Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Sophia Balakian on Loes Nas
View through CrossRef
In her essay “Americanization and Anti-American Attitudes in South Africa and Georgia,” Loes Nas charts two newly democratic countries’ opposing trajectories in their sentiments and policies regarding “the West” and the United States more specifically. Nas envisions these trajectories as two lines forming an “...
Title: Sophia Balakian on Loes Nas
Description:
In her essay “Americanization and Anti-American Attitudes in South Africa and Georgia,” Loes Nas charts two newly democratic countries’ opposing trajectories in their sentiments and policies regarding “the West” and the United States more specifically.
Nas envisions these trajectories as two lines forming an “.
Related Results
Sophia Balakian on Broeck and Mariani
Sophia Balakian on Broeck and Mariani
This essay argues that both Broeck and Mariani implicitly and explicitly frame discourses of anti-Americanism as a form of name-calling, and that this involves condemnation in spec...
Conexões: linguagens e educação em cena
Conexões: linguagens e educação em cena
O conhecimento se fabrica nos múltiplos circuitos da linguagem e em conexões estabelecidas nos próprios efeitos dos saberes humanos. As dinâmicas dos discursos, as práticas de ensi...
Encyclopedia of Genocide
Encyclopedia of Genocide
Written by almost 100 experts from many countries, this award winning text is the first reference work to chart the full extent of this horrific subject with objectivity and author...
Loes Nas on Kate Delaney and Andrzej Antoszek
Loes Nas on Kate Delaney and Andrzej Antoszek
This essay is a response to the essay “Americanization and Anti-Americanism in Poland: A Case Study, 1945-2006.” The author argues that Poland, Georgia, and South Africa tend to ec...
Threescore Years and Ten
Threescore Years and Ten
Sophia Elizabeth De Morgan (1809–1892) was the wife of the mathematician and logician Augustus De Morgan and mother of ceramicist William De Morgan. In Threescore Years and Ten, co...

