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Duke University Press

Index Duke University Press

Duke University Press is an academic publisher of books and journals, and a unit of Duke University. [1]

1063 relations: A Free Ride, A. Aneesh, A. O. Neville, Abdelkader Mokhtari, Abu Bakr II, Academy, Achanak (band), Ackbar Abbas, Adjudication, Adriana Bombom, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, African-American literature, Afro-Latin Americans, Afsaneh Najmabadi, Against Sadomasochism, Akira Kurosawa, Alan Sokal, Albert Coates (professor), Albert Saijo, Alex Au, Alexander Hinton, Alexander the Great, Alexander: The Other Side of Dawn, Alfred Arteaga, Alfred F. Young, Alice Dreger, Alien invasion, Alois Neurath, Alt.binaries.slack, Amalia Mallén, Amber L. Hollibaugh, American Beauty (1999 film), American Dialect Society, American Israel Public Affairs Committee, American Literature (journal), American Speech, Amor Prohibido, Amor Prohibido (song), Amy Anderson (comedian), Amy Ashwood Garvey, Anal sex, AnaLouise Keating, Anant Shivaji Desai, Aníbal Quijano, And you are lynching Negroes, Andrea del Castagno, Andrew Ross (sociologist), Andy Warhol, Anglo-Indian, Ann Dunham, ..., Ann Farnsworth-Alvear, Ann Laura Stoler, Ann Pellegrini, Anna G. Jónasdóttir, Anna Kohler, Anna Laetitia Barbauld, Anne Balsamo, Anne Fausto-Sterling, Anne McClintock, Annie Sprinkle, Anti-Indian sentiment, Anti-miscegenation laws, Anton Fransch, Antonio Negri, Apostasy in Judaism, Argumentative turn, Ariwara no Narihira, Aron Gurevich, Artistic depictions of the partition of India, Arturo Escobar (anthropologist), Arturo Pellerano Alfau, Asef Bayat, Ashanti people, Ashio, Tochigi, Association of American University Presses, Atheism, Ato Quayson, Augusto Pinochet, Austin E. Quigley, Avant-garde, Awilix, ¡Ay, Jalisco, no te rajes!, Éric Fassin, Ba'athist Iraq, Babylon 5's use of the Internet, Bachatón, Bad Education (film), Bahasa Binan, Bahá'í Faith in Iran, Bahá'í school, Banana production in Belize, Barbara Avedon, Barbara Herrnstein Smith, Barrier Device, Bartolomé de las Casas, Bastille Day, Battle of Aspern-Essling, Battle of Borovo Selo, Battle of Lenino, Battle of Orašje, Battle of Osijek, Battle of the Barracks, Battle of the Miljevci Plateau, Battle of Zadar, Beam Me Up, Scotty (D.C. Scorpio song), Beatriz Jaguaribe, Bee Vang, Behind the Green Door, Bengalis, Benjamin Lowy, Bernal de Bonaval, Bestial Devastation, Beyond a Boundary, Beyond the First Amendment, Bibliography of works on Madonna, Big Bang Baby, Black Sabbath (film), Blackface, Bleecker Street Cinema, Blitz Wolf, Bob W. White, Bound and Gagged: Pornography and the Politics of Fantasy in America, Bound by Law? Tales from the Public Domain, Boundary 2, Brad Vernon, Brazilian Army, Brazilian thrash metal, Brenda Patterson, Brit rechitzah, Brooke Singer, Brothel, Bruno Carr, Bruno Latour, Bučje camp, Buenos Amigos, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Burning Chrome (short story collection), C. L. R. James, Camera Obscura (journal), Camille Paglia, Camp Nordland, Canary Conn, Capitalism, Caridad Atencio, Carl Raschke, Carlota Alfaro, Carol Gluck, Carpetbagger, Cascarita, Castle of San Felipe de Lara, Catholic Church in Kazakhstan, Catholic Church in Romania, Celsa Albert Batista, Center for Documentary Studies, Central Mississippi Correctional Facility, Cesare Pavese, Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Charles Baudelaire, Charles F. Walker, Cherchez l'idole, Cherríe Moraga, Chicago Lesbian Liberation, Child marriage, Chinese Canadians in Greater Vancouver, Chinese cannibalism, Chinese Indonesians, Chiquita Brands International, Christian Evangelical Church of Romania, Christian Rakovsky, Chuck Eddy, CIA Tibetan program, Cinema of China, Citadine, Civil rights movement (1865–1896), Claudia Jones, Clitoris, Cocoon (Björk song), Codex Cospi, Comecon, Comedy of menace, Comfort women, Committee of Concerned Scientists, Communism, Conan the Barbarian (1982 film), Conant Gardens, Conference on Latin American History, Congress of Black Writers and Artists, Conservatism in North America, Contras, Coricancha, Cosita rica, Craufurd Goodwin, Creationism, Criticism of reality television, Croatian War of Independence, Cuba, Cuban Revolution, Cuje Bertram, Cultural memory, Culture of Jamaica, Cum shot, Cyber Rights, Cyberpunk, D.C. Scorpio, Daniel James (historian), Daniel Levy (sociologist), Dark City (1998 film), Daruvar Agreement, Darwin from Orchids to Variation, Daughter of the Nile, Dave Van Ronk, David Hume, David Lane (white supremacist), Debate over the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Demak Great Mosque, Demographics of Mexico, Demographics of Puerto Rico, Denise Riley, Deportation of the Crimean Tatars, Desmond Tutu, Devi Chaudhurani, Devotions upon Emergent Occasions, Dicen Que Soy, Dick Blau, Differences (journal), Different from You and Me, Dipesh Chakrabarty, Directed evolution (transhumanism), Distortion (music), Diva (Ivy Queen album), DJ Krush, Documentary film, Dolores (Ziegfeld girl), Domenicangela Lina Unali, Domingo de Vico, Don Ed Hardy, Don José Vidal, Doris Sommer, Dreaming of You (Selena album), Dreaming of You (Selena song), Dreamtime, Duchess Harris, Dude, Duke Mathematical Journal, Dwain Esper, E. Mealy El, E. P. Thompson, East Turkestan, Economic rent, Economy of the United States, Edgardo Rodríguez Juliá, Edgemont (Durham, North Carolina), Edmund Samarakkody, Edward A. Allworth, Edward Douglas-Scott-Montagu, 3rd Baron Montagu of Beaulieu, Effects unit, Eichmann in Jerusalem, Electric blues, Elizabeth Hill Boone, Ellen Gruenbaum, Ellen Stewart, Emel (magazine), Emergency! (album), Emigration from Ecuador, Enabling act, Encilhamento, End of communism in Hungary (1989), Entre a Mi Mundo, Erasmus Gower, Eric Hobsbawm, Eric Schaefer, Ernie Lancaster, Ernst Jünger, Es Demasiado Tarde, Esin Engin, Ethnohistory (journal), Evangelical Church of Romania, Evenings at Home, Exodusters, Exploitation film, Faith Ringgold, Fantasias for Guitar and Banjo, Farewell My Concubine (novel), Feminism, Feminist art movement in the United States, Feminist effects on society, Feminist pornography, Femmes du Maroc, Fielding Dawson, Fight Club (novel), First Amendment to the United States Constitution, First-wave feminism, Fixing Sex, Flashback (Ivy Queen album), Flight attendant, Folk religion, Foresight Institute, Fourth International Posadist, Fran Herndon, France Winddance Twine, Frances Ferguson, Frances Sargent Osgood, Franco-Belgian comics, Fred Ho, Fredric Jameson, Free Speech, "The People's Darling Privilege", Freedom for the Thought That We Hate, Freedom from Want (painting), Freedom of Expression (book), Freedom of speech, French Historical Studies, Fruit (slang), Ganesh Shankar Vidyarthi, Gavin Butt, Gay icon, Gay sexual practices, Gérard Debreu, Gender studies, General Hershy Bar, Geoffrey Galt Harpham, Geographical renaming, George Adamski, George Ciccariello-Maher, George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney, George Washington Williams, Gina Dent, Gleichschaltung, GLQ (journal), Gods of the Blood, Golden Age of Porn, Golden Dawn (political party), Goree Carter, Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies, Gregg Araki, Griselda Pollock, Guatemalan Civil War, Gubbinal, Guido von Pirquet, Guitar amplifier, Gumrah (1993 film), Guy Hocquenghem, Hal Ellson, Hannah Wilke, Harold Brown (Rhode Island), Haworth Pictures Corporation, Hürriyet, Heathenry (new religious movement), Heavy metal music, Heel (professional wrestling), Height discrimination, Helen of Troy, Hello, Hello Brazil: Popular Music in the Making of Modern Brazil, Henry II of France, Henry Jenkins, Hermaphrodites with Attitude, Hernando de Soto, Hershel Parker, Hettie Jones, Hibernophile, Hideko the Bus-Conductor, High ground, Hiram Rhodes Revels, Hiram Wesley Evans, Hispanic–Latino naming dispute, Historiography, History of African Americans in Los Angeles, History of Cuba, History of Filipino Americans, History of film, History of Japanese nationality, History of Political Economy, History of propaganda, History of prostitution, History of sociology, History of the Jews in Morocco, History of the Maya civilization, History of women in Puerto Rico, History of women in the United Kingdom, Hoda Elsadda, Homi K. Bhabha, Honda Super Cub, Honour killing in Pakistan, Horse meat, Hortsang Jigme, How Many More Years, How to Read Donald Duck, Huda Naamani, Huejotla, Hugo Black, Human Rights (album), Human rights in Cuba, Human sacrifice in Maya culture, Hurricane recovery in North Carolina, Hymns in Prose for Children, Hypersociability, Hysteria, I Could Fall in Love, I. C. Frimu, Ice shove, Illness or Modern Women, Immanuel Wallerstein, Incarceration in the United States, Incest pornography, Independence Day (India), Independent Women's Forum, Inderpal Grewal, India, Indian Rebellion of 1857, Interdenominational Theological Center, International Mathematics Research Notices, International Socialists (Canada), International Workers League – Fourth International, Intersectionality, Intersex and LGBT, Ion Antonescu, Iravan, Islah Jad, Islam in Romania, Isobel (song), Israel–United States military relations, Israel–United States relations, István Győrkös, Ivy Queen 2008 World Tour Live!, J-pop, J. Fred Rippy, J. Michael Straczynski, Jackson Irving Cope, Jadid, Jake Roberts, Jakobson's functions of language, James Alexander Robertson, James B. Twitchell, James D. Martin, James Green (historian), James Morone, James Russell Lowell, Jane Bennett (political theorist), Jane Feuer, Jane M. Blocker, Janet Baus, Janet Jackson, Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814, Janet Jakobsen, Janet L. Jacobs, Japan, Japanese Brazilians, Japanese community of São Paulo, Japanese hip hop, Jasbir Puar, Javier Elorriaga, Jaws (film), Jazz Hot, Jean Halley, Jehovah's Witnesses Association of Romania, Jesús Sosa Blanco, Jim Stafford, Jimmy Creech, Jin Yun Qiao, Jineology, Joe Harriott, Joe Hill Louis, John Aikin, John Benitez, John Corbett (writer), John D. Lantos, John Fante, John H. Van Evrie, John Hope Franklin Center for Interdisciplinary and International Studies, John Lomax, John Marshall Harlan II, John of Gaunt, John Riordan (mathematician), Jon Scheyer, Jonathan Odell, José Esteban Muñoz, Joseph Charlier, Joseph McElroy, Joseph Schumpeter, Josephine Donovan, Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, Journal of Middle East Women's Studies, Journal of Music Theory, Judaism Without Embellishment, Judith Butler, Ka-Mer, Kal Ho Naa Ho, Karen Barad, Karim Said Atmani, Karl Christian Friedrich Krause, Kathryn Kuhlman, Katrina Karkazis, Keiō Reforms, Keith Gilyard, Kellie Jones, Khan Yunis, Khawarij, Khen Shish, Knowledge Unlatched, Korean War, Kozarčanka, Krainz Woods, Krishnamurti to Himself, Krista Thompson (art historian), Kristen R. Ghodsee, Kronid Lyubarsky, Ku Klux Klan, Kwame Anthony Appiah, Kyōhō Reforms, Kyeong-Hee Choi, Labor (journal), Lacandon Jungle, Laird, Land and liberty (slogan), Language and gender, Lanka Dahan, Lapidary (text), Larry McCaffery, Larry McNeil (photographer), Laughter, Laura Briggs, Laura Shannon Prize, Lawrence Moore Cosgrave, Lawrence Scott, Lazy Afternoon (Barbra Streisand album), Le foto proibite di una signora per bene, Le Moniteur Universel, Leah DeVun, Leah Gilliam, Lee D. Baker, Lee Edelman, Leninism, Leonte Răutu, Les Fleurs du mal, Lessons for Children, Like a Prayer (album), Lina Penna Sattamini, Linda Williams (film scholar), Linda Wong (pornographic actress), Lisa Duggan, Lisa L. Moore, Lisa Rofel, Lissette, List of Alien characters, List of anthropology journals, List of awards and nominations received by William Gibson, List of bhangra artists, List of death metal bands, L–Z, List of extreme metal bands, List of Gran Torino characters, List of group-0 ISBN publisher codes, List of hard rock musicians (A–M), List of hard rock musicians (N–Z), List of highest-grossing films, List of LGBT periodicals, List of music festivals in the United Kingdom, List of people executed for witchcraft, List of people influenced by Selena, List of proposed etymologies of OK, List of sex symbols, List of Shuttle Carrier Aircraft flights, List of songs recorded by Selena, List of subcultures, List of the oldest mosques, List of thrash metal bands, List of transgender publications, List of university presses, List of white nationalist organizations, List of works by William Gibson, Literature of Alfonso X, Little Roger and the Goosebumps, Liu Zhenyun, Live! The Last Concert, Lo Mejor de...Selena, Lolo Soetoro, Loop (music), Lora Romero, Louis Althusser, Louis Austin, Louis Beam, Louis R. Gottschalk, Louise Thompson Patterson, Lovas killings, Luis Alfonso Dávila, Luisa Gómez de la Torre Paez, Lumpenproletariat, Lynda Benglis, Lynn Spigel, Macartney Embassy, Madonna Studies, Maeva Marcus, Mah Laqa Bai, Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni, Making Samba, Malak Hifni Nasif, Manche Ch'ol, Maniac Mansion, Manolo Álvarez Mera, María Collado Romero, María Luisa Dolz, Marc Turtletaub, Marcia Ochoa, Marija Bursać, Marilyn Chambers, Mark Bauerlein, Mark Slonim, Marlon Brando, Martha Graham, Martin Bernal, Martin E. Brooks, Mass killings under communist regimes, Matei Călinescu, Maud Mandel, Maxinquaye, Maya religion, Mel Gibson, Memphis blues, Meryl Fernando, Michael Hardt, Michael Kimmel, Michael M. J. Fischer, Michael Messner, Michael Nelson (political scientist), Michael Perelman, Michel Azcueta, Michigan Womyn's Music Festival, Mickey (song), Middlesex (novel), Miguel de Buría, Mikhail Iampolski, Mikhail Suslov, Mikhail Tugan-Baranovsky, Mimi Sheller, Miriam Cooke, Misogyny in rap music, Mississippi State Penitentiary, Mixtón War, Mladen Stojanović, Moanin' in the Moonlight, Moderato Cantabile, Modern Language Quarterly, Monetae cudendae ratio, Morbid Visions, More Pricks Than Kicks, Mos Teutonicus, Motorcycle safety, Mountain Moving Coffeehouse, Muhammad Mahdi Salih, Murray Hill (performer), Music of Texas, Nadia al-Ghazzi, Nadodi Mannan, Nahuas, Naked (Zheng Jun album), Nasser Abufarha, Natasha Jiménez, National archives, National Photographic Record Association, National Socialist black metal, Native Son, Nature Boy, Nazira Zain al-Din, Neo-Riemannian theory, Neoliberalism, Net.wars, Neuromancer, New German Critique, New Jerusalem, Nie Er, Night of the Living Dead, Night Ripper, Nikolai Gogol, Nikolai Kondratiev, Nils Jacobsen, Nina Chanel Abney, No Me Queda Más, Noise in music, Nordic aliens, Nordic model, Norman Tindale, North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, Not in Front of the Children, Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic, Novel: A Forum on Fiction, Nueva Segovia Department, Oklahoma City bombing, Okwui Enwezor, Olmec alternative origin speculations, Olmecs, Open Your Heart (Madonna song), Operation Backstop, Operation Baranja, Operation Flash, Operation Hurricane-91, Operation Labrador, Operation Mistral 2, Operation Sana, Operation Southern Move, Operation Storm, Operation Swath-10, Operation Una, Operation Winter '94, Optimo (EP), Origins of rock and roll, Orlando Furioso, Orlando Hernández, Orlando Martins, Our Mr. Sun, Our Town (Producers' Showcase), Out of Athens, Owen Lattimore, P-Funk mythology, Paid in Full (Eric B. & Rakim song), Partition of India, Pastiche, Pat Hare, Paul Gootenberg, Paul Morris (producer), Pedro de Alvarado, Pee Wee Kirkland, Peeping Tom (film), Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women, Pentecostal Union of Romania, Peopling of Thailand, Permanent Court of International Justice, Perth Amboy, New Jersey, Peter Jaszi, Phil Carreón, Philip S. Gorski, Phillip E. Wegner, Physics envy, Physiocracy, Pierre Clastres, Pin-up model, Pipil people, Pitești, Pleasant Dreams, Plitvice Lakes incident, Poetics Today, Pokémon, Police corruption, Politico-media complex, Pompeyo Márquez, Pontine Marshes, Pop Muzik, Popular Mechanics, Pornochanchada, Pornography, Portuguese Colonial War, Post (Björk album), Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism, Poverty in the United States, Pretty Modern: Beauty, Sex, and Plastic Surgery in Brazil, Primitive accumulation of capital, Prince Frederick of Württemberg, Prince William of Baden (1829–1897), Project Euclid, Prostitutes in South Korea for the U.S. military, Prostitution, Public, Public Culture, Puchito Records discography, Q'uq'umatz, Queer, Queer theory, Quiet storm, Racism in the LGBT community, Racism in the United States, Radical History Review, Raghupathi Venkataratnam Naidu, Ralph Luker, Ramón Saldívar, Randian hero, Randy Martin, Randy Weston, Rantiya, Raymond Lee Brown, Real (Ivy Queen album), Rebellion of Túpac Amaru II, Rec.arts.sf.tv.babylon5.moderated, Reggae, Reggaeton, Religion in the United States, Religious war, Renée Méndez Capote, Reproduction and pregnancy in speculative fiction, Resurrection of Eve, Rey Chow, Rhodesian Bush War, Ribs (recordings), Right to Censor, Right to keep and bear arms, Ritu Birla, Robert A. Hill (historian), Robert H. Thayer, Robert Muise, Roberta Flack, Roberto Clemente Community Academy, Roberto Gerlein Echeverría, Rock and roll, Rock Awhile, Rock music, Rocket 88, Rocky Dzidzornu, Roger Bartra, Roksana Bahramitash, Romanian Union Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, Romeo and Juliet, Ronda Campesina, Saddeka Arebi, Said al-Ghazzi, Saint-Denis, Seine-Saint-Denis, Sampling (music), Samuel Kamakau, Sandinista National Liberation Front, Sandungueo, Sangh Parivar, Santha Rama Rau, Sara Ahmed, Sarah Méndez Capote, Sarah Schulman, Sarah Thomason, Sathima Bea Benjamin, Satire, Saxbe fix, Scat singing, Schizophrenia (Sepultura album), Schools of economic thought, Second Opium War, Secrecy, Selena, Sense8, Sentimiento (album), Sentimientos (song), Seo Taiji and Boys, Seo Taiji and Boys II, Seo Taiji and Boys III, Seo Taiji and Boys IV, Sessue Hayakawa filmography, Sessue Hayakawa: Silent Cinema and Transnational Stardom, Setchūbai, Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest, Sex, Sin, and Blasphemy, Sexploitation film, Sexual Personae, Shawna Robinson, Shōnen Sekai, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Sherrie Tucker, Shindo Renmei, Shine Louise Houston, Shining Path, Shira (book), Shock rock, Si Una Vez, Siege of Dubrovnik, Siege of Kijevo (1991), Sir George Staunton, 1st Baronet, Sir John Maclean, 1st Baronet, Skatt Brothers, Slovak National Party, Small Axe Project, Social construction of gender, Social Science History, Social Text, Soft butch, Sonia Boyce, Sophia Delza, Soul Sisters Softball Team, South End Press, Soviet occupation of Romania, Spanish conquest of Guatemala, Spanish conquest of the Maya, Spanish conquest of Yucatán, Speaking in Tongues (speech), Stalinism, State of Palestine, Statue of Sir Thomas Jackson, 1st Baronet, Statue Square, Staying with the Trouble, Stephen Crane, Stephen Paul Miller, Stereotypes of South Asians, Steve Fuller (sociologist), Still Time (book), Stone Cold Hustler, Storming of the Bastille, Storming the Reality Studio, Sturm (novella), Suad Joseph, Subterranean Jungle, Sugar Soul, Superman, Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story, Susan Stryker, Suzanna Danuta Walters, Sylvia M. Broadbent, Syrian Turkmen, Székely Land, Székelys, Tai Kato, Take a Bow (Madonna song), Tang Danian, Tashkent, Táhirih, Te He Querido, Te He Llorado, Teška Industrija, Techno Cumbia, Technodelic, Ted Gioia, Teiaiagon, Tejaswini Niranjana, Tela, Television in Cuba, Ten (2002 film), Tenpō Reforms, Teorema (film), Territory band, Texas blues, Texas country music, Tha Blue Herb, Thaddeus B. Hurd, Thai Chinese, The Alphabet Versus the Goddess, The Analysis of Beauty, The Best American Magazine Writing 2007, The Big Ballad Jamboree, The Black Book of Communism, The Crime and the Glory of Commander Suzdal, The Eternal Road (opera), The Galaxy Being, The Girl Who Knew Too Much (1963 film), The Good Terrorist, The Hispanic American Historical Review, The Immobile Empire, The Invasion of 1910, The Jade Pussycat, The Jezebel Spirit (song), The Journal of Korean Studies, The Kid (book), The Latino World Order, The Magic Flute (1975 film), The Minnesota Review, The Namesake (short story), The Open Source Definition, The Original Pinettes Brass Band, The Padlock, The Painful Experience, The Philosophical Review, The Song of Everlasting Sorrow (novel), The Thirteenth Tribe, The Tingler, The Ultimate Warrior, The Watermelon Woman, The Way I See It, The Way to Eden, The World of Lucha Libre, Theodore G. Bilbo, Thomas Glave, Thomas M'Clintock, Thomas R. Cole, Tikkun (magazine), Timeline of second-wave feminism, Tobias Hecht, Todd Haynes, Tohil, Tom Boellstorff, Tomás Moulian, Tony Allen (musician), Tony Ballantyne (historian), Tourniquet (band), Trade union, Trade unions in Colombia, Transgender History (book), Transgender Studies Quarterly, Transport in the Soviet Union, Transylvania, Tripartite Declaration of 1950, Truth or Consequences, New Mexico, Tsuru Aoki, Tunisian Communist Party, Turks in Lebanon, Tyntesfield, Ukrainian language, Unitarian Church of Transylvania, Unitarianism, United Fruit Company, United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine, United States and state-sponsored terrorism, United States Court for Berlin, University of Massachusetts Boston, Uzbekistan, Vance plan, Varivode massacre, Vasil Levski, Vera (film), Vernita Gray, Vespertine, Vicente L. Rafael, Viennese Actionism, Viking metal, Vilnius Castle Complex, Vogue (magazine), Vukovar massacre, Wahhabism, Walter Benjamin, Walter Gempp, Walter Mignolo, Wangga, Warrendale, Detroit, Wartime sexual violence, Wayne Marshall (ethnomusicologist), Weequahic High School, West Indian Gazette, Western cosmetics in the 1970s, Whedonesque.com, William C. Owen, William Eldridge Odom, William Gibson, William H. Poteat, William O. Douglas Prize, William Pannapacker, William Pūnohu White, William Treanor, Willy Brandt, Women in Latin music, Women's liberation movement, Women's liberation movement in North America, Women's studies, Women-only space, Womyn's land, Womyn-born womyn, Woolsey Hall, Workers World Party, World Broadcasting System, World Policy Journal, Xcaret Park, Xel-Ha Park, Yalo, Yamasee War, Yamila Cafrune, Yanakuna, Yearbook on International Communist Affairs, Yellow Magic Orchestra, Yonsei (Japanese diaspora), Youth International Party, Yvette Christiansë, Z-4 Plan, Zagreb rocket attacks, Zakaria Hashemi, Zong-qi Cai, Zou huo ru mo, 1899 Atlantic hurricane season, 1899 San Ciriaco hurricane, 1947 Fort Lauderdale hurricane, 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état, 1973 oil crisis, 1982 Barnard Conference on Sexuality, 1991 protest in Split, 1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia, 1992 European Community Monitor Mission helicopter downing, 1996 in philosophy, 1996 in science, 99 Records. Expand index (1013 more) »

