40,956 research outputs found

    Bulgarian sport policy 1945-1989: A strategic relation perspective

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    The 2008 Beijing Olympic Games have stimulated discussions about the success of different sport systems and the Chinese model in particular. Revisiting explanations of sport in the former communist countries of Eastern Europe during the Cold War seems timely, as the current Chinese model of sport was largely designed after the Soviet example established in this period. This paper examines Bulgarian sport policy between 1945 and 1989. It employs a Strategic Relation approach (Jessop, 1990) to analyse sport policy making as a strategic relation closely linked to the dominant state project of building a new stateness. It goes beyond ideological interpretations and argues that the state represents a strategic terrain where these relations have to be established in struggles, the outcomes of which are always uncertain. Furthermore, past and present struggles and their outcomes create various socio-political environments that presuppose the forms of state selectivity and intervention in sport. The process of constructing sport policy was influenced by two main categories of strategic relations: intra-state, including political, organisational and personal relations between the Party, state apparatus and various sport and non-sport organisations and their managers, and transnational, concerning ideological, political, economic and organisational relations with both communist and western countries and international sport organisations

    Spartan Daily May 14, 2012

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    Volume 138, Issue 54https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/1053/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, March 10, 2015

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    Volume 144, Issue 19https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/2111/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, November 20, 2019

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    Volume 153, Issue 37https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartan_daily_2019/1080/thumbnail.jp

    The Messenger -- November 18, 1991

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    What it Means To Be a Man: A Character Study of Macduff

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    In this thesis I will be discussing my process as an actor when approaching a role, specifically the role of Macduff in William Shakespeare’s, Macbeth. I will include a character/script/event analysis as well as a journal of my experiences during the rehearsal process. I will also include production photos, programs, a link to my website, and my headshot and resume at the end

    Communicator, June 2018

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    The Playful Audience: Professional Wrestling, Media Fandom, and the Omnipresence of Media Smarks

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    This dissertation posits a new model for understanding media audiences, bringing the scholarship of game studies to the critical analysis of audience practices. The concept of play proves beneficial for understanding the complex processes of media audiences, as they are able to traverse dichotomous categories when engaging media content. The genre of professional wrestling proves a perfect case study for examining these playful audience practices, and this study is an ethnographic account of the practices of wrestling fans. Focusing on the behaviors of fans at live wrestling events, in online contexts, and in the subcultural setting of a card game entitled Champions of the Galaxy, this study demonstrates the necessity of the concept of play for understanding what media audiences do when they engage media content. These practices, however, are always negotiated by the hegemonic power of the rules that structure how audiences are encouraged to engage content, resulting in ideological constraints on the possibilities play offers

    Hawks\u27 Herald -- November 16, 2007

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