural life. Authors were both subjects and objects of a celebrity culture that were equally evident in theatre, music, painting, fashion, and the sporting world.
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Abstract The Victorian period saw the power and mystique of ‘celebrity’ become an established part of cultural life. Authors were both subjects and objects of a celebrity culture that were equally evident in theatre, music, painting, fashion, and the sporting world.
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2018
The nineties was a decade in thrall to the tremendous cultural and commercial attractions of celebrity. If, in hindsight, the seventies seem forever marked by memories of the Winter of Discontent, and the eighties by the dominating presence of Margaret Thatcher, perhaps the signature cultural moment of the nineties was the extravagant national response
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The nineties was a decade in thrall to the tremendous cultural and commercial attractions of celebrity. If, in hindsight, the seventies seem forever marked by memories of the Winter of Discontent, and the eighties by the dominating presence of Margaret Thatcher, perhaps the signature cultural moment of the nineties was the extravagant national response
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Celebrity culture and materialism
Practice Nursing, 2012A materialistic celebrity culture appears to be one of the causes of declining female wellbeing. Edin Lakasing and Joanna Sargent discuss how health professionals can help reverse the decline
Edin Lakasing, Joanna E Sargent
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Celebrating Science as Culture
Science, 2008A researcher who has participated in several science festivals discusses their strengths and weaknesses as a means of improving public understanding of science.
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