A Free Ride

A Free Ride, also known as A Grass Sandwich, is a stag film of the silent era that is considered to be the earliest extant American hardcore pornographic movie.

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A. Aneesh

A.

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A. O. Neville

Auber Octavius Neville (20 November 1875 – 18 May 1954) was a public servant, notably Chief Protector of Aborigines, in Western Australia.

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Abdelkader Mokhtari

Abdelkader Mokhtari (kunya: Abu el-Ma'ali, The Gendarme) was an Arab commander who became a "sacred legend" for the Bosnian mujahideen in the Bosnian War.

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Abu Bakr II

Abu Bakr II (fl. 14th century), also spelled Abubakri and known as Mansa Qu, may have been the ninth mansa of the Mali Empire.

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Academy

An academy (Attic Greek: Ἀκαδήμεια; Koine Greek Ἀκαδημία) is an institution of secondary education, higher learning, research, or honorary membership.

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Achanak (band)

Achanak is a bhangra group signed to the label Nachural Records.

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Ackbar Abbas

Ackbar Abbas is a professor of comparative literature at the University of California, Irvine.

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Adjudication

Adjudication is the legal process by which an arbiter or judge reviews evidence and argumentation, including legal reasoning set forth by opposing parties or litigants to come to a decision which determines rights and obligations between the parties involved.

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Adriana Bombom

Adriana Bombom, stage name of Adriana Soares (Rio de Janeiro, January 8, 1974), is a Brazilian dancer, model, television host, and actress.

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Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (or, in more recent editions, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn) is a novel by Mark Twain, first published in the United Kingdom in December 1884 and in the United States in February 1885.

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African-American literature

African-American literature is the body of literature produced in the United States by writers of African descent.

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Afro-Latin Americans

Afro-Latin Americans or Black Latin Americans refers to Latin American people of significant African ancestry.

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Afsaneh Najmabadi

Afsāneh Najmābādi (افسانه نجم‌آبادی; born 1946) is an Iranian-American historian and gender theorist.

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Against Sadomasochism

Against Sadomasochism: A Radical Feminist Analysis is a 1982 radical feminist anthology edited by Robin Ruth Linden, Darlene R. Pagano, Diana E. H. Russell, and Susan Leigh Star.

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Akira Kurosawa

was a Japanese film director and screenwriter, who directed 30 films in a career spanning 57 years.

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Alan Sokal

Alan David Sokal (born January 24, 1955) is a professor of mathematics at University College London and professor of physics at New York University.

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Albert Coates (professor)

Albert Coates (1896–1989) was the founder and long-time director of the Institute of Government at the University of North Carolina.

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Albert Saijo

Albert Fairchild Saijo (February 4, 1926 – June 2, 2011) was a Japanese-American poet associated with the Beat Generation.

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Alex Au

Alex Au Waipang, also known by his Internet nom de plume as Yawning Bread, is an advocate of LGBT rights in Singapore.

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Alexander Hinton

Alexander Hinton serves as the Director of the Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights and Professor in the Anthropology and Global Affairs Departments at Rutgers University, Newark.

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Alexander the Great

Alexander III of Macedon (20/21 July 356 BC – 10/11 June 323 BC), commonly known as Alexander the Great (Aléxandros ho Mégas), was a king (basileus) of the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedon and a member of the Argead dynasty.

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Alexander: The Other Side of Dawn

Alexander: The Other Side of Dawn is a 1977 American made-for-television drama film directed by John Erman, and a sequel to Dawn: Portrait of a Teenage Runaway (1976).

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Alfred Arteaga

Alfred Arteaga (1950 – July 4, 2008) was a Chicano poet, writer, and scholar.

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Alfred F. Young

Alfred Fabian "Al" Young (1925–2012) was an American historian.

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Alice Dreger

Alice Domurat Dreger is a historian, bioethicist, author, and former professor of clinical medical humanities and bioethics at the Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University in Chicago, Illinois.

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Alien invasion

The alien invasion or space invasion is a usual part of science fiction stories and film, in which extraterrestrials invade the Earth either to exterminate and supplant human life, enslave it under an intense state, harvest people for food, steal the planet's resources, or destroy the planet altogether.

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Alois Neurath

Alois Neurath (29 August 1886 Vienna – 25 April 1955 Stockholm) was a Sudeten German dissident communist activist who later joined the Swedish Social Democratic Party.

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Alt.binaries.slack

alt.binaries.slack is a Usenet newsgroup created for the purpose of posting pictures, sounds, and utilities related to the Church of the SubGenius, making them available for everyone to see and hear.

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Amalia Mallén

Amalia Mallén de Ostolaza was a Cuban essayist, translator, suffragist, and feminist activist.

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Amber L. Hollibaugh

Amber L. Hollibaugh (born 1946) is an American writer, filmmaker and political activist, largely concerned with feminist and sexual agendas.

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American Beauty (1999 film)

American Beauty is a 1999 American drama film directed by Sam Mendes and written by Alan Ball.

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American Dialect Society

The American Dialect Society (ADS), founded in 1889, is a learned society "dedicated to the study of the English language in North America, and of other languages, or dialects of other languages, influencing it or influenced by it." The Society publishes the academic journal, American Speech.

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American Israel Public Affairs Committee

The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) is a lobbying group that advocates pro-Israel policies to the Congress and Executive Branch of the United States.

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American Literature (journal)

American Literature is a literary journal published by Duke University Press.

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American Speech

American Speech is a quarterly academic journal of the American Dialect Society, established in 1925 and published by Duke University Press.

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Amor Prohibido

Amor Prohibido (Forbidden Love) is the fourth studio album by American singer Selena, released on March 13, 1994, by EMI Latin.

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Amor Prohibido (song)

"Amor Prohibido" ("Forbidden Love") is the title song of American Tejano singer Selena's fourth studio album of the same name (1994).

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Amy Anderson (comedian)

Amy Anderson (born September 1, 1972) is a South Korean-born Swedish-American comedian, actress, and writer.

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Amy Ashwood Garvey

Amy Ashwood Garvey (10 January 1897 – 3 May 1969) was a Jamaican Pan-Africanist activist, director of the Black Star Line Steamship Corporation, and founded the Negro World newspaper.

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Anal sex

Anal sex or anal intercourse is generally the insertion and thrusting of the erect penis into a person's anus, or anus and rectum, for sexual pleasure.

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AnaLouise Keating

AnaLouise Keating (born June 24, 1961) is a professor of Multicultural Women's and Gender Studies at Texas Woman's University in Denton, Texas.

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Anant Shivaji Desai

Anant Shivaji Desai (अनंत शिवाजी देसाई) (born on 17 October 1853 in Walawal, nicknamed Bhausaheb Topiwalla) was an Indian businessman from the erstwhile Sawantwadi State in British India.

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Aníbal Quijano

Aníbal Quijano (17 November 1930 – 31 May 2018) was a Peruvian sociologist and humanist thinker, known for having developed the concept of "coloniality of power".

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And you are lynching Negroes

"And you are lynching Negroes" ("А у вас негров линчуют") and the later "And you are hanging blacks" are catchphrases satirizing Soviet propaganda's response to American criticisms of its human rights violations.

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Andrea del Castagno

Andrea del Castagno (or Andrea di Bartolo di Bargilla; 1419 – 19 August 1457) was an Italian painter from Florence, influenced chiefly by Tommaso Masaccio and Giotto di Bondone.

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Andrew Ross (sociologist)

Andrew Ross (born 1956) is Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis at New York University (NYU), and a social activist and analyst.

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Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol (born Andrew Warhola; August 6, 1928 – February 22, 1987) was an American artist, director and producer who was a leading figure in the visual art movement known as pop art.

