Showing 161 - 180 results of 192 for search '"subversion"', query time: 0.04s Refine Results
  1. 161

    La propagande arabe anglaise vers le Maghreb pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale (1939-1943) by Fayçal Cherif

    Published 2006-09-01
    “…This article examines the developing of British Arabic propaganda and seeks to measure its degree of success or failure in the face of other subversive propaganda particularly from Germany and Italy and especially its impacts on the North African populations from 1939 till May 1943.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  2. 162

    The Forgotten : tentative de réappropriation aborigène de l’histoire australienne by Virginie BERNARD

    Published 2012-12-01
    “…Nevertheless, collective forgetting cannot permanently stifle subversive voices. In recent decades, many historians and anthropologists have dedicated their research to such repressed histories, provoking virulent reactions among conservative scholars and politicians opposed to a rewriting of history which questions the Australian national narrative and identity. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  3. 163

    Anti-corruption Law and Systemic Corruption: The Role of Direct Responses by Kevin E. Davis

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…This analysis is based on the premise that corruption becomes systemic when it is widespread, persistent, subversive, structural, or normalized. There are three general ways in which law enforcement agencies might respond to these forms of corruption: an enhanced effort (“big push enforcement”), get more agencies involved (“institutional multiplicity”), and win over the general public by confront powerful actors using tactics such as communication strategies (“political engagement”). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  4. 164

    Radical orthodoxy and protestantism today: John Milbank in conversation by J. Milbank

    Published 2017-11-01
    “…“Telling a different story” is then crucial to any genuinely subversive theological proposal. The majority of the stories I shall tell are based on scholarly research on RO, much thereof generally accepted by experts, if not always well disseminated. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  5. 165

    L’Art du détour selon Shakespeare : les déviations de Troilus and Cressida, d’Othello et de The Tempest by Sophie Alatorre

    Published 2008-03-01
    “…Oblique strategies are thus used by the playwright to generate extra-ordinary emotions: weaving a dramatic web to ensnare the spectators, Shakespeare creates a subversive art which fascinates precisely because of its refusal to follow well-traced, ordinary paths. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 166

    Anton de Kom, historiographe. La construction d’un passé national pour les esclaves du Surinam by Kim Andringa

    Published 2014-09-01
    “…It looks into the methods used by Anton de Kom to reclaim the colonial archive, how he distorts its discourse through a subversive use of citations, and brings about what Geert Oostindie has called an “ideological overthrow” of colonial literature. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  7. 167

    Normative Ideology, Transgressive Aesthetics: Depicting and Exploring the Urban Underworld in Oliver Twist (1838), Twist (2003) and Boy Called Twist (2004) by Clémence Folléa

    Published 2014-06-01
    “…Twist and Boy Called Twist both respond to the didactic ideology of Oliver Twist and make the most of the novel’s subversive potential. In the end, these two films deploy many latent aspects of the text, thus redefining the terms in which we read Oliver Twist. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  8. 168

    ASIAN ENGLISH LITERATURE'S MIDTERM EXAMINATION MATERNAL INSTINCT DEPICTED IN VERENATAY'S BROKEN by Ruly Indra Darmawan

    Published 2018-08-01
    “…It is interesting to see how VrenaTay pictures that woman acts and somehow lives after she was dead, how a woman escapes from subversive condition and move toward dominant one by leap through the limit of life and death. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  9. 169

    Pomiędzy queerową subwersją a „middle-class mainstreaming”. O twórczości drag queen Mony Lizak by Magdalena Stoch

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…The article presents the historical and cultural contexts of drag, from amateur underground theatres to the contemporary commercialized queer scene, and emphasizes how Mona Lizak’s work reflects the tensions between subversive ideology and mainstream trends. Particular attention is paid to the artist’s political message, which criticises the exclusion of LGBT+ persons, the dominance of the Catholic church, and social issues such as the climate crisis and women’s rights. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  10. 170

    The Architectural Photomontages of Piero Bottoni by Fabio Colonnese

    Published 2023-06-01
    “…Passionate about photography and cinema, Bottoni used these techniques for different purposes, not least their latent political and subversive potential, which was already implicit in the work of the artistic avant-gardes. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  11. 171

    Transferring Transnationally, Transforming Locally, Imagining Transnationally: The Transference of Interwar Poland’s Popular Culture to Israel and Its Rediscovery in the Last Decad... by Marcos Silber

