Search results for "British empire"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Hooligans, Ultras and Vandals

2015

Football hooliganism in its modern sense is often said to have started in Great Britain in 1961, after a serious riot broke out during a match between Tottenham Hotspur and Sunderland; although crowd disorder was not unknown in other countries, this event is regarded as the birth date of the so-called ‘English disease’, which grew in seriousness and extent over the next few decades. The increasing professionalization and internationalization of English football during the 1950s generated a need for greater profits in football clubs that brought about a reorganization of stadiums (Taylor, 1971). Due to this reorganization, young working-class people were relocated at the ends of the stadiums…

Football hooliganismEthosPolitical sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectBritish EmpirePatriotismEconomic historyContext (language use)FootballDecolonizationSeriousnessmedia_common
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India Re-loaded: Vikas Swarup’s Slumdog Millionaire as a Postcolonial Novel

2012

Once “the jewel in the crown” of the British Empire, India for some time ceased to be the focus of interest for the British writers. Largely due to the success of its film version, Vikas Swarup’s Slumdog Millionaire (Black Swan, London, 2005, originally called Q and A) again drew the attention of the Western world to the problems postcolonial India has to face: poverty, crime, sex abuse, exploitation of children, police brutality and many more. In this paper, however, we are not going to compare the two versions of the story, i.e. the novel and the film, but primarily concentrate on the textual commentaries in the context of postcolonial theory and literature. Of particular interest for us …

HistoryPolice brutalityPovertyBritish EmpireMedia studiesWestern worldFace (sociological concept)Gender studiesContext (language use)Character (symbol)Black swan theory
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The Indian Scenario

2016

The architecture of the Indian higher-education system is not a simple one, with the legacy of the British Empire, the distinction between deemed and non-deemed universities, aided and non-aided colleges, rural and urban institutions. The youth of the Indian population arguably constitutes the most decisive asset in the knowledge economy. The mass-scale of Indian higher-education as well as the increasingly significant role of the private sector, are posing new challenges to regulatory bodies. The supply of graduates assumes great importance in twenty-first-century India. The enhancement and the modernization of the Indian higher-education system have been redefined as a national priority, …

InternationalizationbiologyEconomyKnowledge economyBritish EmpireAsset (economics)BusinessArchitecturebiology.organism_classificationPrivate sectorModernization theoryRusa
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Richard Francis Burton. Victorian Explorer and Translator

2012

This volume offers a critical insight into the life and work of the controversial Victorian explorer and translator Richard Francis Burton (1821-1890). Analysis focuses on his travel accounts and erotic translations, which both re-elaborated and challenged dominant Victorian discourses on race, gender and sexuality, generating controversies in the fields of anthropology, sexology and medicine. The premise of the study is that Burton entertained an ambiguous relationship with the colonial institutions: on the one hand, he pursued the colonial project, while on the other, he was an irreverent outsider who clashed with the imperial authorities. As this investigation reveals, he defied British …

Richard Francis Burton British Empire Colonialism Orientalism Eroticism Sexuality Masculinity Performativity Intercultural TranslationSettore L-LIN/10 - Letteratura Inglese
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Hobsonʻs imperialism : a study in late-Victorian political thought

2009

In his PhD study Timo Särkkä explores J. A. Hobson’s (1858–1940) paradigm of imperialism, its content, intentions and, finally, its limitations. The study reveals that Hobson’s thesis of imperialism can be seen as paradigmatic of the 1890s radical-liberal understanding of imperialism.The author argues that when the Victorian periodical press (weeklies, reviews and magazines) is analysed in its original communicative context, it reveals a more appropriate environment in which to study Hobson’s political thought in terms of the history of ideas. Thus, quite conversely to the previous studies concerning Hobson, the principal sources used in this study are journal and periodical articles, revie…

liberalismiHobson J. AimperialismimperialismisodatBritish empireVictorian ageaatehistoriaEtelä-Afrikkapoliittinen filosofialiberalismviktoriaaninen aikaIso-Britannia
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