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Anglo-Indian

The term Anglo-Indians can refer to at least two groups of people: those with mixed Indian and British ancestry, and people of British descent born or living in the Indian subcontinent.

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Ann Dunham

Stanley Ann Dunham (November 29, 1942 – November 7, 1995) was an American anthropologist who specialized in the economic anthropology and rural development of Indonesia.

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Ann Farnsworth-Alvear

Ann Farnsworth-Alvear (born Huntington, New York) is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania.

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Ann Laura Stoler

Ann Laura Stoler is the Willy Brandt Distinguished University Professor of Anthropology and Historical Studies at The New School for Social Research in New York City.

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Ann Pellegrini

Ann Pellegrini is Professor of Performance Studies (Tisch School of the Arts) and Social and Cultural Analysis (Faculty of Arts and Science) at NYU and the director of NYU's Center for the Study of Gender and Sexuality.

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Anna G. Jónasdóttir

Anna Guðrún Jónasdóttir (born 2 December 1942) is an Icelandic political scientist, gender studies academic and a leading figure internationally in the research into the concept of love.

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Anna Kohler

Anna Kohler (alternative spelling: Anna Köhler or Anna Koehler) is a German-American theater actress, director and translator.

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Anna Laetitia Barbauld

Anna Laetitia Barbauld (by herself possibly, as in French, née Aikin; 20 June 1743 – 9 March 1825) was a prominent English poet, essayist, literary critic, editor, and author of children's literature.

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Anne Balsamo

Anne Marie Balsamo (born January 7, 1959) is a writer who focuses on the connections between art, culture, gender, and technology.

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Anne Fausto-Sterling

Anne Fausto-Sterling (born July 30, 1944) is the Nancy Duke Lewis Professor of Biology and Gender Studies at Brown University.

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Anne McClintock

Anne McClintock (born in Harare, Zimbabwe) is a writer, feminist scholar and public intellectual who has published widely on issues of sexuality, race, imperialism, and nationalism; popular and visual culture, photography, advertising and cultural theory.

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Annie Sprinkle

Annie M. Sprinkle (born Ellen F. Steinberg on July 23, 1954) is an American sex educator, former sex worker, Also available as: feminist stripper, pornographic actress, cable television host, porn magazine editor, writer, sex film producer, and sex-positive feminist.

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Anti-Indian sentiment

Anti-Indian sentiment or Indophobia refers to negative feelings and hatred towards India, Indians, and Indian culture.

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Anti-miscegenation laws

Anti-miscegenation laws or miscegenation laws are laws that enforce racial segregation at the level of marriage and intimate relationships by criminalizing interracial marriage and sometimes also sex between members of different races.

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Anton Fransch

Anton Fransch (c. 1969 – 17 November 1989), nom de guerre Mahomad, was a commander in Umkhonto we Sizwe.

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Antonio Negri

Antonio "Toni" Negri (born 1 August 1933) is an Italian Marxist sociologist and political philosopher, best known for his co-authorship of Empire and secondarily for his work on Spinoza.

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Apostasy in Judaism

In Judaism, apostasy refers to the rejection of Judaism and possible defection to another religion by a Jew.

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Argumentative turn

The "argumentative turn" refers to a group of different approaches in policy-analysis and planning that emphasize the increased relevance of argumentation, language and deliberation in policy-making.

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Ariwara no Narihira

was a Japanese courtier and waka poet of the early Heian period.

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Aron Gurevich

Aron Yakovlevich Gurevich (also spelled Aaron Gurevich Аро́н Я́ковлевич Гуре́вич; May 12, 1924, Moscow – August 5, 2006, Moscow) was a Russian medievalist historian, working on the European culture of the Middle Ages.

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Artistic depictions of the partition of India

The partition of India and the associated bloody riots inspired many creative minds in India and Pakistan to create literary/cinematic depictions of this event.

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Arturo Escobar (anthropologist)

Arturo Escobar (born 1952) is a Colombian-American anthropologist and the Kenan Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA.

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Arturo Pellerano Alfau

Arturo Joaquín Pellerano Alfau (1864–1935) was a Dominican merchant, publisher, and journalist.

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Asef Bayat

Asef Bayat is an Iranian-American scholar.

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Ashanti people

Ashanti also known as Asante are an ethnic group native to the Ashanti Region of modern-day Ghana.

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Ashio, Tochigi

was a town located in Kamitsuga District, Tochigi, Japan.

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Association of American University Presses

The Association of University Presses (AUPresses) is an association of mostly, but not exclusively, North American university presses.

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Atheism

Atheism is, in the broadest sense, the absence of belief in the existence of deities.

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Ato Quayson

Ato Quayson (born 26 August 1961) is a Ghanaian academic and literary critic, who is University Professor, Professor of English and inaugural Director of the Centre for Diaspora Studies at the University of Toronto.

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Augusto Pinochet

Augusto José Ramón Pinochet Ugarte (25 November 1915 – 10 December 2006) was a Chilean general, politician and the dictator of Chile between 1973 and 1990 who remained the Commander-in-Chief of the Chilean Army until 1998 and was also President of the Government Junta of Chile between 1973 and 1981.

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Austin E. Quigley

Austin Edmund Quigley (born December 31, 1942) was Dean of Columbia College of Columbia University, Lucy G. Moses Professor, and Brander Matthews Professor of Dramatic Literature at Columbia University, in New York City, and the recipient of the 2008 Alexander Hamilton Medal, Columbia College's highest honor.

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Avant-garde

The avant-garde (from French, "advance guard" or "vanguard", literally "fore-guard") are people or works that are experimental, radical, or unorthodox with respect to art, culture, or society.

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Awilix

Awilix (also spelt Auilix and Avilix) was a goddess (or possibly a god) of the Postclassic K'iche' Maya, who had a large kingdom in the highlands of Guatemala.

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¡Ay, Jalisco, no te rajes!

"¡Ay, Jalisco, no te rajes!" is a Mexican ranchera song composed by Manuel Esperón with lyrics by Ernesto Cortázar Sr. It was written in 1941 and featured in the 1941 Mexican film ¡Ay Jalisco, no te rajes!, after which it became an enormous hit in Mexico.

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Éric Fassin

Éric Fassin (born 1959) is a French sociologist.

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Ba'athist Iraq

Ba'athist Iraq, formally the Iraqi Republic, covers the history of Iraq between 1968 and 2003, during the period of the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party's rule.

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Babylon 5's use of the Internet

Babylon 5s use of the Internet began in 1991 with the creator of the series, J. Michael Straczynski, who participated in a number of Internet venues to discuss elements of his work with his fans, including the rec.arts.sf.tv.babylon5 Usenet newsgroup, where he continued to communicate as late as March 2007.

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Bachatón

Bachatón is a fusion genre from Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic which combines bachata melodies and reggaeton style beats, lyrics, rapping, and disc jockeying.

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Bad Education (film)

Bad Education (La mala educación) is a 2004 Spanish drama film written and directed by Pedro Almodóvar.

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Bahasa Binan

Bahasa Binan (or bahasa Béncong) is a distinctive Indonesian speech variety originating from the gay community.

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Bahá'í Faith in Iran

The Bahá'í Faith in Iran is the country's second-largest religion after Islam and the birthplace of the three central figures of the religion – The Báb, Bahá'u'lláh and `Abdu'l-Bahá.

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Bahá'í school

A Bahá'í school at its simplest would be a school run officially by the Bahá'í institutions in its jurisdiction and may be a local class or set of classes, normally run weekly where children get together to study about Bahá'í teachings, Bahá'í central figures, or Bahá'í administration.

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Banana production in Belize

Banana production in Belize accounted for 16 percent of total Belizean exports in 1999.

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Barbara Avedon

Barbara Avedon (June 14, 1925 – August 31, 1994) was a television writer, political activist, and feminist.

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Barbara Herrnstein Smith

Barbara Herrnstein Smith (born 1932) is an American literary critic and theorist, best known for her work Contingencies of Value: Alternative Perspectives for Critical Theory.

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Barrier Device

"Barrier Device" is a 2002 short film written and directed by Grace Lee.

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Bartolomé de las Casas

Bartolomé de las Casas (1484 – 18 July 1566) was a 16th-century Spanish historian, social reformer and Dominican friar.

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Bastille Day

Bastille Day is the common name given in English-speaking countries/lands to the French National Day, which is celebrated on the 14th of July each year.

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Battle of Aspern-Essling

In the Battle of Aspern-Essling (21–22 May 1809), Napoleon attempted a forced crossing of the Danube near Vienna, but the French and their allies were driven back by the Austrians under Archduke Charles.

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Battle of Borovo Selo

The Battle of Borovo Selo on 2 May 1991 (known in Croatia as the Borovo Selo massacre, Pokolj u Borovom Selu and in Serbia as the Borovo Selo incident, Инцидент у Боровом Селу) was one of the first armed clashes in the conflict which became known as the Croatian War of Independence.

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Battle of Lenino

The Battle of Lenino was a tactical World War II engagement that took place between October 12 and October 13, 1943, north of the village of Lenino in the Mogilev region of Byelorussia.

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Battle of Orašje

The Battle of Orašje was fought during the Bosnian War, from 5 May to 10 June 1995, between the Bosnian Serb Army of Republika Srpska (Vojska Republike Srpske – VRS) and the Bosnian Croat Croatian Defence Council (Hrvatsko vijeće obrane – HVO) for control of the town of Orašje and its surrounding area on the south bank of the Sava River.

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Battle of Osijek

The Battle of Osijek (Bitka za Osijek) was the artillery bombardment of the Croatian city of Osijek by the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) which took place from August 1991 to June 1992 during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Battle of the Barracks

The Battle of the Barracks (Bitka za vojarne) was a series of engagements that occurred in mid-to-late 1991 between the Croatian National Guard (Zbor narodne garde – ZNG, later renamed the Croatian Army) and the Croatian police on one side and the Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija – JNA) on another.

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Battle of the Miljevci Plateau

The Battle of the Miljevci Plateau was a clash of the Croatian Army (Hrvatska vojska - HV) and forces of the Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK), fought on 21–23 June 1992, during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Battle of Zadar

The Battle of Zadar (Bitka za Zadar) was a military engagement between the Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija, or JNA), supported by the Croatian Serb Serbian Autonomous Oblast of Krajina (SAO Krajina), and the Croatian National Guard (Zbor Narodne Garde, or ZNG), supported by the Croatian Police.

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Beam Me Up, Scotty (D.C. Scorpio song)

"Beam Me Up, Scotty" is the second single released in 1988 by the Washington, D.C.-based hip-hop artist D.C. Scorpio.

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Beatriz Jaguaribe

Beatriz Jaguaribe is a professor of comparative communications in the School of Communications at the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro.

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Bee Vang

Bee Vang (born November 4, 1991) is an American actor.

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Behind the Green Door

Behind the Green Door is a 1972 American feature-length pornographic film, widely considered one of the genre's "classic" pictures and one of the films that ushered in The Golden Age of Porn.

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Bengalis

Bengalis (বাঙালি), also rendered as the Bengali people, Bangalis and Bangalees, are an Indo-Aryan ethnic group and nation native to the region of Bengal in the Indian subcontinent, which is presently divided between most of Bangladesh and the Indian states of West Bengal, Tripura, Assam, Jharkhand.

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Benjamin Lowy

Benjamin Lowy (born 1979) World Press Photo.

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Bernal de Bonaval

Bernal(do) de Bonaval(le), also known as Bernardo (de) Bonaval, was a 13th-century troubadour in the Kingdom of Galicia (in the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula, in parts of modern Portugal and Spain) who wrote in the Galician-Portuguese language.

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Bestial Devastation

Bestial Devastation is an EP by Brazilian heavy metal band Sepultura, released in 1985 through Cogumelo Records.

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Beyond a Boundary

Beyond a Boundary (1963) is a memoir on cricket written by the Trinidadian Marxist intellectual C. L. R. James, which he described as "neither cricket reminiscences nor autobiography".

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Beyond the First Amendment

Beyond the First Amendment: The Politics of Free Speech and Pluralism is a book about freedom of speech and the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, written by author Samuel Peter Nelson.

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Bibliography of works on Madonna

The life and work of American singer Madonna have generated various academic study material.

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Big Bang Baby

"Big Bang Baby" is a song featured on Tiny Music... Songs from the Vatican Gift Shop, the third album by the band Stone Temple Pilots.

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Black Sabbath (film)

Black Sabbath (lit) is a 1963 horror anthology film directed by Mario Bava.

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Blackface

Blackface was and is a form of theatrical make-up used predominantly by non-black performers to represent a caricature of a black person.

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Bleecker Street Cinema

The Bleecker Street Cinema was an art house movie theater located at 144 Bleecker Street in Manhattan, New York City, New York.

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Blitz Wolf

Blitz Wolf is an early anti-German World War II Hitler-parodying cartoon produced in 1942 by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and distributed by Loew's.

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Bob W. White

Bob W. White is an associate professor of social anthropology at the University of Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

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Bound and Gagged: Pornography and the Politics of Fantasy in America

Bound And Gagged: Pornography and the Politics of Fantasy in America is a 1996 book by Laura Kipnis.

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Bound by Law? Tales from the Public Domain

Bound by Law?: Tales from the Public Domain is a comic book about intellectual property law and the public domain published in 2008 by Duke University Press.

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Boundary 2

Boundary 2, often stylized boundary 2, is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal of postmodern theory, literature, and culture.

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Brad Vernon

Brad Vernon is a fictional character from the American soap opera One Life to Live.

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Brazilian Army

The Brazilian Army (Exército Brasileiro) is the land arm of the Brazilian Armed Forces.

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Brazilian thrash metal

Brazilian thrash metal is a regional scene of thrash metal music that originated during the 1980s in Brazil.

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Brenda Patterson

Brenda Patterson is an American blues singer, based in Memphis, Tennessee, United States.

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Brit rechitzah

Brit Rechitzah (covenant of washing) is an alternative ceremony to Brit milah performed by progressive Jews who are opposed to circumcision as a blood ritual.

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Brooke Singer

Brooke Singer (born 1972) is a New York City–based media artist, co-founder of the art, technology and activist group Preemptive Media, and a professor of New Media at Purchase College, State University of New York.

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Brothel

A brothel or bordello is a place where people engage in sexual activity with prostitutes, who are sometimes referred to as sex workers.

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Bruno Carr

Edward "Bruno" Carr (February 9, 1928 – October 25, 1993) was an American jazz drummer.

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Bruno Latour

Bruno Latour (born 22 June 1947) is a French philosopher, anthropologist and sociologist.

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Bučje camp

The Bučje camp (Logor Bučje) was an internment camp run by rebel Croatian Serb forces during the early stages of the Croatian War of Independence.

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Buenos Amigos

"Buenos Amigos" ("Good Friends") is a down-tempo, pop ballad duet recorded by Salvadoran recording artist Álvaro Torres and American recording artist Selena for Torres' sixth studio album Nada Se Compara Contigo (1991).

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Bulgarian Orthodox Church

The Bulgarian Orthodox Church (Българска православна църква, Balgarska pravoslavna tsarkva) is an autocephalous Orthodox Church.

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Burning Chrome (short story collection)

Burning Chrome (1986) is a collection of short stories written by William Gibson.

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C. L. R. James

Cyril Lionel Robert James (4 January 1901 – 31 May 1989), who sometimes wrote under the pen-name J. R. Johnson, was an Afro-Trinidadian historian, journalist and socialist.

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Camera Obscura (journal)

Camera Obscura is a journal of feminism, culture, and media studies published by Duke University Press.

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Camille Paglia

Camille Anna Paglia (born April 2, 1947) is an American academic and social critic.

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Camp Nordland

Camp Nordland was a 204-acre resort facility located in Andover Township, New Jersey.

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Canary Conn

Canary Conn (born 1949) is an American entertainer and author.

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Capitalism

Capitalism is an economic system based upon private ownership of the means of production and their operation for profit.

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Caridad Atencio

Caridad Atencio (born 14 February 1963) is a Cuban poet and essayist.

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Carl Raschke

Carl A. Raschke (1944-) is an American philosopher and theologian.

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Carlota Alfaro

Carlota Alfaro (born June 4, 1933 in Santurce, Puerto Rico) is a high fashion designer.

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Carol Gluck

Carol Gluck (born November 12, 1941) is an American academic and Japanologist.

