Search results for "world war I"

showing 10 items of 132 documents

Remembering and Forgetting, Discovering and Cherishing

2018

The events of the Second World War left considerable material remains in Finnish Lapland, ranging from the remnants of structures that were destroyed in the 1944–45 Lapland War, through to small, portable objects connected to soldiers, prisoners of war and civilians. These material remains have variously been saved and cherished by survivors and their families, disregarded as ‘war junk’, ‘discovered’ by hobbyists exploring the landscape, amassed and exchanged by private collectors, and accessioned into official museum collections. These various processes represent transformations of material culture to take on various meanings and embodiments, depending on the different individuals and orga…

Cultural StudiesValue (ethics)Materiality (auditing)ForgettingHistory060102 archaeologyWorld War IIMedia studiesContext (language use)06 humanities and the arts16. Peace & justice060104 historyExhibitionAnthropologyEthnography0601 history and archaeologyPrisoners of warEthnologia Fennica
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“Narrative Museums” and Curators’ Rights: The Protection of a Museum Exhibition and Its Scenario under Polish Law

2020

Since at least the 1990s, museums have expanded to cover a variety of societal functions, often enabling inclusive and participatory spaces for critical dialogue about the past and the future, and bridging together various narratives and cultural experiences, contributing to social cohesion and reconciliation. The new functions of museums, involving novel technological forms of display and communication, pose several legal questions concerning the management of such institutions, their resources, and exhibitions, including issues of copyright and other intellectual property rights. While referring to a recent case concerning an alleged infringement of the moral rights of the authors of the …

Cultural StudiesVisual Arts and Performing Artsmedia_common.quotation_subjectcopyrightConservationArtMuseum of the Second World War in GdanskExhibitionCreative workLawcurators’ moral rightsNarrativecreative workmuseum exhibitionLawmedia_commonSantander Art and Culture Law Review
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Post memory and cinematic affect in The Midwife

2017

The Second World War has proved a rich source of inspiration for fiction films worldwide. The Finnish fiction film The Midwife (Kätilö, Antti J. Jokinen, 2015) is aimed at an international audience with a story that takes place in the context of the Lapland War in Finland in 1944. The film tells of a romantic relationship between a local woman and a member of the German army, in a highly affective manner. This article argues that the film downplays elements that might have interested the national, or local, audience, and that it privileges affect over knowledge. To bring out the film’s transnational character, the article begins by analysing it in the context of national, or local, and glob…

Cultural Studieslcsh:BH1-301LappiVisual Arts and Performing ArtsLapland WarLapin sota0507 social and economic geographyAppealContext (language use)elokuvatlcsh:AestheticsGermanSuomilocalKätilömuistaminenSociologySet (psychology)The Midwifelcsh:NX1-82005 social sciencesWorld War IIMedia studiesFinnish cinemaGender studies06 humanities and the artslcsh:Arts in general060202 literary studiesglobaltoinen maailmansotaRomancelanguage.human_languageSecond World WarPhilosophyaffectpost memoryta61310602 languages and literaturelanguagePerformance artaffects050703 geographyNexus (standard)
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Latvian Emigrants in the United States: Different Waves, Different Identities?

2019

AbstractThis chapter studies the relationships and interaction among the Latvian emigrants from different migration waves in the United States. It specifically examines reasons for the inability of the existing and politically and culturally active Latvian diaspora community in the United States to integrate newcomers from Latvia. The diaspora community is formed mostly of migrants who left Latvia after World War II. The research is based on a mix of two sources of information and methods – qualitative analysis of in-depth interviews with the ‘new’ Latvian emigrants in the United States in 2014, who began arriving there in 1991 and quantitative data analysis of The Emigrant Communities of L…

Cultural heritageInterpersonal tiesEconomyPolitical scienceWorld War IIQuantitative researchlanguageIdentity (social science)Latvianlanguage.human_languageDiasporaEmigration
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Translating Transculturality: Mediation of Identity in John Rabe’s Diaries

2019

Along with people’s movement and technology, local and foreign components in language and culture become interconnected. Hence translation and cultural studies need approaches, beyond the national, to fuzzy linguistic and cultural forms. One such case originates from the Nanking Massacre, which occurred in the East Asian theatre of WWII. John Rabe, a businessman from Hamburg and a foreign resident in Nanking, was elected by the International Committee for the Nanking Safety Zone to be its chairman. His humanitarian efforts eventually won him a special cultural identity, «the Living Buddha». This article focuses on mediation of identity. It presents «translating transculturality» as a new re…

Cultural identityCultural studiesGautama BuddhaWorld War IIMediationMedia studiesFuzzy linguisticIdentity (social science)East AsiaGeneral MedicineSociologyTranslation and interpretationTraducción e interpretaciónCLINA: Revista Interdisciplinaria de Traducción, Interpretación y Comunicación Intercultural
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Prasa polskiej emigracji politycznej w Wielkiej Brytanii wobec protestów robotników w kraju w czerwcu 1976 roku

2016

Strajki i demonstracje w Polsce, do których doszło 25 czerwca 1976 r. odbiły się żywym echem wśród emigracji w Wielkiej Brytanii. W artykule przedstawiono opinie i oceny emigracyjnych polityków oraz publicystów dotyczące przyczyn, przebiegu i konsekwencji czerwcowych protestów w kraju.

