Imagining Gender, Nation and Consumerism in Magazines of the 1920s Religious and ceremonial artOffering the first comparative study of 1920s US and Canadian print cultures, Imagining Gender, Nation and Consumerism in Magazines of the 1920s comparatively examines the highly influential Ladies Home Journal (18832014) and the often overlooked Canadian Home Journal (19051958), revealing how they constructed their imagined audience as readers, consumers and citizens.
He argues that increasingly self-interested elites are not only damaging society they are destroying the basis of Establishment rule itself
Written with detail and thoroughness - covers all eras of the horror film and correlates specific types of movie monsters to the historical social conditions which produced them
The general issue raised in the book refers to the assessment of the nature and working of contemporary Indian rural economy
Situating these television serials in their real world context of twenty-first-century America
What will the e-book landscape look like in ten years' time
The latest book in the long-running Britain at the Polls series provides an indispensable account of the remarkable 2017 British general election
Bringing together a group of international scholars
this work reveals how cultural as well as economic and political influences shaped British reaction to the Famine
this book will be a valuable resource for students
John Kinsella explores a contemporary poetics and pedagogy as it emerges from his reflections on his own writing and teaching
extreme forms of bodily transformation and violence
but science can also be seen as complicit in processes of colonial domination