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Carpetbagger

In the history of the United States, a carpetbagger was any person from the Northern United States who came to the Southern states after the American Civil War and was perceived to be exploiting the local populace for their own purposes.

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Cascarita

Orlando Guerra (gayr'-rah; September 20, 1914 – March 20, 1973), better known as Cascarita, was a popular Cuban singer who specialized in guaracha and son montuno.

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Castle of San Felipe de Lara

The Castle of San Felipe de Lara (Castillo de San Felipe de Lara) (often referred to simply as the Castillo de San Felipe) is a Spanish colonial fort at the entrance to Lake Izabal in eastern Guatemala.

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Catholic Church in Kazakhstan

The Catholic Church in Kazakhstan is part of the worldwide Catholic Church, under the spiritual leadership of the pope in Rome.

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Catholic Church in Romania

The Catholic Church (Biserica Catolică din România, Romániai Római Katolikus Egyház, Katholische Kirche in Rumänien) in Romania is a Latin Rite Christian church, part of the worldwide Catholic Church, under the spiritual leadership of the Pope in Rome.

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Celsa Albert Batista

Celsa Albert Batista (born 28 July 1942) is a black Dominican academic, writer and historian.

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Center for Documentary Studies

The Center for Documentary Studies (CDS) opened its doors in 1990 as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit support corporation of Duke University dedicated to the documentary arts.

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Central Mississippi Correctional Facility

The Central Mississippi Correctional Facility for Women (CMCF) is a Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC) prison for men and women located in an unincorporated area in Rankin County, Mississippi, near the city of Pearl.

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Cesare Pavese

Cesare Pavese (9 September 1908 – 27 August 1950) was an Italian poet, novelist, literary critic and translator.

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Chandra Talpade Mohanty

Chandra Talpade Mohanty (born 1955) is a Distinguished Professor of Women's and Gender Studies, Sociology, and the Cultural Foundations of Education and Dean's Professor of the Humanities at Syracuse University.

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Charles Baudelaire

Charles Pierre Baudelaire (April 9, 1821 – August 31, 1867) was a French poet who also produced notable work as an essayist, art critic, and pioneering translator of Edgar Allan Poe.

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Charles F. Walker

Charles "Chuck" Walker is the MacArthur Foundation Endowed Chair in International Human Rights and professor of Latin American history at the University of California, Davis.

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Cherchez l'idole

Cherchez l'idole (English title: The Chase) is a 1964 French-Italian film directed by Michel Boisrond.

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Cherríe Moraga

Cherríe Lawrence Moraga (born September 25, 1952) is a Chicana writer, feminist activist, poet, essayist, and playwright.

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Chicago Lesbian Liberation

The Chicago Lesbian Liberation (CLL) was a gay liberation organization formed in Chicago for lesbians during the Women's liberation movement (WLM).

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Child marriage

Child marriage is a formal marriage or informal union entered into by an individual before reaching a certain age, specified by several global organizations such as UNICEF as minors under the age of 18.

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Chinese Canadians in Greater Vancouver

Chinese Canadians are a sizable part of the population in Greater Vancouver, especially in the Chinese communities in the city of Vancouver and the adjoining suburban city of Richmond.

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Chinese cannibalism

The practice of cannibalism (喫人) has a peculiarly detailed history in China.

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Chinese Indonesians

Chinese Indonesians (Indonesian: Orang Tionghoa-Indonesia) are Indonesians descended from various Chinese ethnic groups, primarily the Han Chinese.

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Chiquita Brands International

Chiquita Brands International Sàrl, formerly known as Chiquita Brands International Inc., is a Swiss producer and distributor of bananas and other produce.

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Christian Evangelical Church of Romania

The Christian Evangelical Church of Romania (Biserica Creştină după Evanghelie) is a Plymouth Brethren Protestant denomination, one of Romania's eighteen officially recognised religious denominations.

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Christian Rakovsky

Christian Rakovsky (– September 11, 1941) was a Bulgarian socialist revolutionary, a Bolshevik politician and Soviet diplomat; he was also noted as a journalist, physician, and essayist.

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Chuck Eddy

Chuck Eddy (born November 26, 1960) is an American music journalist.

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CIA Tibetan program

The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency's (CIA) Tibetan program was a covert operation during the Cold War consisting of "political action, propaganda, paramilitary and intelligence operations" based on U.S. Government arrangements made with brothers of the Dalai Lama, who himself was not initially aware of them.

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Cinema of China

The cinema of China is one of three distinct historical threads of Chinese-language cinema together with the cinema of Hong Kong and the cinema of Taiwan.

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Citadine

Citadine (meaning City Women in English) is a French language women's and lifestyle magazine published in Casablanca, Morocco.

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Civil rights movement (1865–1896)

The African-American civil rights movement (1865–1896) was aimed at eliminating racial discrimination against African Americans, improving educational and employment opportunities, and establishing electoral power, just after the abolition of Slavery in the United States.

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Claudia Jones

Claudia Jones, née Claudia Vera Cumberbatch (21 February 1915 – 24 December 1964), was a Trinidad-born journalist and activist.

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Clitoris

The clitoris is a female sex organ present in mammals, ostriches and a limited number of other animals.

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Cocoon (Björk song)

"Cocoon" is a song recorded by Icelandic singer Björk for her fourth studio album Vespertine (2001).

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Codex Cospi

The Codex Cospi (or Codex Bologna) is a pre-Columbian Mesoamerican pictorial manuscript, included in the Borgia Group.

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Comecon

The Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (English abbreviation COMECON, CMEA, or CAME) was an economic organization from 1949 to 1991 under the leadership of the Soviet Union that comprised the countries of the Eastern Bloc along with a number of communist states elsewhere in the world.

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Comedy of menace

Comedy of menace is the body of plays written by David Campton, Nigel Dennis, N. F. Simpson, and Harold Pinter.

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Comfort women

Comfort women were women and girls forced into sexual slavery by the Imperial Japanese Army in occupied territories before and during World War II.

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Committee of Concerned Scientists

The Committee of Concerned Scientists (CCS) is an independent international organization devoted to the protection and advancement of human rights and scientific freedom of scientists, physicians, and scholars.

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Communism

In political and social sciences, communism (from Latin communis, "common, universal") is the philosophical, social, political, and economic ideology and movement whose ultimate goal is the establishment of the communist society, which is a socioeconomic order structured upon the common ownership of the means of production and the absence of social classes, money and the state.

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Conan the Barbarian (1982 film)

Conan the Barbarian is a 1982 American fantasy adventure film directed and co-written by John Milius.

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Conant Gardens

Conant Gardens is a neighborhood in northeast Detroit, Michigan.

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Conference on Latin American History

Conference on Latin American History, (CLAH), founded in 1926, is the professional organization of Latin American historians affiliated with the American Historical Association.

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Congress of Black Writers and Artists

The Congress of Black Writers and Artists (French: Congrès des écrivains et artistes noirs; originally called the Congress of Negro Writers and Artists) is a meeting of leading black intellectuals for the purpose of addressing the issues of colonialism, slavery, and Négritude.

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Conservatism in North America

Conservatism in North America is a political philosophy that varies in form, depending on the country and the region, but that has similar themes and goals.

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Contras

The Contras were the various U.S.-backed and funded right-wing rebel groups that were active from 1979 to the early 1990s in opposition to the socialist Sandinista Junta of National Reconstruction government in Nicaragua.

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Coricancha

Coricancha, Koricancha, Qoricancha or Qorikancha (from Quechua quri gold; kancha enclosure) was the most important temple in the Inca Empire.

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Cosita rica

Cosita rica is a Venezuelan telenovela written by Leonardo Padrón and produced by Venevisión between 2003 and 2004.

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Craufurd Goodwin

Craufurd D. W. Goodwin (1934–2017) was an historian of economic thought and the James B. Duke Professor Emeritus of Economics, Vice-Provost, and Dean of the Graduate School at Duke University.

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Creationism

Creationism is the religious belief that the universe and life originated "from specific acts of divine creation",Gunn 2004, p. 9, "The Concise Oxford Dictionary says that creationism is 'the belief that the universe and living organisms originated from specific acts of divine creation.'" as opposed to the scientific conclusion that they came about through natural processes.

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Criticism of reality television

The reality television genre, and specific reality television shows, have been subject to significant criticism since the genre first rose to worldwide popularity in the 1990s.

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Croatian War of Independence

The Croatian War of Independence was fought from 1991 to 1995 between Croat forces loyal to the government of Croatia—which had declared independence from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY)—and the Serb-controlled Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) and local Serb forces, with the JNA ending its combat operations in Croatia by 1992.

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Cuba

Cuba, officially the Republic of Cuba, is a country comprising the island of Cuba as well as Isla de la Juventud and several minor archipelagos.

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Cuban Revolution

The Cuban Revolution (Revolución cubana) was an armed revolt conducted by Fidel Castro's revolutionary 26th of July Movement and its allies against the authoritarian government of Cuban President Fulgencio Batista.

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Cuje Bertram

Bennie Esterd "Cuje" Bertram (August 24, 1894 – April 2, 1993) was an African American old-time fiddle player from Kentucky.

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Cultural memory

Because memory is not just an individual, private experience but is also part of the collective domain, cultural memory has become a topic in both historiography (Pierre Nora, Richard Terdiman) and cultural studies (e.g., Susan Stewart).

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Culture of Jamaica

Jamaican culture is the religion, norms, values and lifestyle that defines the people of Jamaica.

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Cum shot

A cum shot is the depiction of human ejaculation, especially onto another person.

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Cyber Rights

Cyber Rights: Defending Free speech in the Digital Age is a non-fiction book about cyberlaw, written by free speech lawyer Mike Godwin.

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Cyberpunk

Cyberpunk is a subgenre of science fiction in a futuristic setting that tends to focus on a "combination of lowlife and high tech" featuring advanced technological and scientific achievements, such as artificial intelligence and cybernetics, juxtaposed with a degree of breakdown or radical change in the social order.

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D.C. Scorpio

Lanard "D.C. Scorpio" Thompson (also credited as "DC Scorpio") is a Washington, D.C.-based hip-hop recording artist.

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Daniel James (historian)

Daniel James (born August 8, 1948) is a British historian educated at Oxford University and the London School of Economics, where he received his doctorate in 1979.

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Daniel Levy (sociologist)

Daniel Levy (born 1962) is a German–American political sociologist and an Associate Professor of Sociology at the State University of New York at Stony Brook.

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Dark City (1998 film)

Dark City is a 1998 American-Australian neo-noir science fiction film directed by Alex Proyas.

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Daruvar Agreement

The Daruvar Agreement (Croatian, Serbian: Daruvarski sporazum) was a document negotiated by Croatian and Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK) local authorities in the United Nations Protected Area (UNPA) for the SAO Western Slavonia, also known as Sector West on 18 February 1993, during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Darwin from Orchids to Variation

Between 1860 and 1868, the life and work of Charles '''Darwin''' from Orchids to Variation continued with research and experimentation on evolution, carrying out tedious work to provide evidence of the extent of natural variation enabling artificial selection.

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Daughter of the Nile

Daughter of the Nile (Ni luo he nyu er) (I kori tou Neilou) is a 1987 film by Taiwanese filmmaker Hou Hsiao-hsien.

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Dave Van Ronk

David Kenneth Ritz "Dave" Van Ronk (June 30, 1936 – February 10, 2002) was an American folk singer.

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David Hume

David Hume (born David Home; 7 May 1711 NS (26 April 1711 OS) – 25 August 1776) was a Scottish philosopher, historian, economist, and essayist, who is best known today for his highly influential system of philosophical empiricism, skepticism, and naturalism.

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David Lane (white supremacist)

David Eden Lane (November 2, 1938 – May 28, 2007) was an American white supremacist leader and convicted felon.

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Debate over the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki

The debate over the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki concerns the ethical, legal, and military controversies surrounding the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on 6 August and 9 August 1945 at the close of World War II (1939–45).

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Demak Great Mosque

Masjid Agung Demak (or Demak Great Mosque) is one of the oldest mosques in Indonesia, located in the center town of Demak, Central Java, Indonesia.

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Demographics of Mexico

With a population of over 123 million in 2017, Mexico ranks as the 11th most populated country in the world.

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Demographics of Puerto Rico

The population of Puerto Rico has been shaped by Amerindian settlement, European colonization especially under the Spanish Empire, slavery and economic migration.

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Denise Riley

Denise Riley (born 1948, Carlisle) is an English poet and philosopher who began to be published in the 1970s.

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Deportation of the Crimean Tatars

The deportation of the Crimean Tatars (Crimean Tatar Qırımtatar sürgünligi; Ukrainian Депортація кримських татар; Russian Депортация крымских татар) was the ethnic cleansing of at least 191,044 Tatars from Crimea in May 1944.

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Desmond Tutu

Desmond Mpilo Tutu (born 7 October 1931) is a South African Anglican cleric and theologian known for his work as an anti-apartheid and human rights activist.

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Devi Chaudhurani

Devi Chaudhurani (দেবী চৌধুরানী) is a Bengali novel written by Bankim Chandra Chatterji and published in 1884.

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Devotions upon Emergent Occasions

Devotions upon Emergent Occasions, or in full Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions, and severall steps in my Sicknes, is a prose work by the English metaphysical poet and cleric in the Church of England John Donne, published in 1624.

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Dicen Que Soy

Dicen Que Soy (They Say That I Am) is the third studio album by Puerto Rican-American recording artist La India released on September 20, 1994 by RMM Records.

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Dick Blau

Dick Blau (born 1943) is a professor of film at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, a photographer and film maker, and a figure in the study of photography of the family.

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Differences (journal)

Differences: A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies (stylized "differences") is a peer-reviewed academic journal that was established in 1989 by Naomi Schor and Elizabeth Weed.

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Different from You and Me

Different from You and Me (§175) (Anders als du und ich (§175)) is a 1957 feature film on the subject of homosexuality directed by Veit Harlan.

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Dipesh Chakrabarty

Dipesh Chakrabarty (born 1948, Kolkata) is a historian, who has also made contributions to postcolonial theory and subaltern studies.

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Directed evolution (transhumanism)

The term directed evolution is used within the transhumanist community to refer to the idea of applying the principles of directed evolution and experimental evolution to the control of human evolution.

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Distortion (music)

Distortion and overdrive are forms of audio signal processing used to alter the sound of amplified electric musical instruments, usually by increasing their gain, producing a "fuzzy", "growling", or "gritty" tone.

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Diva (Ivy Queen album)

Diva is the third studio album by Puerto Rican reggaetón recording artist Ivy Queen.

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DJ Krush

, better known by his stage name DJ Krush, is a record producer and DJ.

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Documentary film

A documentary film is a nonfictional motion picture intended to document some aspect of reality, primarily for the purposes of instruction, education, or maintaining a historical record.

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Dolores (Ziegfeld girl)

Dolores or Rose Dolores (born Kathleen Rose) (1893 or 1894 – 7 November 1975) was the first celebrity clothes model and has been credited with inventing the "blank hauteur" of the modern fashion model.

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Domenicangela Lina Unali

Domenicangela Lina Unali (born 1936 in Rome) has been Professor of English Literature at the Faculty of Letters, University of Rome Tor Vergata since 1983.

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Domingo de Vico

Domingo de Vico was a Spanish Dominican friar during the Spanish conquest of Chiapas and the conquest of Guatemala in the 16th century.

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Don Ed Hardy

Don Ed Hardy is an American tattoo artist raised in Southern California.

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Don José Vidal

Don José Vidal (March 12, 1763, in A Coruña, Spain – August 22, 1823, in New Orleans, Louisiana) was a Spanish grandee who served in many different roles during the last decade of Louisiana's colonial period.

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Doris Sommer

Doris Sommer is Ira Jewell Williams, Jr., Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures and of African and African American Studies at Harvard University.

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Dreaming of You (Selena album)

Dreaming of You is the fifth and final studio album by American singer Selena.

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Dreaming of You (Selena song)

"Dreaming of You" is a song recorded by American Tejano singer Selena for her fifth studio album of the same name (1995).

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Dreamtime

Dreamtime (also dream time, dream-time) is a term devised by early anthropologists to refer to a religio-cultural worldview attributed to Australian Aboriginal beliefs.

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Duchess Harris

Duchess Harris is an African-American academic, author, and legal scholar.

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Dude

Dude is American English slang for an individual, typically male.

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Duke Mathematical Journal

Duke Mathematical Journal is a peer-reviewed mathematics journal published by Duke University Press.