Czerwiec 1976the June 1976 riots in Polandprasa polska na emigracjiPolish political émigrés in the United Kingdom after World War IIPolish press in the United Kingdom after World War IIemigracja polska w Wielkiej Brytanii po II wojnie światowejRocznik Historii Prasy Polskiej
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Are Universities Ready to Face the Knowledge-Based Economy?

2002

It is generally agreed that the two main functions of universities are to transmit high level knowledge and to produce new knowledge. For centuries, these two functions were performed in a context in which only a small share of the relevant age cohort attended higher education institutions. After the Second World War, this context changed radically and higher education began to face more or less continuous growth. This has led to the situation that, in the developed economies, more than 40 per cent of the younger generation now attend third-level institutions (cf. Teichler, 2000).

Economic growthHigher educationbusiness.industry[SHS.EDU]Humanities and Social Sciences/Education4. EducationKnowledge economy[SHS.EDU] Humanities and Social Sciences/Education05 social sciencesWorld War IIHigh educationFace (sociological concept)Context (language use)[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance050905 science studiesHuman capitalEnseignement supérieurUniversitéPolitical science0502 economics and business0509 other social sciences[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinancebusinessComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSÉconomie de la connaissance050203 business & management
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Why People Born During World War II are Healthier

2017

War leads civilians to suffer. This can take extreme forms, such as during periods of intense violence or famines. But also outside of such episodes, civilians’ lives during wars can be harsh, as they suffer from poorer nutritional situations, stress, recessions, and sub optimally functioning health care systems. The more extreme types of suffering are proven to lead to a worse health among those prenatally exposed to them. But long-run effects of prenatal exposure to the latter circumstances have thus far largely been unexplored, even though in many wars more pregnant women are exposed to these “everyday” circumstances than to the extreme circumstances. We study the general, population-wid…

Economic growthHistorybusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectWorld War IIFertilityRecessionOlder populationSpanish Civil WarHealth careFaminebusinessPrenatal exposureDemographymedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Money Doctoring After World War II: Arthur I. Bloomfield and the Federal Reserve Missions to South Korea

2009

In this paper we analyse the scientific contributions of the New York Fed economist Arthur I. Bloomfield. A Canadian born economist, in 1941 Bloomfield took his PhD in economics at the University of Chicago, under the supervision of Jacob Viner and then joined the staff of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York as a Research Economist and stayed there until 1958. In this position, Bloomfield combined scholarly research on recent economic history and international financial and banking problems with active service as a member of various committees and commissions, both in the United States and abroad. While on leave from the Fed, he accepted appointments as a consultant and advisor to various …

Economics and EconometricsHistoryLatin Americansmedia_common.quotation_subjectCommissionMoney Doctorlaw.inventionStatutePoliticsFederal ReserveOrder (exchange)lawPolitical scienceSouth KoreaEconomic historySociologymedia_commonConstitutionFinancial marketWorld War IIInstitutional economicsCentral BankingBiographyFraming (social sciences)CurrencyForeign policyCLARITYPosition (finance)Arthur Bloomfield
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EU Refugee Policies and Politics in Times of Crisis: Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives

2017

Phenomena such as civil war, protracted conflict, and deteriorating internal security, especially in the Middle East, Africa and Southern Asia, have triggered massive departures of civilian populations in recent years. The war in Syria alone has displaced over 5 million people (UNHCR, 2017a). While most of these forced migrants are either internally displaced or remain in Syria’s immediate neighbourhood, the numbers of those trying to come to Europe have steeply increased in 2015 and 2016. In each of these two years more than 1.2 million asylum-seekers submitted their asylum claims in the EU (Eurostat, 2017a), as compared to 625,000 in 2014 (Eurostat, 2015, p. 4). This represents the larges…

Economics and EconometricsMiddle EastRefugee05 social sciencesWorld War IIGeneral Business Management and Accounting0506 political sciencePoliticsGeographyInternal securitySpanish Civil WarEconomyInternally displaced person0502 economics and businessPolitical Science and International RelationsEuropean integration050602 political science & public administration050207 economicsBusiness and International ManagementJCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies
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