5,709 research outputs found

    Dr. Jeffrey Hass – Faculty Author Interview

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    Dr. Jeffrey Hass, Associate Professor of Sociology, discusses his new book, Power, Culture, and Economic Change in Russia: To the Undiscovered Country of Post-Socialism, 1988-2008. Utilizing cutting-edge theory and unique data, this book examines the role of power, culture, and practice in Russia’s story of post-socialist economic change, and provides a framework for addressing general economic change

    Providence College Faculty Author Series 2018-2019: Jeffrey Johnson

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    In this installment of the Faculty Authors Series, Jeffrey Johnson (History, Providence College) discusses his newest book, The 1916 Preparedness Day Bombing: Anarchy and Terrorism in Progressive Era America

    Providence College Faculty Author Series 2018-2019: Jeffrey Johnson

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    In this installment of the Faculty Authors Series, Jeffrey Johnson (History, Providence College) discusses his newest book, The 1916 Preparedness Day Bombing: Anarchy and Terrorism in Progressive Era America

    Books piece on a reading by Jeffrey Lent, author of Lost Nation, that will b

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    Books piece on a reading by Jeffrey Lent, author of Lost Nation, that will be presented at the Portland Public Library July 31

    University of Texas at Arlington (U. T. A.) President Spaniolo with author Jeffrey Toobin

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    University of Texas at Arlington (U. T. A.) President Spaniolo with author Jeffrey Toobin, legal analyst for The New Yorker, 03/2010https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_spaniolomaterials/1038/thumbnail.jp

    New Insights into Materialism and Conspicuous Consumption in China

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    This paper provides insights based on recent literature and findings that relate to materialism and conspicuous consumption among Chinese consumers. There is a specific focus on gender related issues and implications on consumer well-being. Our work is intended to assist in both conceptual and hypothesis development for other interested scholars.Peer reviewe

    Enacting Ethnicity: Yiddishkeit Masked and Unmasked on the Contemporary American Stage

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    Two recent productions of American dramas employed provocative strategies for enacting Jewish ethnicity: National Asian American Theatre Company’s performance of Clifford Odets’s Awake and Sing! with an all-Asian American cast and New Yiddish Rep’s staging of Toyt fun a seylsman, a Yiddish translation of Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman. Each production entails a different approach to performing Jewishness that exemplifies these companies’ respective artistic agendas regarding the enactment of ethnicity, resulting in complex performances of masking and unmasking Jewishness. Moreover, their analysis illuminates how ethnicity is conceptualized and realized in the United States in the early decades of the twenty-first century. Yiddish appears strategically, if often obliquely, in the histories of composition, production, and reception for both dramas, emblematic of shifting notions of enacting ethnicity.Peer reviewe

    An Ethnographer in Poland: On Experience as a Mode of Engaging Jewishness

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    Museums have become especially prominent sites of Jewish experience—not only in Poland but elsewhere, including cities with large Jewish populations—as permanent and very publicly visible institutions. Their presence looms large despite the fact that many, if not most, people will visit a given museum only once, spending an hour or two there. Given its scope and salience, the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews is poised to become the keystone in the arch of Polish Jewish experience

    “If Jewish People Wrote All the Songs”: The Anti-Folklore of Allan Sherman

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    Though his fame proved to be short-lived, Allan Sherman's parodies have found a niche in American popular culture.Peer reviewe
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