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Dwain Esper

Dwain Atkins Esper (October 7, 1894 – October 18, 1982) was an American director and producer of exploitation films.

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E. Mealy El

Edward Mealy El (born Edward Mealy; September 17, 1870 – 1935), often known as E. Mealy El, was an Moorish-American religious leader who was Prophet Noble Drew Ali's successor as head of the Moorish Science Temple of America.

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E. P. Thompson

Edward Palmer Thompson (3 February 1924 – 28 August 1993), usually cited as E. P.

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East Turkestan

East Turkestan (Uyghur: شەرقىي تۈركىستان, Шәрқий Түркистан, Shərqiy Türkistan) also known as Eastern Turkistan, Uyghurstan, Uyghuristan is a political term with multiple meanings depending on context and usage.

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Economic rent

In economics, economic rent is any payment to an owner or factor of production in excess of the costs needed to bring that factor into production.

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Economy of the United States

The economy of the United States is a highly developed mixed economy.

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Edgardo Rodríguez Juliá

Edgardo Rodríguez Juliá (born October 9, 1946) is a Puerto Rican essayist and novelist.

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Edgemont (Durham, North Carolina)

The Edgemont neighborhood is a community of mill works located in Durham, North Carolina.

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Edmund Samarakkody

No description.

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Edward A. Allworth

Edward A. Allworth (1 December 1920 – 20 October 2016) was an American historian specializing in Central Asia.

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Edward Douglas-Scott-Montagu, 3rd Baron Montagu of Beaulieu

Edward John Barrington Douglas-Scott-Montagu, 3rd Baron Montagu of Beaulieu (20 October 1926 – 31 August 2015), was an English Conservative politician well known in Great Britain for founding the National Motor Museum, as well as for a pivotal cause célèbre in British gay history following his 1954 conviction and imprisonment for homosexual sex, a charge he denied.

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Effects unit

An effects unit or effects pedal is an electronic or digital device that alters the sound of a musical instrument or other audio source.

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Eichmann in Jerusalem

Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil is a book by political theorist Hannah Arendt, originally published in 1963.

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Electric blues

Electric blues refers to any type of blues music distinguished by the use of electric amplification for musical instruments.

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Elizabeth Hill Boone

Elizabeth Hill Boone (born September 6, 1948) is an American art historian, ethnohistorian and academic, specialising in the study of Latin American art and in particular the early colonial and pre-Columbian art, iconography and pictoral codices associated with the Mixtec, Aztec and other Mesoamerican cultures in the central Mexican region.

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Ellen Gruenbaum

Ellen Gruenbaum is an American anthropologist.

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Ellen Stewart

Ellen Stewart (November 7, 1919 – January 13, 2011) was an African-American theatre director and producer and the founder of La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club.

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Emel (magazine)

emel is a defunct British lifestyle magazine that reported on contemporary British Muslim culture.

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Emergency! (album)

Emergency! is the debut double album by American jazz fusion group The Tony Williams Lifetime.

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Emigration from Ecuador

Emigration from Ecuador is a relatively recent phenomenon, but one that has had a huge impact on the country's demographics and economy.

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Enabling act

An enabling act is a piece of legislation by which a legislative body grants an entity which depends on it (for authorization or legitimacy) the power to take certain actions.

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Encilhamento

The Encilhamento was an economic bubble that boomed in the late 1880s and early 1890s in Brazil, bursting during the 1st Brazilian military dictatorship (1889-1894), leading to an institutional and a financial crisis.

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End of communism in Hungary (1989)

The Communist rule in the Hungarian People's Republic came to an end in 1989.

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Entre a Mi Mundo

Entre a Mi Mundo (Enter My World) is the third studio album by American singer Selena, released on May 6, 1992, by EMI Latin.

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Erasmus Gower

Admiral Sir Erasmus Gower (3 December 1742 – 21 June 1814) was a naval officer and colonial governor.

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Eric Hobsbawm

Eric John Ernest Hobsbawm (9 June 1917 – 1 October 2012) was a British historian of the rise of industrial capitalism, socialism and nationalism.

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Eric Schaefer

Eric Schaefer, Ph.D., (born 1959) is a professor and film historian.

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Ernie Lancaster

Ernie Lancaster (November 30, 1953 – July 17, 2014) was an American electric blues and blues rock guitarist and songwriter.

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Ernst Jünger

Ernst Jünger (29 March 1895 – 17 February 1998) was a highly decorated German soldier, author, and entomologist who became publicly known for his World War I memoir Storm of Steel.

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Es Demasiado Tarde

"Es Demasiado Tarde" ("It's Too Late") is a song written and performed by Mexican singer-songwriter Ana Gabriel.

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Esin Engin

Esin Engin (May 17, 1945 – May 4, 1997), was a Turkish musician, composer, arranger and film actor.

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Ethnohistory (journal)

Ethnohistory is a peer-reviewed academic journal established in 1954 and published quarterly by Duke University Press on behalf of the American Society for Ethnohistory.

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Evangelical Church of Romania

The Evangelical Church of Romania (Biserica Evanghelică Română), a Protestant denomination, is one of Romania's eighteen officially recognised religious denominations.

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Evenings at Home

Evenings at Home, or The Juvenile Budget Opened (1792–1796) is a collection of six volumes of stories written by John Aikin and his sister Anna Laetitia Barbauld.

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Exodusters

Exodusters was a name given to African Americans who migrated from states along the Mississippi River to Kansas in the late nineteenth century, as part of the Exoduster Movement or Exodus of 1872.

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Exploitation film

An exploitation film is a film that attempts to succeed financially by exploiting current trends, niche genres, or lurid content.

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Faith Ringgold

Faith Ringgold (born October 8, 1930, in Harlem, New York City) is an artist, best known for her narrative quilts.

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Fantasias for Guitar and Banjo

Fantasias for Guitar and Banjo is the debut album of the folk guitarist Sandy Bull, released in 1963 through Vanguard Records.

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Farewell My Concubine (novel)

Farewell My Concubine is a 1985 novel by Lilian Lee (Li Bihua).

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Feminism

Feminism is a range of political movements, ideologies, and social movements that share a common goal: to define, establish, and achieve political, economic, personal, and social equality of sexes.

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Feminist art movement in the United States

The feminist art movement in the United States began in the early 1970s and sought to promote the study, creation, understanding and promotion of women's art.

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Feminist effects on society

The feminist movement has effected change in Western society, including women's suffrage; greater access to education; more equitable pay with men; the right to initiate divorce proceedings; the right of women to make individual decisions regarding pregnancy (including access to contraceptives and abortion); and the right to own property.

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Feminist pornography

Feminist pornography refers to a genre of film developed by and/or for those dedicated to gender equality.

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Femmes du Maroc

Femmes du Maroc (meaning Women of Morocco in English) is a French language monthly women's magazine published in Casablanca, Morocco.

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Fielding Dawson

Fielding Dawson (August 2, 1930 – January 5, 2002) was a Beat-era author of short stories and novels, and a student at Black Mountain College.

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Fight Club (novel)

Fight Club is a 1996 novel by Chuck Palahniuk.

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First Amendment to the United States Constitution

The First Amendment (Amendment I) to the United States Constitution prevents Congress from making any law respecting an establishment of religion, prohibiting the free exercise of religion, or abridging the freedom of speech, the freedom of the press, the right to peaceably assemble, or to petition for a governmental redress of grievances.

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First-wave feminism

First-wave feminism was a period of feminist activity and thought that occurred during the 19th and early 20th century throughout the Western world.

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Fixing Sex

Fixing Sex: Intersex, Medical Authority, and Lived Experience, a book by Stanford anthropologist and bioethicist Katrina Karkazis, was published in 2008.

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Flashback (Ivy Queen album)

Flashback is the fifth studio album by Puerto Rican reggaetón recording artist Ivy Queen, released on October 4, 2005 through Univision and on September 15, 2007 as Greatest Hits in Germany and Spain.

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Flight attendant

Flight attendants or cabin crew (also known as stewards/stewardesses, air hosts/hostesses, cabin attendants) are members of an aircrew employed by airlines primarily to ensure the safety and comfort of passengers aboard commercial flights, on select business jet aircraft, and on some military aircraft.

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Folk religion

In religious studies and folkloristics, folk religion, popular religion, or vernacular religion comprises various forms and expressions of religion that are distinct from the official doctrines and practices of organized religion.

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Foresight Institute

The Foresight Institute is a Palo Alto, California-based research non-profit dedicated to promoting the development of nanotechnology (and other emerging technologies).

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Fourth International Posadist

The Fourth International Posadist is a Trotskyist international.

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Fran Herndon

Fran Herndon is an American artist associated with the central poets of the San Francisco Renaissance.

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France Winddance Twine

France Winddance Twine (born 1960 in Chicago, Illinois) is Professor of Sociology and documentary filmmaker at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

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Frances Ferguson

Frances Ferguson (born 23 August 1947) is a literary and cultural theorist who has taught courses in eighteenth and nineteenth century materials and twentieth century literary theory at a variety of universities, including Johns Hopkins University until July, 2012, where she was Mary Elizabeth Garrett Chair in Arts and Sciences at the university.

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Frances Sargent Osgood

Frances Sargent Osgood (née Locke) (June 18, 1811 – May 12, 1850) was an American poet and one of the most popular women writers during her time.

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Franco-Belgian comics

Franco-Belgian comics (bande dessinée franco-belge) are comics that are created for French-Belgian (Wallonia) and/or French readership.

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Fred Ho

Fred Ho (born Fred Wei-han Houn; August 10, 1957 – April 12, 2014) was an American jazz baritone saxophonist, composer, bandleader, playwright, writer and Marxist social activist.

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Fredric Jameson

Fredric Jameson (born April 14, 1934) is an American literary critic and Marxist political theorist.

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Free Speech, "The People's Darling Privilege"

Free Speech, "The People’s Darling Privilege": Struggles for Freedom of Expression in American History is a non-fiction book about the history of freedom of speech in the United States written by Michael Kent Curtis and published in 2000 by Duke University Press.

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Freedom for the Thought That We Hate

Freedom for the Thought That We Hate: A Biography of the First Amendment is a 2007 non-fiction book by journalist Anthony Lewis about freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of thought, and the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.

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Freedom from Want (painting)

Freedom from Want, also known as The Thanksgiving Picture or I'll Be Home for Christmas, is the third of the ''Four Freedoms'' series of four oil paintings by American artist Norman Rockwell.

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Freedom of Expression (book)

Freedom of Expression® is a book written by Kembrew McLeod about freedom of speech issues involving concepts of intellectual property.

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Freedom of speech

Freedom of speech is a principle that supports the freedom of an individual or a community to articulate their opinions and ideas without fear of retaliation, censorship, or sanction.

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French Historical Studies

French Historical Studies is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal covering French history.

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Fruit (slang)

Fruit and fruitcake, as well as many variations, are slang or even sexual slang terms which have various origins but modern usage tend to primarily refer to gay men and sometimes other LGBT people.

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Ganesh Shankar Vidyarthi

Ganesh Shankar Vidyarthi (26 October 1890 – 25 March 1931, Kanpur) was an Indian journalist, a leader of the Indian National Congress and an independence movement activist.

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Gavin Butt

Gavin Butt (born 1967) is a writer and academic based in Brighton, UK.

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Gay icon

A gay icon is a public figure (historical or present) who is embraced by many within lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) communities.

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Gay sexual practices

Gay sexual practices are sexual activities involving men who have sex with men (MSM), regardless of their sexual orientation or sexual identity.

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Gérard Debreu

Gérard Debreu (4 July 1921 – 31 December 2004) was a French-born American economist and mathematician.

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Gender studies

Gender studies is a field for interdisciplinary study devoted to gender identity and gendered representation as central categories of analysis.

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General Hershy Bar

General Hershy Bar (aka Calypso Joe), was the name William "Bill" Matons used as a satirical character of the Vietnam War-era Anti-War protest movement, in parody of U.S. General Lewis B. Hershey, then Director of the Selective Service.

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Geoffrey Galt Harpham

Geoffrey Galt Harpham (born 1946) is an American academic who until recently served as President and Director of the National Humanities Center.

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Geographical renaming

Geographical renaming is the changing of the name of a geographical feature or area.

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George Adamski

George Adamski (17 April 1891 – 23 April 1965) was a Polish American citizen who became widely known in ufology circles, and to some degree in popular culture, after he claimed to have photographed spaceships from other planets, met with friendly Nordic alien Space Brothers, and to have taken flights with them to the Moon and other planets.

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George Ciccariello-Maher

George Ciccariello-Maher (born March 12, 1979) is an American political scientist and activist who was an associate professor of politics and global studies at Drexel University and a lecturer in philosophy and political economy at the Venezuelan Ministry of Planning and Finance's School of Planning.

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George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney

George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney, KB (14 May 1737 – 31 May 1806) was a British statesman, colonial administrator and diplomat.

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George Washington Williams

George Washington Williams (October 16, 1849 – August 2, 1891) was an American Civil War soldier, Christian minister, politician, lawyer, journalist, and writer on African-American history.

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Gina Dent

Gina Dent received her B. A. in Comparative Literature from University of California, Berkeley, her M.A.and Ph.D. in English & Comparative Literature from Columbia University.

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Gleichschaltung

Gleichschaltung, or in English co-ordination, was in Nazi terminology the process of Nazification by which Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party successively established a system of totalitarian control and coordination over all aspects of German society, "from the economy and trade associations to the media, culture and education".

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GLQ (journal)

GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies is a scholarly, peer-reviewed journal based published by Duke University Press.

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Gods of the Blood

Gods of the Blood: The Pagan Revival and White Separatism is a book by Swedish scholar Mattias Gardell discussing neopaganism (in particular Asatru) and white separatism, neo-fascism, and antisemitism.

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Golden Age of Porn

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MediaWiki_talk:Spam-whitelist/Archives/2018/01#Another_Worthy_Journal_Article_on_Wordpress ---> The Golden Age of Porn, or porno chic, refers to a 15-year period (around 1969–1984) in commercial American pornography, which spread internationally, in which sexually-explicit films experienced positive attention from mainstream cinemas, movie critics, and the general public.

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Golden Dawn (political party)

The Popular Association – Golden Dawn (Λαϊκός Σύνδεσμος – Χρυσή Αυγή, Laïkós Sýndesmos – Chrysí Avgí), usually known simply as Golden Dawn (Χρυσή Αυγή, Chrysí Avgí), is an ultranationalist, far-right political party in Greece.

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Goree Carter

Goree Chester Carter or Christer Carter (December 31, 1930 – December 29, 1990), known as Goree Carter, was an American singer, guitarist, drummer, songwriter and soldier.

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Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies

Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal established in 1958 by John J. Bilitz.

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Gregg Araki

Gregg Araki (born December 17, 1959) is an American filmmaker involved heavily with New Queer Cinema.

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Griselda Pollock

Griselda Pollock (born 11 March 1949) is a visual theorist, cultural analyst and scholar of international, postcolonial feminist studies in the visual arts.

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Guatemalan Civil War

The Guatemalan Civil War ran from 1960 to 1996.

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Gubbinal

"Gubbinal" is a poem from Wallace Stevens's first book of poetry, Harmonium (1923).

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Guido von Pirquet

Guido von Pirquet (30 March 1880 – 17 April 1966) was an Austrian pioneer of astronautics and a Baron of a lower noble family.

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Guitar amplifier

A guitar amplifier (or amp) is an electronic device or system that strengthens the weak electrical signal from a pickup on an electric guitar, bass guitar, or acoustic guitar so that it can produce sound through one or more loudspeakers, which are typically housed in a wooden cabinet.

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Gumrah (1993 film)

Gumrah is a 1993 Indian crime drama film directed by Mahesh Bhatt in a screenplay written by Sujit Sen and Robin Bhatt.

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Guy Hocquenghem

Guy Hocquenghem (10 December 1946 – 28 August 1988) was a French writer, philosopher, and queer theorist.

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Hal Ellson

Harold "Hal" Ellson (1910 – October 31, 1994 in Brooklyn), in the New York Times; published November 9, 1994; retrieved July 2, 2014 was an American author of pulp fiction whose work primarily focused on juvenile delinquency, a field in which he has been described as "one of the most popular" writers, by Carlo Rotella (quoting Claude Brown); published April 21, 1998, by University of California Press (via Google Books), by Leerom Medovoi; published June 2, 2005, by Duke University Press (via Google Books) and as "legendary".

