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Aiex, Nola Kortner – 1991
College faculty who teach writing courses might find an examination of early religious literature helpful when trying to explain "writing for an audience" or "audience awareness" to their students. The Jesuit priest who preached to and wrote for the Indians in Brazil during the early colonial period, Jose de Anchieta, is a…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Christianity, Comparative Analysis, Drama
Hoover, Judith D. – 1989
Part of a larger rhetorical biography, this essay examines several of the narratives of the southern writer and humorist, Irvin S. Cobb (1876-1944), to understand the unhappy "ordinary experience" of Southern racism and sexism. Following a biographical introduction, the first section discusses Cobb's narratives, while the second deals…
Descriptors: Blacks, Females, Fiction, Literary Criticism
Mellini, Peter – Humanities, 1990
Compares John Bull and Uncle Sam as iconographic symbols, respectively personifying male images of the British and United States national characters. Recounts their origins, evolutions, and representative values, and includes cartoons depicting the evolution. Describes female counterparts: Britannia and Columbia/Liberty. (CH)
Descriptors: Cartoons, Cultural Images, European History, Folk Culture
Miller, Susanna L. – Crisis, 1991
The history of women jazz performers and composers, namely African Americans, in the United States is traced from its beginnings to contemporary artists. Women have played an integral role in jazz development. Separate women's festivals showcase many female talents, demonstrating that the future is very promising for women in jazz. (SLD)
Descriptors: Bands (Music), Black History, Black Influences, Blacks

Valerio, Joseph M.; Friedman, Daniel – 1982
This book explores the potential of U.S. movie theaters as an important national asset. Each of the 4,000 movie palaces constructed during Hollywood's Golden Age, as well as the countless smaller theaters modeled after the grander showcases, has a role to play in the life of today's cities. The first section of the book explores the social and…
Descriptors: Architectural Character, Architecture, Building Design, Cultural Activities
2001
This lesson introduces students to the "blues," one of the most distinctive and influential elements of African-American musical tradition. With this lesson plan, students can take a virtual field trip to Memphis, Tennessee, one of the prominent centers of blues activities, and explore the history of the blues in the work of W. C. Handy…
Descriptors: Black Culture, Curriculum Enrichment, Intermediate Grades, Learning Activities
Moore, Jack B. – 1993
The origins and history of the skinhead movement in the United States are traced, beginning with their links with skinheads in England and focusing on racist skinheads rather than the less-well-known nonracist skinheads. How skinheads have developed within the larger youth group scenes, their ideas and activities, the role of music in their…
Descriptors: Cultural Background, Foreign Countries, Hate Crime, Juvenile Gangs
Bartlett, Keith – 1986
This paper assesses, by reference to contemporary issues of the "Radio Times" and the London edition of the "TV Times," the way in which Independent Television (ITV) separated itself from the traditional middle class attitudes typified by the British Broadcasting Company programs and, instead, expressed through its programming…
Descriptors: Audiences, Broadcast Industry, Commercial Television, Consumer Economics
Turner, Patricia A. – 1994
Using the methods of cultural criticism to analyze the images of Blacks prevalent in American popular culture, this book examines possible connections between the finite and often distorted range of depictions of Blacks, especially prevalent in the mass media, to the treatment that they receive in contemporary society. The book looks at the way…
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black Influences, Black Stereotypes, Cultural Context
Tapia, John Edward – 1997
In 1874, Methodist minister John Vincent began a Sunday school retreat on the shores of Lake Chautauqua, New York, the mission of which was education. Initial offerings such as Bible reading, biblical geography, and public oration were supplemented with general education and entertainment activities. In the late 19th century, the Chautauqua…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Change Agents, Community Education, Informal Education
Williams, Luther G. – 1987
As jazz music found its way onto the public agenda between 1921 and 1929 the "New York Times" became a major forum for the controversy surrounding the new music form. Although jazz was played mostly by black musicians, this fact was seldom reflected in the newspaper's stories, and the specter of racism loomed just beneath the surface of…
Descriptors: Blacks, Content Analysis, Jazz, Mass Media Effects

Morris, Richard; Wander, Philip – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1990
Provides a brief sketch of key historical and political conditions that led to the 1973 protests at Wounded Knee, South Dakota, by Native Americans. Demonstrates how the discursive strategies of the protestors both reflect the influence of context and reveal the significance of rhetoric's role in revitalizing culture. Considers implications for…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indians, Communication Research, Culture Conflict

Monroy, Douglas – Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 1990
Draws on interviews of the 1920s and 1930s with Mexican immigrants to Los Angeles to illustrate the intergenerational conflicts that arose from immigrant children's acceptance of American values encountered in school and via the popular culture of films and fashion. Contains 27 references. (SV)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Culture Conflict, Family School Relationship, Hispanic American Culture
Blincoe, Deborah, Ed.; Forrest, John, Ed. – Journal of the New York Folklore Society, 1989
A special theme issue of this biannually published journal illustrates a range of topics that public folklorists in New York state have addressed in their work. The first article, "Forty Years before the Mast: Sailing the Stormy and Serene Seas of Public Folklore" by Bruce R. Buckley, introduces the volume by setting public folklore in…
Descriptors: Anthropology, Art Education, Ballads, Community Resources
Rodriguez, Clara E. – 1991
This social history of the post-World War II Puerto Rican community in the United States focuses mainly on New York City. Each of the following chapters can be read separately: (1) "The Colonial Relationship: Migration and History" examines the factors leading to the migration of Puerto Ricans to the United States and their choice of…
Descriptors: Educational Needs, Elementary Secondary Education, Migration Patterns, Modern History