Results 251 to 260 of about 1,845,057 (306)
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Dermatographism in popular culture
Clinics in Dermatology, 2022Dermatographism was first described by William Heberden (1710-1801) more than 250 years ago as a type of urticaria brought on by rubbing or scratching the skin. In 1859, William Gull (1816-1890) gave it the name factitious urticaria, distinguishing dermatographism from chronic urticaria, in which the skin lesions appear spontaneously.
Ariana Page, Russell +5 more
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Thatcherism and popular culture
Journal of European Popular Culture, 2017Abstract
Kallioniemi Kari, Mähkä Rami
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The Uses and Abuses of Popular Culture: Cultural Policy and Popular Culture
Loisir et Société / Society and Leisure, 1991Abstract This paper is concerned with a crisis in European cultural policy and the serious choices with which this crisis confronts us. Beginning with a brief overview of the history of cultural policy, it examines the way in which a particular definition of “culture” both promoted and was promoted by such a cultural policy.
Justin O'connor, Derek WYNNE
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Popular Culture: Why Is It Popular?
Loisir et Société / Society and Leisure, 1981ABSTRACTAlthough popular culture is a product of the economic market, its meaning and appeal cannot be explained simply as entrepreneurial manipulation. As a part of leisure, popular culture choices change as different sets of goals, associations, and role expectations are developed through the life course.
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Popular Culture and Critical Popularization
boundary 2, 1988According to the popular intelligence, the fundamental fact about real life is that it has probably ceased to exist. Not for everyone, obviously. But certainly for white, middle-class Americans: the people who went to college, or else want their kids to go there; the ones who subscribe to Time or Newsweek, and who have become popularly acquainted ...
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2002
This book is largely about graphical matters; the domain of alphabetically printed literary writing. However, I begin instead with the concept of vision. Vision, the faculty of sight, has long been used as a metaphor for its opposite, for seeing that which is not here. The seer, the visionary, is the traditional bearer of truths, or at least knowledges,
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This book is largely about graphical matters; the domain of alphabetically printed literary writing. However, I begin instead with the concept of vision. Vision, the faculty of sight, has long been used as a metaphor for its opposite, for seeing that which is not here. The seer, the visionary, is the traditional bearer of truths, or at least knowledges,
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Popular memory, popular culture
2015This book chapter traces the national and transnational popular memory of the Second World War through an examination of commemorations, war films and television representations since 1945. Case studies examined include Soviet and British film, German television and European commemoration of D Day.
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Popular Culture and the Popular Front
Reviews in American History, 1997In this encyclopedic study, Michael Denning recovers the left-wing culture of the 1930s from critics like Alfred Kazin and Irving Howe and historians like Warren Sussman, who described it as sentimental and shallow, as empty agitprop produced by fellow travelers misled into serving Stalin.
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