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Hannah Wilke

Hannah Wilke (born Arlene Hannah Butter; March 7, 1940 – January 28, 1993) was an American painter, sculptor, photographer, video artist and performance artist.

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Harold Brown (Rhode Island)

Harold Brown (December 24, 1863 – May 10, 1900) was an American financier and philanthropist who was prominent in New York society during the Gilded Age.

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Haworth Pictures Corporation

Haworth Pictures Corporation was a film studio established by American actor Sessue Hayakawa in March 1918.

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Hürriyet

Hürriyet (Liberty) is one of the major Turkish newspapers, founded in 1948.

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Heathenry (new religious movement)

Heathenry, also termed Heathenism or Germanic Neopaganism, is a modern Pagan religion.

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Heavy metal music

Heavy metal (or simply metal) is a genre of rock music that developed in the late 1960s and early 1970s, largely in the United Kingdom.

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Heel (professional wrestling)

In professional wrestling, a heel (also known as a rudo in lucha libre) is a wrestler who portrays a villain or a "bad guy" and acts as an antagonist.

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Height discrimination

Height discrimination (more commonly known as heightism) is prejudice or discrimination against individuals based on height.

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Helen of Troy

In Greek mythology, Helen of Troy (Ἑλένη, Helénē), also known as Helen of Sparta, or simply Helen, was said to have been the most beautiful woman in the world, who was married to King Menelaus of Sparta, but was kidnapped by Prince Paris of Troy, resulting in the Trojan War when the Achaeans set out to reclaim her and bring her back to Sparta.

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Hello, Hello Brazil: Popular Music in the Making of Modern Brazil

Hello, Hello Brazil: Popular Music in the Making of Modern Brazil is a book by historian Bryan McCann published by Duke University Press in 2004.

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Henry II of France

Henry II (Henri II; 31 March 1519 – 10 July 1559) was a monarch of the House of Valois who ruled as King of France from 31 March 1547 until his death in 1559.

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Henry Jenkins

Henry Jenkins III (born June 4, 1958) is an American media scholar and Provost Professor of Communication, Journalism, and Cinematic Arts, a joint professorship at the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism and the USC School of Cinematic Arts.

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Hermaphrodites with Attitude

Hermaphrodites with Attitude was a newsletter edited by Cheryl Chase and published by the Intersex Society of North America (ISNA) between 1994 and 2005.

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Hernando de Soto

Hernando de Soto (1495 – May 21, 1542) was a Spanish explorer and conquistador who led the first Spanish and European expedition deep into the territory of the modern-day United States (through Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and most likely Arkansas).

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Hershel Parker

Hershel Parker is an American professor of English and literature, noted for his research into the works of Herman Melville.

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Hettie Jones

Hettie Jones (born 1934 as Hettie Cohen) is best known for her memoir of the Beat Scene, as well as for the preceding 20 books she published for children and young adults, which include the award-winning The Trees Stand Shining, and Big Star Fallin' Mama: Five Women in Black Music.

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Hibernophile

A Hibernophile is a person who is fond of Irish culture, Irish language and Ireland in general.

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Hideko the Bus-Conductor

, based on the short story "Okomasan" by Masuji Ibuse, is a 1941 Japanese film directed by Mikio Naruse.

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High ground

High ground is an area of elevated terrain, which can be useful in combat.

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Hiram Rhodes Revels

Hiram Rhodes Revels (September 27, 1827Different sources list his birth year as either 1827 or 1822. – January 16, 1901) was a Republican U.S. Senator, minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME), and a college administrator.

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Hiram Wesley Evans

Hiram Wesley Evans (September 26, 1881 – September 14, 1966) was the Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, an American white supremacist group, from 1922 to 1939.

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Hispanic–Latino naming dispute

The Hispanic–Latino naming dispute is an ongoing disagreement over the use of the ethnonyms "Hispanic" and "Latino" to refer collectively to the inhabitants of the United States of America who are of Latin American or Spanish origin—that is, Latino or Hispanic Americans.

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Historiography

Historiography is the study of the methods of historians in developing history as an academic discipline, and by extension is any body of historical work on a particular subject.

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History of African Americans in Los Angeles

This article discusses the African-American community in Los Angeles.

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History of Cuba

The island of Cuba was inhabited by various Mesoamerican cultures prior to the arrival of the Spanish explorer Christopher Columbus in 1492.

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History of Filipino Americans

Filipinos in what is now the United States were first documented in the 16th century, with small settlements beginning in the 18th century.

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History of film

Although the start of the history of film is not clearly defined, the commercial, public screening of ten of Lumière brothers' short films in Paris on 28 December 1895 can be regarded as the breakthrough of projected cinematographic motion pictures.

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History of Japanese nationality

The history of Japanese nationality as a chronology of evolving concepts and practices begins in the mid-nineteenth century, as Japan opened diplomatic relations with the west and a modern nation state was established through the Meiji Restoration.

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History of Political Economy

The History of Political Economy is a journal published by Duke University Press, focusing on economics and the history of economic thought and analysis.

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History of propaganda

Propaganda is information that is not impartial and used primarily to influence an audience and further an agenda, often by presenting facts selectively (perhaps lying by omission) to encourage a particular synthesis, or using loaded messages to produce an emotional rather than a rational response to the information presented.

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History of prostitution

Prostitution has been practiced throughout ancient and modern culture.

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History of sociology

Sociology as a scholarly discipline emerged primarily out of enlightenment thought, shortly after the French Revolution, as a positivist science of society.

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History of the Jews in Morocco

Moroccan Jews constitute an ancient community.

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History of the Maya civilization

The history of Maya civilization is divided into three principal periods: the Preclassic, Classic and Postclassic periods; these were preceded by the Archaic Period, which saw the first settled villages and early developments in agriculture.

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History of women in Puerto Rico

The recorded history of women in Puerto Rico can trace its roots back to the era of the Taíno, the indigenous people of the Caribbean, who inhabited the island that they called "Boriken" before the arrival of Spaniards.

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History of women in the United Kingdom

History of women in the United Kingdom covers the social, cultural and political roles of women in Britain over the last two millennia.

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Hoda Elsadda

Hoda Elsadda is Chair in the Study of the Contemporary Arab World at the University of Manchester.

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Homi K. Bhabha

Homi K. Bhabha (born November 1, 1949) is an Indian English scholar and critical theorist.

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Honda Super Cub

The Honda Super Cub is a Honda underbone motorcycle with a four stroke single cylinder engine ranging in displacement from.

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Honour killing in Pakistan

Honour killings in Pakistan are known locally as karo-kari (کاروکاری).

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Horse meat

Horse meat is the culinary name for meat cut from a horse.

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Hortsang Jigme

Hortsang Jigme (Tibetan: ཧོར་གཙང་འཇིགས་མེད། Wylie: Hor-gtsang-'jigs-med) is a scholar, writer, and poet who writes in the Tibetan language and currently resides in the United States.

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How Many More Years

"How Many More Years" is a blues song written and originally recorded by Howlin' Wolf (born Chester Burnett) in July 1951.

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How to Read Donald Duck

How to Read Donald Duck (Para leer al Pato Donald in Spanish) is a 1971 book-length essay by Ariel Dorfman and Armand Mattelart that critiques Disney comics from a Marxist point of view as being vehicles for American cultural imperialism.

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Huda Naamani

Huda Naamani (also known as Houda Naamani, Hoda Naamani,or Houda K. Al-Naamani) (Arabic: هدى نعمانىِ) is a Damascus-born Arab feminist writer, poet, publisher, and artist.

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Huejotla

Huexotla or Huexotla is an archaeological site located 5 kilometers south of Texcoco, at the town of San Luis Huexotla, close to Chapingo, in the Mexico State.

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Hugo Black

Hugo Lafayette Black (February 27, 1886 – September 25, 1971) was an American politician and jurist who served in the United States Senate from 1927 to 1937, and as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1937 to 1971.

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Human Rights (album)

Human Rights is a studio album by jazz trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith.

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Human rights in Cuba

Human rights in Cuba are under the scrutiny of human rights organizations, who accuse the Cuban government of systematic human rights abuses, including arbitrary imprisonment and unfair trials.

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Human sacrifice in Maya culture

During the pre-Columbian era, human sacrifice in Maya culture was the ritual offering of nourishment to the gods.

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Hurricane recovery in North Carolina

Due to the common occurrence of hurricanes in the coastal state of North Carolina, Hurricane recovery in North Carolina is a large component of the state's emergency management efforts.

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Hymns in Prose for Children

Hymns in Prose for Children (1781) is a children's book by Anna Laetitia Barbauld.

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Hypersociability

In the context of transmedia storytelling, hypersociability is the encouraged involvement of media consumers in a story through ordinary social interaction.

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Hysteria

Hysteria, in the colloquial use of the term, means ungovernable emotional excess.

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I Could Fall in Love

"I Could Fall in Love" is a song recorded by American Tejano singer Selena for her fifth studio album, Dreaming of You (1995), released posthumously by EMI Latin on June 26, 1995.

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I. C. Frimu

Ion Costache Frimu (&ndash) was a Romanian socialist militant and politician, a leading member of the Social Democratic Party of Romania (PSDR) and labor activist.

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Ice shove

An ice shove, ice surge, ice heave, ivu, or shoreline ice pileup is a surge of ice from an ocean or large lake onto the shore.

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Illness or Modern Women

Illness or Modern Women is a play by the Austrian playwright Elfriede Jelinek.

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Immanuel Wallerstein

Immanuel Maurice Wallerstein (born September 28, 1930) is an American sociologist, historical social scientist, and world-systems analyst, arguably best known for his development of the general approach in sociology which led to the emergence of his world-systems approach.

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Incarceration in the United States

Incarceration in the United States is one of the main forms of punishment and rehabilitation for the commission of felony and other offenses.

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Incest pornography

Incest pornography is a genre of pornography involving the depiction of incest (sexual activity between relatives).

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Independence Day (India)

Independence Day is annually celebrated on 15 August, as a national holiday in India commemorating the nation's independence from the United Kingdom on 15 August 1947, the UK Parliament passed the Indian Independence Act 1947 transferring legislative sovereignty to the Indian Constituent Assembly.

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Independent Women's Forum

The Independent Women's Forum (IWF) is a politically conservative American non-profit organization focused on economic policy issues of concern to women.

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Inderpal Grewal

Inderpal Grewal is a professor of Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Yale University, and a key figure in the academic discipline of women's studies.

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India

India (IAST), also called the Republic of India (IAST), is a country in South Asia.

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Indian Rebellion of 1857

The Indian Rebellion of 1857 was a major uprising in India between 1857–58 against the rule of the British East India Company, which functioned as a sovereign power on behalf of the British Crown.

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Interdenominational Theological Center

The Interdenominational Theological Center (ITC) is a consortium of five predominantly African-American denominational Christian seminaries located in Atlanta, Georgia.

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International Mathematics Research Notices

The International Mathematics Research Notices is a peer-reviewed mathematics journal.

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International Socialists (Canada)

The International Socialists is a Canadian socialist organization which is part of the International Socialist Tendency.

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International Workers League – Fourth International

The International Workers League (Fourth International) or IWLfi (Liga Internacional de los Trabajadores (Cuarta Internacional) or LITci; Liga Internacional dos Trabalhadores - Quarta Internacional or LIT-QI) is a Morenist Trotskyist international organisation.

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Intersectionality

Intersectionality is an analytic framework which attempts to identify how interlocking systems of power impact those who are most marginalized in society.

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Intersex and LGBT

Intersex people are born with sex characteristics, such as genitals, gonads, and chromosome patterns that, according to the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, "do not fit the typical definitions for male or female bodies".

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Ion Antonescu

Ion Antonescu (– June 1, 1946) was a Romanian soldier and authoritarian politician who, as the Prime Minister and Conducător during most of World War II, presided over two successive wartime dictatorships.

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Iravan

Also, refer to Barbarika, whose story is very similar Iravan, also known as Iravat and Iravant, is a minor character from the Hindu epic of Mahabharata.

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Islah Jad

Islah Jad (born 1951) is a tenured Assistant Professor of Gender and Development at Birzeit University.

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Islam in Romania

Islam in Romania is followed by only 0.3 percent of population, but has 700 years of tradition in Northern Dobruja, a region on the Black Sea coast which was part of the Ottoman Empire for almost five centuries (ca. 1420-1878).

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Isobel (song)

"Isobel" is a song recorded by Icelandic singer Björk for her third studio album, Post.

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Israel–United States military relations

Military relations between Israel and the United States have been consistently close, reflecting shared security interests in the Middle East.

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Israel–United States relations

Israel–United States relations refers to the bilateral relationship between the State of Israel and the United States of America.

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István Győrkös

István Győrkös (born 20 November 1940) is a Hungarian far-right political figure, founder and leader of the Hungarist and neo-Nazi paramilitary movement Hungarian National Front (MNA) since 1989.

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Ivy Queen 2008 World Tour Live!

Ivy Queen 2008 World Tour LIVE! is the first live compilation album from Puerto Rican singer-songwriter Ivy Queen, released on August 12, 2008 in a two-disc box set.

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J-pop

J-pop (often stylized as J-POP; ジェイポップ jeipoppu; an abbreviation for Japanese pop), natively also known simply as, is a musical genre that entered the musical mainstream of Japan in the 1990s.

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J. Fred Rippy

James Fred Rippy (27 October 1892, Nubia, Tennessee – 10 February 1977) was an American professor, author, and historian of Latin America and American diplomacy.

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J. Michael Straczynski

Joseph Michael Straczynski (born July 17, 1954), known professionally as J. Michael Straczynski and informally as Joe Straczynski or jms, is an American television and film screenwriter, producer and director, and comic book writer.

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Jackson Irving Cope

Jackson Irving Cope (1 September 1925 - 6 August 1999) was Leo S. Bing professor emeritus of English at the University of Southern California.

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Jadid

The Jadids were Muslim modernist reformers within the Russian Empire in the late 19th and early 20th century.

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Jake Roberts

Aurelian Jake Smith Jr. (born May 30, 1955), best known by his ring name Jake "The Snake" Roberts, is an American actor and semi-retired professional wrestler.

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Jakobson's functions of language

Roman Jakobson defined six functions of language (or communication functions), according to which an effective act of verbal communication can be described.

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James Alexander Robertson

James Alexander Robertson (August 19, 1873 – March 20, 1939) was an American academic historian, archivist, translator and bibliographer.

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James B. Twitchell

James B. Twitchell is an author and former professor of English.

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James D. Martin

James Douglas Martin (September 1, 1918 – October 30, 2017) was an American businessman and Republican politician from the U.S. state of Alabama, who served a single term in the United States House of Representatives from 1965 to 1967.

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James Green (historian)

James Robert Green (November 4, 1944 – June 23, 2016) was an American historian, author, and labor activist.

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James Morone

James Morone (born 1951) is an American political scientist and author, noted for his work on health politics and policy and on popular participation and morality in American politics and political development.

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James Russell Lowell

James Russell Lowell (February 22, 1819 – August 12, 1891) was an American Romantic poet, critic, editor, and diplomat.

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Jane Bennett (political theorist)

Jane Bennett (born July 31, 1957) is an American political theorist and philosopher.

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Jane Feuer

Jane Feuer is Professor of film studies in the English and Communication Departments at the University of Pittsburgh, United States.

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Jane M. Blocker

Jane M. Blocker is a Professor of Contemporary Art and Theory and the Chair of the Department of Art History at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, where she is affiliated with the Moving Image Studies at the Department of Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature.

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Janet Baus

Janet Baus is a documentary film and television director, producer and editor.

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Janet Jackson

Janet Damita Jo Jackson (born May 16, 1966) is an American singer, songwriter, dancer, and actress.

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Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814

Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814 (commonly referred to as Rhythm Nation) is the fourth studio album by American singer Janet Jackson, released on September 19, 1989, by A&M Records.

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Janet Jakobsen

Janet R. Jakobsen is Ann Whitney Olin Professor of Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Barnard College and Director of Barnard's Center for Research on Women.

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Janet L. Jacobs

Janet Liebman Jacobs (born 1948) is an American sociologist specializing in gender and religion.

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Japan

Japan (日本; Nippon or Nihon; formally 日本国 or Nihon-koku, lit. "State of Japan") is a sovereign island country in East Asia.

