Results 61 to 70 of about 2,940 (249)

Working‐Class Muscles? Co‐Operative Gyms in Interwar Britain

open access: yesHistory, EarlyView.
Abstract The Health & Strength League's network of co‐operative gymnasiums constituted one of interwar Britain's most significant yet overlooked physical culture institutions, affiliating over 800 gyms across Britain and Ireland by 1939. Drawing on Health & Strength magazine's editorial content and reader contributions, this article argues that these ...
CONOR HEFFERNAN
wiley   +1 more source

The Imperial Propaganda with Focus on the Female Element in Portrait Art [PDF]

open access: yes, 2015
The thesis is focused on the imperial propaganda in sculpture, gems and coins. It focuses primarily on the importance of the female element of propaganda, therefore describes how the goddesses are compared to empresses and how it happens.
Mrázková, Eliška
core  

Spectacular Translucence: The Games in Glass

open access: yesTheoretical Roman Archaeology Journal, 2018
Glass cups bearing labeled images of charioteers and gladiators were popular between AD 50 and 80 and have been found throughout the empire’s northwestern quadrant, including Italy.
Kimberly Cassibry
doaj   +2 more sources

‘The Tragedy of a Small Nation’: Alexander Devine and British Perspectives on the Montenegrin Question, 1918–24

open access: yesHistory, EarlyView.
Abstract This article examines the pro‐Montenegrin political campaigns of Alexander Devine, a schoolmaster and journalist who became Montenegro's leading British advocate following its incorporation into the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes after the First World War.
ROSS CAMERON
wiley   +1 more source

The relationship between Ford, Kipling, Conan Doyle, Wells and British propaganda of the First World War

open access: yes, 2009
PhDThis thesis resituates the war-writing of Ford Madox Ford, Rudyard Kipling, Arthur Conan Doyle and H.G. Wells in relation to official British propaganda produced during the First World War.
Jain, Anurag
core  

DECOLONIZING CREATIVE GEOGRAPHIES OF ART BIENNIALS: A Study of Istanbul's Yeditepe Biennial through the Cultural Politics of Turkish Islamic Nationalism

open access: yesInternational Journal of Urban and Regional Research, EarlyView.
Abstract This article examines the Yeditepe Biennial—Turkey's first Islamic and traditional arts biennial—as a creative festival shaped by the socio‐political and spatial dynamics of Turkish‐Islamist nationalism. Counterposed against the Istanbul Biennial and the Western‐oriented secular cultural legacy of the Turkish Republic, the Yeditepe Biennial ...
Hulya Arik, Sabrien Amrov
wiley   +1 more source

“kai adousin ōdēn kainēn legontes...” (Ap 5, 9) Un canto de resistencia

open access: yesCuestiones Teológicas, 2017
El Apocalipsis de Juan plantea una clara teología política. En especial, Ap 5,9- 10 desarrolla una crítica contra la propaganda político-religiosa del Imperio romano.
Juan Sebastián Hernández Valencia
doaj  

Pseudonyms, Propaganda, and Prints: The Life and Political Caricatures of William Dent, 1782–931

open access: yesJournal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, EarlyView.
Abstract ‘Dent was probably an amateur and nothing is known of his life’, state Bryant and Heneage. Despite contributing to caricature's ‘golden age’, William Dent remains overlooked compared to contemporaries like James Gillray. Dent's extensive portfolio (1782–93) and rumoured role as a Pittite propagandist have not secured his place in the canon of ...
Callum D. Smith
wiley   +1 more source

Officers of the Imperial Japanese Army propaganda leaflet

open access: yes, 1944
A propaganda leaflet issued by the Allied Forces during World War II after the return of General Douglas MacArthur in 1944. The leaflets were probably airdropped to Japanese military officers on the Philippine Islands in October, 1944.
Allied Forces. South West Pacific Area. Psychological Warfare Branch
core  

Late Antique Allāh: Ancestral Arabian Religion and the Monotheistic Zeitgeist

open access: yesArabian Archaeology and Epigraphy, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT This essay addresses the ongoing scholarly tension between the monotheistic interpretations of late pre‐Islamic Arabian religion, pioneered by G. Hawting and P. Crone, and the traditional accounts of rampant Arabian polytheism found in later Islamic literary sources.
Ahmad Al‐Jallad, Hythem Sidky
wiley   +1 more source

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