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Showing 1,552,621 to 1,552,635 of 1,555,717 results
Peer reviewedSmith, Johanna – Stage of the Art, 1995
Describes the recent trend of establishing theater companies in science museums and zoos. Provides a brief history of science museums. Emphasizes that modern science museums and zoos are interactive. Examines the American Zoo as a model. Presents an overview of two museum theater groups and describes some of the current popular shows at other…
Descriptors: Cultural Enrichment, Elementary Secondary Education, Museums, Program Descriptions
Peer reviewedHirsch, David – Stage of the Art, 1995
Describes a theater exercise designed to help students develop sensory skills and learn improvisational skills at the same time. Explains the four steps: getting into the drama, mixing in sensory skills, deepening the drama, and finishing up. States that the exercise is valuable in teaching students skills that are difficult to teach with…
Descriptors: Creative Dramatics, Improvisation, Secondary Education, Skill Development
Peer reviewedHaaga, Agnes – Stage of the Art, 1995
Provides a retrospective of Winifred Ward's career; she is credited with being one of the founders of creative drama in the United States. States that Ward wrote many books about theater, taught for 32 years, founded the first national organization for child drama in 1944, and received numerous academic honors. Relates anecdotes told by those who…
Descriptors: Creative Dramatics, Creative Teaching, Cultural Enrichment, Educational History
Peer reviewedEngnell, Richard A. – Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 1995
Discusses the spiritual potential of scene, some spiritual implications of film narrative, and "Otherness" and the varieties of spirituality. Explores multiple ways in which film may manipulate scene and narrative to express Otherness by examining two films: "Places in the Heart" and "Tender Mercies." (SR)
Descriptors: Communication Research, Film Criticism, Films, Higher Education
Peer reviewedLalvani, Suren – Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 1995
Explores the multiple and heterogeneous deployment of the Other within discourses that intersect and contest each other. Shows how the 19th century discourse of "le femme orientale," which informed the Romantic critique of capitalism, was recuperated in a hegemonic manner to promote an expanding consumer culture. Discusses the colonial…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Critical Thinking, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education
Peer reviewedJames, Beverly – Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 1995
Investigates the ways in which social actors in Hungary--cultural producers as well as the lay public--conceptualize and articulate their experiences as subjects in that nation's transition to a culture of consumption. Discusses three recurrent themes: the lure of the capitalist West, the alien nature of materialism, and the legacy of Communism…
Descriptors: Capitalism, Change Agents, Communism, Consumer Economics
Peer reviewedBarker-Plummer, Bernadette – Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 1995
Elaborates a conceptualization of news as a discursive resource, and suggests a dialogical model for media-movement relationships. Describes how two "branches" of the United States women's movement understood news differently and developed different and specific strategies which are called "media pragmatism" and "media subversion." (SR)
Descriptors: Activism, Communication Research, Feminism, Higher Education
Peer reviewedSparks, Colin S. – Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 1995
Argues that, up until recently, the whole of British television (public and private) was a public service system, that the 1990 Broadcasting Act and satellite channels have introduced greater competitive pressures, and that British television is moving to a commercial system in which there remains a subordinate public service element. (SR)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Futures (of Society), Higher Education, Public Service
Peer reviewedAlexander, Alison; Morrison, Margaret A. – Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 1995
Examines the three major critical works that have documented the role of children in a consumer culture and the specific role of advertising in the creation of that culture. Discusses perspectives from political economy, textual analysis, and cultural studies. (SR)
Descriptors: Advertising, Children, Critical Theory, Higher Education
Peer reviewedPecora, Norma – Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 1995
Uses previous reviews on the literature on children and television advertising to trace the short history of research from a social science perspective on advertising directed at children. Examines the dimensions that have come to define the field. Argues that nothing in these studies indicates an increasingly sophisticated perspective of the…
Descriptors: Children, Higher Education, Literature Reviews, Mass Media Effects
Peer reviewedScott, Robert Ian – ETC: A Review of General Semantics, 1995
States that Christian Morgenstern made a fundamental point of semantics clear by making any absolute faith in words ridiculous. Describes other pieces of Morgenstern's poetry, and examines its implications in semantic terms. Points out that Morgenstern ridiculed the assumption that what is said must be sensible, as if the world must obey human…
Descriptors: Language Attitudes, Language Usage, Poetry, Semantics
Peer reviewedJohnston, Paul Dennithorne – ETC: A Review of General Semantics, 1995
Defines general semantics in accordance with the personal views of the author. Describes some guidelines, including tunnel vision, labels that limit, success and survival, beyond Aristotle, separation of word and thing, time-binding, abstracting, from experience to symbols, non-allness, and consciousness of context. Uses definitions and guidelines…
Descriptors: Definitions, Guidelines, Language Usage
Peer reviewedGozzi, Raymond, Jr. – ETC: A Review of General Semantics, 1995
States that "Generation X" refers to people born in the later 1960s and early 1970s who are young adults by the 1990s. Points out that many college students object to the term. Analyzes the Baby Boomers and Generation Xers in a search for comparisons. Concludes that there are more similarities than were previously thought. (PA)
Descriptors: Baby Boomers, College Students, Comparative Analysis, Labeling (of Persons)
Peer reviewedMurphy, John W. – ETC: A Review of General Semantics, 1995
States that many trends in the Information Age appear dissimilar, but are in fact closely related. Argues that the market is linked to the exchange of information as currency, which will lead to a new conceptualization of the market economy. Concludes that the benefits of the Information Age may be enormous, but may lead to the depersonalization…
Descriptors: Free Enterprise System, Information Industry, Social Problems
Peer reviewedRojcewicz, Stephen – Journal of Poetry Therapy, 1995
Suggests that a quote from the 17th-century English physician and writer Thomas Browne captures the essence of the poetry of healing. Argues that healing, at its highest calling, combines the technical mastery of the problem with the response of the whole human being to the mystery; and that this many-faceted response is poetry. (SR)
Descriptors: Health, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Poetry


