6,520 research outputs found

    Aliyah and Identity in Israeli-Russian Literature

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    The mass migration of almost a million Russian speakers to Israel following the collapse of the Soviet Union, referred to as the Great Aliyah, marked a significant turning point in the history of Zionism. Unlike in previous waves of migration, the immigrants of the Great Aliyah defied assimilatory pressures and used the strength of their demography to build a Russian-language cultural enclave, asserting their unique identity at the expense of a speedier integration into the Israeli mainstream. This important migrant group forced the Israeli state to adopt a multiculturalist model at the expense of its traditional melting pot approach to integration. The Great Aliyah spawned a vibrant Russian-language cultural scene in Israel, and created the new literary genre of Israeli-Russian fiction. This paper seeks to examine this phenomenon, with particular focus on Israeli-Russian notions of identity, through an analysis of the work of two prominent writers: Dina Rubina, who publishes in Russian, and Ola Groisman, who publishes in Hebrew

    THE LAWYER\u27S LAW

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    The imperial idea in some modern fiction: aspects of the treatment of imperialism in selected literature between 1888 and 1939.

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    The purpose of this thesis is to examine certain aspects of selected authors' responses to the phenomenon of Imperialism within the period 1888 to 1939. Chapter One argues that the writers' responses should not be considered as an escape from the cultural anxieties of Britain, but rather that the exotic context they assume is used as a vehicle through which to discuss many of those anxieties. It suggests, therefore, that there exists in their writing a self-conscious reference to the larger literary culture of the day, even when the focus is apparently wholly upon the practical manifestations of the Imperial ideology. Chapter Two analyses the attitudes of the selected writers towards Christianity in the Empire, arguing that the skepticism over the role of the missionary is symptomatic of a wider doubt concerning the authenticity of the traditional faith, which is increasingly operative from the l850's onwards. The next chapter proceeds to examine these authors' responses towards the presence of commercial interests in the Empire, suggesting, in a similar way to Chapter Two, that the mistrust with which they view such interests may be related to the larger ambivalence towards industrialism and material progress which is expressed in the literary culture of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Chapter Three concentrates in depth upon Kipling, a writer who, despite the findings of a considerable degree of recent scholarship, continues to be seen, even, or perhaps especially, by the educated mind, as an vulgarly jingoistic propagandist. The interpretation concentrates upon the element of deep disillusion and defensiveness in his Indian stories and upon the metaphorical nature of his general construct. The conclusion discusses the work of Joyce Cary, in whom may be seen the final demise of the Imperial ideology

    Preliminary design of the Shuttle-C avionics recovery system

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    The analysis done in developing a recovery system for the Shuttle-C cargo vehicle is presented. This recovery system is comprised of a reentry capsule which houses the vehicles avionics. The avionics are contained in a single package which is extracted from the capsule by the parachute recovery system. The Shuttle-C will be able to satisfy NASA's design and mission requirements. Included, is an analysis of the structural, thermal protection, and parachute recovery systems. A discussion of the merits of the proposed system is also included
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