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Japanese Brazilians

are Brazilian citizens who are nationals or naturals of Japanese ancestry, or Japanese immigrants living in Brazil.

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Japanese community of São Paulo

The single largest Japanese diaspora in any city is in São Paulo.

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Japanese hip hop

Japanese hip hop (also known as J-rap, J-hip hop or J-hop) is said to have begun when Hiroshi Fujiwara returned to Japan and started playing hip hop records in the early 1980s.

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Jasbir Puar

Jasbir K. Puar is a U.S.-based queer theorist who currently works as an associate professor in the Department of Women's and Gender Studies at Rutgers University.

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Javier Elorriaga

Javier Elorriaga Berdeque (born 13 May 1961) is a Mexican journalist who was alleged to have joined the EZLN (Zapatista) revolutionary movement in Chiapas, Mexico, in the 1980s, taking the nom de guerre Vicente.

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Jaws (film)

Jaws is a 1975 American thriller film directed by Steven Spielberg and based on Peter Benchley's 1974 novel of the same name.

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Jazz Hot

Jazz Hot is a French quarterly jazz magazine published in Marseille.

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Jean Halley

Jean Halley (born June 16, 1967) is an American writer and sociologist based in New York City.

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Jehovah's Witnesses Association of Romania

Jehovah's Witnesses Association of Romania (Organizația Religioasă "Martorii lui Iehova" din România) is the formal name used by Jehovah's Witnesses for their operations in Romania, with a branch office located in Bucharest.

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Jesús Sosa Blanco

Jesús Sosa Blanco (1907/08 – February 18, 1959) was a colonel in the Cuban army under Fulgencio Batista.

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Jim Stafford

James Wayne Stafford (born January 16, 1944) is an American comedian, musician, and singer-songwriter.

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Jimmy Creech

Jimmy Creech is a lifelong pioneer in LGBT equality issues.

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Jin Yun Qiao

Jin Yun Qiao or Chin Yun Ch'iao (金雲翹 or 金雲翹傳, The Tale of Jin, Yun and Qiao or The Tale of Chin, Yun, and Ch'iao) is a seventeenth-century Chinese novel by an anonymous writer known only by the pseudonym Qingxin Cairen (青心才人, Pure Heart Talented Man).

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Jineology

Jineology (Kurdish: jineolojî), the "science of women", or "women's science" (otherwise referred to as "Kurdish feminism") is a form of feminism and gender equality advocated by Abdullah Öcalan, the leader of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and the broader Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK) umbrella.

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Joe Harriott

Joseph Arthurlin "Joe" Harriott (15 July 1928 in Kingston, Jamaica – 2 January 1973 in Southampton, Hampshire) was a Jamaican jazz musician and composer, whose principal instrument was the alto saxophone.

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Joe Hill Louis

Joe Hill Louis (September 23, 1921 – August 5, 1957), born Lester Hill, was an American singer, guitarist, harmonica player and one-man band.

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John Aikin

John Aikin (15 January 17477 December 1822) was an English doctor and writer.

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John Benitez

John Benitez (born November 7, 1957), also known as Jellybean, is an American drummer, guitarist, songwriter, DJ, remixer and music producer of Puerto Rican descent.

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John Corbett (writer)

John Corbett (born 1963) is an American writer, musician, radio host, teacher, record producer, concert promoter, and gallery owner based in Chicago, Illinois.

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John D. Lantos

John D. Lantos (born 12 October 1954) is an American pediatrician and a leading expert in medical ethics.

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John Fante

John Fante (April 8, 1909 – May 8, 1983) was an Italian-American novelist, short story writer and screenwriter.

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John H. Van Evrie

John H. Van Evrie (1814–1896) was an American physician and defender of slavery best known as the editor of the Weekly Day Book and the author of several books on race and slavery which reproduced the ideas of scientific racism for a popular audience.

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John Hope Franklin Center for Interdisciplinary and International Studies

The John Hope Franklin Center for Interdisciplinary and International Studies (JHFC) is located at Duke University in the United States.

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John Lomax

John Avery Lomax (September 23, 1867 – January 26, 1948) was an American teacher, a pioneering musicologist, and a folklorist who did much for the preservation of American folk music.

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John Marshall Harlan II

John Marshall Harlan (May 20, 1899 – December 29, 1971) was an American jurist who served as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court from 1955 to 1971.

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John of Gaunt

John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster, KG (6 March 1340 – 3 February 1399) was an English nobleman, soldier, statesman, and prince, the third of five surviving sons of King Edward III of England.

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John Riordan (mathematician)

John Francis Riordan (April 22, 1903 – August 27, 1988) was an American mathematician and the author of major early works in combinatorics, particularly Introduction to Combinatorial Analysis and Combinatorial Identities.

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Jon Scheyer

Jonathan James Scheyer (ג'ון שייר; born August 24, 1987) is an American-Israeli former basketball player, currently an associate head coach of the Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team.

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Jonathan Odell

Jonathan Odell (25 September 1737 – 25 November 1818) was a Loyalist poet who lived during the American Revolution.

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José Esteban Muñoz

José Esteban Muñoz (August 9, 1967 – December 3, 2013) was a Cuban American academic in the fields of performance studies, visual culture, queer theory, cultural studies, and critical theory.

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Joseph Charlier

Joseph Charlier (20 June 1816 – 6 December 1896) was a Belgian self-described jurist, writer, accountant, and merchant.

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Joseph McElroy

Joseph Prince McElroy (born August 21, 1930) is an American novelist, short story writer, and essayist.

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Joseph Schumpeter

Joseph Alois Schumpeter (8 February 1883 – 8 January 1950) was an Austrian political economist.

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Josephine Donovan

Josephine Donovan (born 1941) is an American scholar of comparative literature who is a Professor Emerita of English in the Department of English at the University of Maine, Orono.

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Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law

The Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law is a bimonthly peer-reviewed medical journal covering health policy and health law as they relate to politics.

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Journal of Middle East Women's Studies

Journal of Middle East Women's Studies is a triannual peer-reviewed interdisciplinary journal which advances Middle East gender, sexuality, and women’s studies.

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Journal of Music Theory

The Journal of Music Theory is a peer-reviewed academic journal specializing in music theory and analysis.

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Judaism Without Embellishment

Judaism Without Embellishment was an Anti-Semitic book published in 1963 by the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences.

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Judith Butler

Judith Butler FBA (born February 24, 1956) is an American philosopher and gender theorist whose work has influenced political philosophy, ethics and the fields of third-wave feminist, queer and literary theory.

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Ka-Mer

Ka-Mer is a Turkish women's group that finds shelter for and offers legal aid to women who have been threatened by their relatives.

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Kal Ho Naa Ho

Kal Ho Naa Ho (italic), also abbreviated as KHNH, is a 2003 Indian romantic drama film directed by Nikkhil Advani.

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Karen Barad

Karen Michelle Barad (born 29 April 1956) is an American feminist theorist, known particularly for her theory of agential realism.

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Karim Said Atmani

A Moroccan living illegally in Montreal since 1995, Karim Said Atmani (also Abu Isham, Abu Hisham) was alleged to be a document-forger for the Groupe Islamique Armé, and shared an apartment with Ahmed Ressam.

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Karl Christian Friedrich Krause

Karl Christian Friedrich Krause (6 May 1781 – 27 September 1832) was a German philosopher, born at Eisenberg, in Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg.

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Kathryn Kuhlman

Kathryn Kuhlman (May 9, 1907 – February 20, 1976) was an American Pentecostal evangelist who was constantly misreprsented as a"faith healer," although she repeatedly insisted "I've never healed anyone...

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Katrina Karkazis

Katrina Alicia Karkazis (born 1970) is a medical anthropologist and bioethicist at the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, Stanford University School of Medicine.

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Keiō Reforms

The were an array of new policies introduced in 1866 by the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan.

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Keith Gilyard

Raymond Keith Gilyard (born 1952 in New York City) is a writer and American professor of English who teaches and researches in the fields of rhetoric, composition, literacy studies, sociolinguistics, and African American literature.

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Kellie Jones

Kellie Jones (born 1959) is an American Associate Professor in Art History and Archaeology in African American Studies at Columbia University.

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Khan Yunis

Khan Yunis (خان يونس, also spelled Khan Younis or Khan Yunus; translation: Caravansary Jonah) is a city in the southern Gaza Strip.

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Khawarij

The Khawarij (الخوارج, al-Khawārij, singular خارجي, khāriji), Kharijites, or the ash-Shurah (ash-Shurāh "the Exchangers") are members of a school of thought, that appeared in the first century of Islam during the First Fitna, the crisis of leadership after the death of Muhammad.

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Khen Shish

Khen Shish (חן שיש; born 1970) is an Israeli painter and installation artist.

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Knowledge Unlatched

Knowledge Unlatched (KU) is an award-winning open access service provider registered as GmbH in Berlin, Germany.

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Korean War

The Korean War (in South Korean, "Korean War"; in North Korean, "Fatherland: Liberation War"; 25 June 1950 – 27 July 1953) was a war between North Korea (with the support of China and the Soviet Union) and South Korea (with the principal support of the United States).

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Kozarčanka

Kozarčanka (Козарчанка, meaning "Woman from Kozara") is a World War II photograph that became iconic in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.

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Krainz Woods

Krainz Woods (simply dubbed as Krainz) is a neighborhood in Detroit, Michigan.

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Krishnamurti to Himself

Krishnamurti to Himself: His Last Journal is a book based on a spoken diary of Jiddu Krishnamurti (1895–1986).

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Krista Thompson (art historian)

Krista Thompson is Weinberg College Board of Visitors Professor and Professor in the Department of Art History at Northwestern University.

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Kristen R. Ghodsee

Kristen R. Ghodsee (born April 26, 1970) is an American ethnographer and Professor of Russian and East European Studies at the University of Pennsylvania known primarily for her ethnographic work on post-communist Bulgaria as well as being a contributor to the field of postsocialist gender studies.

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Kronid Lyubarsky

Kronid Arkadyevich Lyubarsky (Крони́д Арка́дьевич Люба́рский; 4 April 1934, Pskov, Soviet Union – 23 May 1996, Bali, Indonesia) was a Russian journalist, dissident, human rights activist and political prisoner.

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Ku Klux Klan

The Ku Klux Klan, commonly called the KKK or simply the Klan, refers to three distinct secret movements at different points in time in the history of the United States.

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Kwame Anthony Appiah

Kwame Akroma-Ampim Kusi Anthony Appiah (born May 8, 1954) is a British-born Ghanaian-American philosopher, cultural theorist, and novelist whose interests include political and moral theory, the philosophy of language and mind, and African intellectual history.

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Kyōhō Reforms

The were an array of economic and cultural policies introduced by the Tokugawa shogunate in 1736 Japan, during the Edo period.

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Kyeong-Hee Choi

Kyeong-Hee Choi is an associate professor of modern Korean literature at the University of Chicago.

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Labor (journal)

Labor: Studies in Working-Class History is a peer reviewed quarterly journal which publishes articles regarding the history of the labor movement in the United States.

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Lacandon Jungle

The Lacandon Jungle (Spanish: Selva Lacandona) is an area of rainforest which stretches from Chiapas, Mexico, into Guatemala and into the southern part of the Yucatán Peninsula.

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Laird

Laird is a generic name for the owner of a large, long-established Scottish estate, roughly equivalent to an esquire in England, yet ranking above the same in Scotland.

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Land and liberty (slogan)

Land and Liberty ("Tierra y Libertad", Zemlya i Volya) is an anarchist slogan.

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Language and gender

Research into the many possible relationships, intersections and tensions between language and gender is diverse.

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Lanka Dahan

Lanka Dahan (Lanka Aflame) is a 1917 Indian silent film directed by Dhundiraj Govind Phalke (Dadasaheb Phalke).

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Lapidary (text)

A lapidary is a text, often a whole book, giving "information about the properties and virtues of precious and semi-precious stones", that is to say a work on gemology.

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Larry McCaffery

Lawrence F. "Larry" McCaffery Jr. (born May 13, 1946) is an America literary critic, editor, and retired professor of English and Comparative Literature at San Diego State University.

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Larry McNeil (photographer)

Larry McNeil (born Larry Tee Harbor Jackson McNeil) is a Native American photographer and printmaker.

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Laughter

Laughter is a physical reaction in humans consisting typically of rhythmical, often audible contractions of the diaphragm and other parts of the respiratory system.

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Laura Briggs

Laura Briggs is an internationally recognized feminist critic and a foremost historian of reproductive politics and US empire.

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Laura Shannon Prize

The Laura Shannon Prize in Contemporary European Studies is a $10,000 book prize sponsored by the Nanovic Institute for European Studies at the University of Notre Dame.

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Lawrence Moore Cosgrave

Colonel Lawrence Vincent Moore Cosgrave, (August 28, 1890 – July 28, 1971) was a Canadian soldier and diplomat.

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Lawrence Scott

Lawrence Scott (born in Trinidad, 1943) is an award-winning novelist and short-story writer from Trinidad & Tobago, who divides his time between London and Port of Spain.

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Lazy Afternoon (Barbra Streisand album)

Lazy Afternoon is a studio album recorded by American singer Barbra Streisand.

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Le foto proibite di una signora per bene

Le foto proibite di una signora per bene, also known as Forbidden Photos of a Lady Above Suspicion, is a 1970 giallo film directed by Luciano Ercoli.

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Le Moniteur Universel

Le Moniteur Universel was a French newspaper founded in Paris on November 24, 1789 under the title Gazette Nationale ou Le Moniteur Universel by Charles-Joseph Panckoucke, and which ceased publication on December 31, 1868.

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Leah DeVun

Leah DeVun is a contemporary artist and historian who lives in Brooklyn, NY.

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Leah Gilliam

Leah Gilliam is an American filmmaker and media artist who deals with issues of race, gender, and sexual orientation in her art.

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Lee D. Baker

Lee D. Baker is an American cultural anthropologist, author, and Duke University faculty member.

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Lee Edelman

Lee Edelman (born 1953) is an American literary critic and academic.

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Leninism

Leninism is the political theory for the organisation of a revolutionary vanguard party and the achievement of a dictatorship of the proletariat as political prelude to the establishment of socialism.

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Leonte Răutu

Leonte Răutu (until 1945 Lev Nikolayevich (Nicolaievici) Oigenstein; February 28, 1910 – 1993) was a Bessarabian-born Romanian communist activist and propagandist.

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Les Fleurs du mal

Les Fleurs du mal (italic) is a volume of French poetry by Charles Baudelaire.

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Lessons for Children

Lessons for Children is a series of four age-adapted reading primers written by the prominent 18th-century British poet and essayist Anna Laetitia Barbauld.

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Like a Prayer (album)

Like a Prayer is the fourth studio album by American singer Madonna.

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Lina Penna Sattamini

Lina Penna Sattamini is a Brazilian interpreter and mother who was living and working in the United States in the 1960s when her son was kidnapped and tortured by members of Brazil’s military regime.

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Linda Williams (film scholar)

Linda Williams (born December 18, 1946) is an American professor of film studies in the departments of Film Studies and Rhetoric at University of California, Berkeley.

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Linda Wong (pornographic actress)

Linda Wong (September 13, 1951 – December 7, 1987) was an American pornographic actress and one of the first Asians to become a star in the adult film industry.

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Lisa Duggan

Lisa Duggan is Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis at New York University.

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Lisa L. Moore

Lisa L. Moore is a Canadian-born American academic and poet.

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Lisa Rofel

Lisa Rofel is an American anthropologist, specialising in feminist anthropology and gender studies.

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Lissette

Lissette Álvarez Chorens, commonly known as Lissette, (born March 10, 1947) is a singer, songwriter, and record producer from Cuba.

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List of Alien characters

Alien, a science-fiction action horror franchise, tells the story of humanity's ongoing encounters with Aliens: a hostile, endoparasitoid, extraterrestrial species.

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List of anthropology journals

Academic anthropological knowledge is the product of lengthy research, and is published in recognized peer-review periodicals.

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List of awards and nominations received by William Gibson

William Gibson is an American-Canadian writer who has been called the "noir prophet" of the cyberpunk subgenre of science fiction.

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List of bhangra artists

This is an alphabetical list of notable bhangra bands and solo artists.

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List of death metal bands, L–Z

This is a list of death metal bands (listed by letters L through Z).

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List of extreme metal bands

This is a list of bands described as extreme metal.

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List of Gran Torino characters

The following is a list of significant characters who feature in the 2008 film Gran Torino, directed by Clint Eastwood.

