Discourse: Berkeley Journal for Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture, Bindi 17,Útgáfa 21995 |
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Niðurstöður 1 - 3 af 17
Síða 71
... crowd as diseased and thus has distanced the suf- fragette from a criminalized crowd ; the sociological gaze , in turn , upsets the gaze of the flâneur which has coded the crowd as an unknowable and engulfing mystery . Finally , each ...
... crowd as diseased and thus has distanced the suf- fragette from a criminalized crowd ; the sociological gaze , in turn , upsets the gaze of the flâneur which has coded the crowd as an unknowable and engulfing mystery . Finally , each ...
Síða 73
... crowd before in all our lives ? — never as a part of it " ( 78 ) . Imagining she is “ part of " the crowd , Vida is actually positioned as detached observer , gazing upon the exotic underworld of London : They had penetrated the fringe ...
... crowd before in all our lives ? — never as a part of it " ( 78 ) . Imagining she is “ part of " the crowd , Vida is actually positioned as detached observer , gazing upon the exotic underworld of London : They had penetrated the fringe ...
Síða 79
... crowd experienced by the flâneur must be replaced by the stationary spectacle of a mass meeting or the contained spectacle of imprisoned women ; thus the gaze of the flâneur is incompatible with activism , inappropriate to the prison ...
... crowd experienced by the flâneur must be replaced by the stationary spectacle of a mass meeting or the contained spectacle of imprisoned women ; thus the gaze of the flâneur is incompatible with activism , inappropriate to the prison ...
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