Results 181 to 190 of about 551 (232)
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What’s Wrong with a Little Swinging? Indian Clubs as a Tool of Suppression and Rebellion in Post-Rebellion India

International Journal of the History of Sport, 2017
AbstractThough the practice of swinging weighted clubs for gymnastic exercise has a centuries long history in India, the latter half of the nineteenth century witnessed the exercise practice grow in political significance. In the years following the 1857 Indian Rebellion, both Hindu nationalists and British army officials undertook the practice with ...
Conor Heffernan
exaly   +2 more sources

The role of M.N. Tukhachevskii in the suppression of the Kronstadt Rebellion

Revolutionary Russia, 2004
Using new documentary sources, from Russian archives and from recently published collections, this article studies the Kronstadt Rebellion of March 1921 from a hitherto neglected angle – the role of Mikhail Tukhachevskii. Introductory sections chart Tukhachevskii’s origins and his career in the Russian Civil War, analysing the lessons he learned, his ...
exaly   +2 more sources

The Deployment of Ethnographic Sciences and Psychological Warfare During the Suppression of the Mau Mau Rebellion

Journal of Medical Humanities, 2013
This essay provides readers with a critical analysis of the ethnographic sciences and the psychological warfare used by the British and Kenyan colonial regimes during the suppression of the Mau Mau rebellion. In recent years, several survivors of several detention camps set up for Mau Mau suspects during the 1950s have brought cases in British courts ...
Hasian Marouf
exaly   +3 more sources

Transcending Shame Through Rebellion: The Modern Arab Woman, Sexual Suppression, and the Will to Break Free

2021
Shame has been often been argued as a culturally bound emotion, which can affect a country’s citizens to varying degrees. Arab societies are often regarded as being heteronormative, masculinist, and patriarchal. These cultures are themselves in turn often synonymous with shame narratives associated with the suppression of women and sexuality.
Shereen H Shaw   +2 more
exaly   +2 more sources

Suppressing Shays' Rebellion

Journal of Theoretical Politics, 1999
Under the Articles of Confederation, the American states frequently failed to pay their requisitions to the national government, sapping it of revenue. This paper explains the failure to raise revenue from the states by analyzing the system of requisitions in the context of Shays' Rebellion.
Michael J. G. Cain, Keith L. Dougherty
openaire   +1 more source

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