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…In contemporary Israel, references to interwar Polish popular culture and its local adaptations serve a subversive and critical function in relation to the state’s identity politics. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  12. 172

    Oscillation Between Resist and to Not? Users’ Folk Theories and Resistance to Algorithmic Curation on Douyin by Hui Lin

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Thus, this article argues that although people espouse folk theories as resources to resist algorithmic curation in different sociocultural contexts, most of their resistance behaviors remain constrained within the dominant use of technological affordances, which largely functions as a process of continuous negotiation rather than a subversive force capable of disrupting the ideological power relations embedded in algorithm-driven platforms.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  13. 173

    Nature’s Song under the Bombs: Pastoral Echoes in some Scottish War Poems by Stéphanie NOIRARD

    Published 2017-06-01
    “…A last part is dedicated to the new poetic forms authors try to create in order to struggle against silence and destruction, as well as to pastoral as a subversive form and the use of sonic “carnivalesque” and resistance.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  14. 174

    CREDIBILITY COMMITMENT AND PEACE BUILDING IN THE NIGER DELTA REGION OF NIGERIA by CHINEDU EKPERECHUKWU ETI, SUNDAY DIDAM AUDU, GOODNEWS OSAH

    Published 2024-06-01
    “…While some are caused by the neglect of early warning mechanisms, others are as a result of subversive reactions to disproportionate distribution of resources and power; and or failed interventions to the conflict. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  15. 175

    L’excès dans la fiction de Wilkie Collins by Françoise Dupeyron-Lafay

    Published 2006-12-01
    “…Both men are ill, marginal, stand for eccentricity and excess, and occasionally act as Collins’s mouthpieces, too.The writer’s ironic and subversive use of these characters to promote « happy endings » may therefore be regarded as another kind of excess.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  16. 176

    African Socialism, the Economy of Affection, and a Concern for Foreign Affairs by Prolific S. Mataruse

    Published 2022-11-01
    “…This paper uses excerpts from the vast archive of Nyerere’s speeches to reflect on how he subversively defined the Global South to implement African socialism, an economy based on interconnectedness and compassion, and a belief that Africa has to be concerned with foreign affairs. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  17. 177

    Alice’s Non-Anthropocentric Ethics: Lewis Carroll as a Defender of Animal Rights by Anna Kérchy

    Published 2018-12-01
    “…The vanishing and reappearing Cheshire Cat represents language that is ideologically manipulative and poetically subversive and distinguishes the speaking human subject from animals (Lecercle 1994); the Caucus Race led by the Dodo Bird is an absurd rehearsal of the Darwinian evolutionary theory’s competitive struggle for survival (Lovell-Smith 2007), while the dormouse in the teapot evokes how the ownership of certain animals could indicate class belonging (Ritvo 1987). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  18. 178

    Marie Corelli, Wormwood, and the Diversity of Decadence by Jessica DeCoux

    Published 2011-11-01
    “…Corelli’s condemnation of the absintheur as a failed Decadent is a call not to moral orthodoxy, but to another, less recognizable but equally subversive model of Decadence. Some of the doubts the novel raises about the Decadent project and the troubled place of the Decadent in the nineteenth-century popular imagination are echoed by other Decadent works of the time.Reading Corelli’s novel in this way not only allows for a dramatic rethinking of her work, it also opens up a reconsideration of the ways that Decadence was embraced by the fin-de-siècle literary public, and the ways that public did not merely consume Decadence but refined and disseminated it. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  19. 179

    Landschaftsgedächtnis und Geschlechterdiskurse in ausgewählten Werken von Elsa Bernstein und Maria Waser by Monika Mańczyk-Krygiel

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…The end of the drama—a combination of a mythical being after death with a sculpture of the Madonna carved in rock—is usually interpreted as the apotheosis of Christianity and the triumph of a new religion (and thus a new world order) over the pagan world. However, its subversive aspect should be emphasized because, in the cult of the Mother of God, one can find strong reminiscences of the cult of the Great Goddess and other ancient fertility deities. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  20. 180

    Modern features of the cryptocurrency use for terrorist financing, money laundering and other unlawful activities: prospective countermeasures by D. S. Melnyk

    Published 2023-07-01
    “…The modern methods (mechanisms) of using cryptocurrencies as a means of payment in the drug trade, for legalisation of proceeds of crime, financing of terrorist, intelligence and subversive, separatist and other illegal activities in Ukraine, including under martial law, are highlighted. …”
    Get full text
    Article