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List of group-0 ISBN publisher codes

A list of publisher codes for (978) International Standard Book Numbers with a group code of zero.

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List of hard rock musicians (A–M)

This is a list of notable hard rock musicians.

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List of hard rock musicians (N–Z)

This is a list of notable hard rock musicians.

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List of highest-grossing films

Films generate income from several revenue streams, including theatrical exhibition, home video, television broadcast rights and merchandising.

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List of LGBT periodicals

The following is a list of periodicals (printed magazines, journals and newspapers) aimed at the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) demographic by country.

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List of music festivals in the United Kingdom

There are a large number of music festivals in the United Kingdom, covering a wide variety of genres.

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List of people executed for witchcraft

This is a list of people executed for witchcraft, many of whom were executed during organised witch-hunts, particularly from the 15th–18th centuries.

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List of people influenced by Selena

Selena Quintanilla-Pérez (April 16, 1971 – March 31, 1995) was an American Tejano singer, songwriter, spokesperson, actress and fashion designer.

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List of proposed etymologies of OK

This is a list of etymologies proposed for the word ''OK'' or ''okay''.

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List of sex symbols

A sex symbol is a celebrity of either sex, typically an actor or actress, musician, supermodel, teen idol, sports star, or even a politician, noted for being widely regarded as sexually attractive.

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List of Shuttle Carrier Aircraft flights

Shuttle Carrier Aircraft ferry flights generally originated at the Edwards Air Force Base in California or on rare occasions White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico following missions which land there, especially in the early days of the Space Shuttle program or when weather at the Shuttle Landing Facility (SLF) at the Kennedy Space Center prevents ending missions there.

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List of songs recorded by Selena

American singer Selena has recorded material for her five studio albums and has collaborated with other artists for duets and featured songs on their respective albums and charity singles.

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List of subcultures

This is a list of subcultures.

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List of the oldest mosques

The designation of the oldest mosque in the world requires careful use of definitions, and must be divided into two parts, the oldest in the sense of oldest surviving building, and the oldest in the sense of oldest mosque congregation.

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List of thrash metal bands

Various bands have played thrash metal at some point of their career.

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List of transgender publications

This list of transgender publications includes books, magazines, and academic journals about transgender people, culture, and thought.

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List of university presses

This page lists notable university presses, arranged by country.

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List of white nationalist organizations

The following is the list of well-known white nationalist organizations, groups and related media: White nationalism is a political ideology which advocates a racial definition of national identity for white people; some white nationalists advocate a separate all-white nation state.

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List of works by William Gibson

The works of William Gibson encompass literature, journalism, acting, recitation, and performance art.

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Literature of Alfonso X

Alfonso X of Castile, also known as Alfonso the Learned, ruled from 1252 until 1284.

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Little Roger and the Goosebumps

Little Roger and the Goosebumps is a pop/rock band from San Francisco active during the 1970s and early 1980s and resurrected in 2006.

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Liu Zhenyun

Liu Zhenyun (born May 1958) is a Chinese novelist and screenwriter.

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Live! The Last Concert

Live! The Last Concert is a live album by Mexican-American singer Selena.

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Lo Mejor de...Selena

Lo Mejor de...Selena is a double disc compilation album by American singer Selena.

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Lolo Soetoro

Lolo Soetoro (EYD: Lolo Sutoro;; 2 January 1935 Google Translate's Lolo studied geography at Gadjah Mada University and got a scholarship from the Indonesian Army Topographic Service. After working for the Indonesian Army Topographic Service, he worked for an American oil company, Unocal. – 2 March 1987), also known as Lolo Soetoro Mangunharjo or Mangundikardjo, was the Indonesian stepfather of Barack Obama, the 44th President of the United States.

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Loop (music)

In electroacoustic music, a loop is a repeating section of sound material.

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Lora Romero

Lora Patricia Romero was an assistant professor of English at Stanford University.

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Louis Althusser

Louis Pierre Althusser (16 October 1918 – 22 October 1990) was a French Marxist philosopher.

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Louis Austin

Louis Austin (1898-1971) was an African American journalist, leader and social activist.

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Louis Beam

Louis Ray Beam, Jr. (born 1946) is an American white nationalist.

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Louis R. Gottschalk

Louis Reichenthal Gottschalk (February 21, 1899 in Brooklyn – June 23, 1975 in Chicago.) was an American historian, an expert on Lafayette and the French Revolution.

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Louise Thompson Patterson

Louise Alone Thompson Patterson (September 9, 1901 – August 27, 1999) was an American social activist and college professor.

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Lovas killings

The Lovas killings (masakr u Lovasu, script) involved the killing of 70 Croat civilian residents of the village of Lovas between 10–18 October 1991, during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Luis Alfonso Dávila

Luis Alfonso Dávila (born 1943) is a Venezuelan politician.

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Luisa Gómez de la Torre Paez

María Luisa Gómez de la Torre Páez (28 May 1887 – 1976) was an Ecuadorian feminist, educator, and activist.

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Lumpenproletariat

Lumpenproletariat is a term used primarily by Marxist theorists to describe the underclass devoid of class consciousness.

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Lynda Benglis

Lynda Benglis (born October 25, 1941) is an American sculptor and visual artist known especially for her wax paintings and poured latex sculptures.

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Lynn Spigel

Lynn Spigel is the Frances E. Willard Professor of Screen Cultures at the School of Communication at Northwestern University.

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Macartney Embassy

The Macartney Embassy, also called the Macartney Mission, was the first British diplomatic mission to China, which took place in 1793.

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Madonna Studies

Madonna Studies is a term which has been used to refer to a development of a field in several studios since late 1980s.

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Maeva Marcus

Maeva Marcus is the Director of the Institute for Constitutional History and a Research Professor of Law at George Washington University Law School.

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Mah Laqa Bai

Mah Laqa Bai (7 April 1768 – 1824), born Chanda Bibi, and sometimes referred to as Mah Laqa Chanda, was an Indian 18th century Urdu poet, courtesan and philanthropist based in Hyderabad.

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Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni

Mahmoud Asgari (محمود عسگری), aged 16, and Ayaz Marhoni (عیاض مرهونی), aged 18, were Iranian teenagers from the province of Khorasan who were publicly hanged in Edalat (Justice) Square in Mashhad, northeast Iran, on July 19, 2005.

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Making Samba

Making Samba: A New History of Race and Music in Brazil is a book by Marc A. Hertzman published by Duke University Press in 2013.

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Malak Hifni Nasif

Malak Hifni Nasif (25 December 1886 – 17 October 1918) was an Egyptian feminist who contributed greatly to the intellectual and political discourse on the advancement of Egyptian women in the early 20th century.

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Manche Ch'ol

The Manche Ch'ol were a former Ch'ol-speaking Maya people inhabiting the extreme south of what is now the Petén Department of modern Guatemala, the area around Lake Izabal (also known as the Golfo Dulce), and southern Belize.

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Maniac Mansion

Maniac Mansion is a 1987 graphic adventure video game developed and published by Lucasfilm Games.

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Manolo Álvarez Mera

Manolo Álvarez Mera (né Manuel Ernesto Álvarez-Mera 7 November 1923 Havana, Cuba – 16 October 1986 New York City) was a Cuban-born tenor who flourished as a bel canto during the latter 1940s and full 1950s.

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María Collado Romero

María Collado Romero (19 March 1885 – c. 1968) was a Cuban journalist, poet, and feminist.

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María Luisa Dolz

María Luisa Dolz y Arango (4 October 1854 – 27 May 1928) was a Cuban writer, essayist, educator, and feminist activist.

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Marc Turtletaub

Marc Jay Turtletaub (born January 30, 1946) is an American film producer and former president and CEO of The Money Store.

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Marcia Ochoa

Marcia Ochoa (born 9 September 1970) is a United States-based professor of Feminist Studies and Critical Race and Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

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Marija Bursać

Marija Bursać (Марија Бурсаћ; 2 August 1920 – 23 September 1943) was a member of the Yugoslav Partisans during World War II in Yugoslavia and the first woman proclaimed a People's Hero of Yugoslavia.

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Marilyn Chambers

Marilyn Chambers (April 22, 1952 – April 12, 2009) was an American pornographic film actress, exotic dancer, model, actress, and vice-presidential candidate.

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Mark Bauerlein

Mark Weightman Bauerlein (born 1959) is an English professor at Emory University and senior editor of First Things journal.

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Mark Slonim

Mark Lvovich Slonim (Марк Льво́вич Сло́ним, also known as Marc Slonim and Marco Slonim; March 23, 1894 Giuseppina Giuliano,, entry; retrieved October 15, 2015 – 1976) was a Russian politician, literary critic, scholar and translator.

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Marlon Brando

Marlon Brando Jr. (April 3, 1924 – July 1, 2004) was an American actor and film director.

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Martha Graham

Martha Graham (May 11, 1894 – April 1, 1991) was an American modern dancer and choreographer.

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Martin Bernal

Martin Gardiner Bernal (10 March 1937 – 9 June 2013) was a British scholar of modern Chinese political history.

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Martin E. Brooks

Martin E. Brooks (born Martin Baum; November 30, 1925 – December 7, 2015) was an American character actor known for playing scientist Dr.

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Mass killings under communist regimes

Mass killings occurred under several twentieth-century Communist regimes.

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Matei Călinescu

Matei Călinescu (June 15, 1934, Bucharest – June 24, 2009, Bloomington, Indiana) was a Romanian-born American literary critic and professor of comparative literature at Indiana University, in Bloomington, Indiana.

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Maud Mandel

Maud Mandel (born 14 June 1967) is Professor of History and Judaic Studies and Dean of the College at Brown University and current President-elect of Williams College.

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Maxinquaye

Maxinquaye is the 1995 debut album by English rapper and producer Tricky.

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Maya religion

The traditional Maya religion of Guatemala, Belize, western Honduras, and the Tabasco, Chiapas, and Yucatán regions of Mexico is a southeastern variant of Mesoamerican religion.

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Mel Gibson

Mel Colmcille Gerard Gibson (born January 3, 1956) is an American actor and filmmaker.

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Memphis blues

The Memphis blues is a style of blues music created from the 1910s to the 1930s by musicians in the Memphis area, like Frank Stokes, Sleepy John Estes, Furry Lewis and Memphis Minnie.

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Meryl Fernando

Weerahennedige Theodore Wilfred Meryl Fernando (18 April 1923 – 27 May 2007) was a Ceylonese teacher, trade unionist, politician and Member of Parliament.

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Michael Hardt

Michael Hardt (born 1960) is an American literary theorist and political philosopher.

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Michael Kimmel

Michael Scott Kimmel (born February 26, 1951) is an American sociologist specializing in gender studies.

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Michael M. J. Fischer

Michael M. J. Fischer is Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities and Professor of Anthropology and Science and Technology Studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Lecturer in the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School.

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Michael Messner

Michael Alan Messner (born 1952) is an American sociologist.

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Michael Nelson (political scientist)

Michael Nelson (born June 11, 1949) is an American political scientist, noted for his work on the Presidency and elections.

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Michael Perelman

Michael Perelman (born October 1, 1939) is an American economist and economic historian, currently professor of economics at California State University, Chico.

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Michel Azcueta

Michel Azcueta (born 1947) is a Spanish-Peruvian teacher and politician.

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Michigan Womyn's Music Festival

The Michigan Womyn's Music Festival, often referred to as MWMF or Michfest, and called the "Original Womyn's Woodstock", was an international feminist music festival held every August from 1976 to 2015 in Oceana County, Michigan, USA, near Hart Township, in a small wooded area referred to as "The Land" by MichFest organizers and attendees.

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Mickey (song)

"Mickey" is a 1981 song recorded by American singer and choreographer Toni Basil on her debut album Word of Mouth.

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Middlesex (novel)

Middlesex is a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Jeffrey Eugenides published in 2002.

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Miguel de Buría

Miguel I of Buría (Spanish: Miguel de Buría; c. 1510 – c. 1555), also known as King Miguel (Spanish: Rey Miguel), Miguel the Black (Spanish: El Negro Miguel) and Miguel Guacamaya, was a former slave from San Juan, Puerto Rico who reigned as the King of Buría in the modern-day state of Lara, Venezuela.

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Mikhail Iampolski

Mikhail Beneaminovich Iampolski (Михаил Бениаминович Ямпольский) is a full professor of comparative literature and Russian and Slavic studies at New York University.

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Mikhail Suslov

Mikhail Andreyevich Suslov (Михаи́л Андре́евич Су́слов; 25 January 1982) was a Soviet statesman during the Cold War.

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Mikhail Tugan-Baranovsky

Mikhail Ivanovich Tugan-Baranovsky (Ukrainian: Михайло Туган-Барановський) (January 20, 1865 – January 21, 1919) was an Ukrainian economist, politician, statesman.

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Mimi Sheller

Mimi Sheller (born 1967) is a professor of sociology in the Department of Culture and Communication, and the founding Director of the New Mobilities Research and Policy Center at Drexel University in Philadelphia.

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Miriam Cooke

Miriam Cooke is an American academic in Middle Eastern and Arab world studies.

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Misogyny in rap music

Misogyny in rap music refers to lyrics, videos or other aspects of rap music that support, glorify, justify, or normalize the objectification, exploitation, or victimization of women.

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Mississippi State Penitentiary

Mississippi State Penitentiary (MSP), also known as Parchman Farm, is a prison farm, the oldest prison, and the only maximum security prison for men in the state of Mississippi.

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Mixtón War

The Mixtón War was fought from 1540 until 1542 between the Caxcanes and other semi-nomadic Indigenous people of the area of north western Mexico against Spanish invaders, including their Aztec and Tlaxcalan allies.

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Mladen Stojanović

Mladen Stojanović (Младен Стојановић; 7 April 1896 – 1 April 1942) was a Bosnian Serb physician who led a detachment of Partisans on and around Mount Kozara in northwestern Bosnia during World War II in Yugoslavia.

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Moanin' in the Moonlight

Moanin' in the Moonlight was the debut album by American blues singer Howlin' Wolf.

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Moderato Cantabile

Moderato Cantabile is a novel by Marguerite Duras.

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Modern Language Quarterly

Modern Language Quarterly (MLQ), established in 1940, is a quarterly, literary history journal, produced (housed) at the University of Washington and published by Duke University Press.

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Monetae cudendae ratio

Monetae cudendae ratio (also spelled Monetæ cudendæ ratio; English: On the Minting of Coin or On the Striking of Coin; sometimes, Treatise on Money) is a paper on coinage by Nicolaus Copernicus (Polish: Mikołaj Kopernik).

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Morbid Visions

Morbid Visions is the debut studio album by Brazilian heavy metal band Sepultura, released on November 10, 1986 by Cogumelo Records.

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More Pricks Than Kicks

More Pricks Than Kicks is a collection of short prose by Samuel Beckett, first published in 1934.

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Mos Teutonicus

Mos Teutonicus (Latin: the German custom) was a postmortem funerary custom used in Europe in the Middle Ages as a means of transporting, and solemnly disposing of, the bodies of high status individuals.

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Motorcycle safety

Motorcycle safety concerns many aspects of vehicle and equipment design as well as operator skill and training that are unique to motorcycle riding.

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Mountain Moving Coffeehouse

The Mountain Moving Coffeehouse for Womyn and Children was a lesbian feminist music venue, located in Chicago and known across the United States.

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Muhammad Mahdi Salih

Mohammad Mahdi Salih Al-Rawi is an Iraqi politician who was Trade Minister in the government of President Saddam Hussein.

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Murray Hill (performer)

Murray Hill is a well-known New York City comedian and drag king entertainer.

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Music of Texas

The U.S. state of Texas has long been a center for musical innovation and is the birthplace of many notable musicians.

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Nadia al-Ghazzi

Nadia al-Ghazzi (نادية الغزي, born in 1935) is a Syrian lawyer and writer.

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Nadodi Mannan

Nadodi Mannan is a 1958 Indian Tamil-language action adventure film directed by M. G. Ramachandran in his debut as a filmmaker.

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Nahuas

The Nahuas are a group of indigenous people of Mexico and El Salvador.

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Naked (Zheng Jun album)

Naked (赤裸裸 Chìluǒluǒ) is the 1994 debut album of Chinese rock musician Zheng Jun.

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Nasser Abufarha

Nasser Abufarha is a Palestinian-American businessman.

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Natasha Jiménez

Natasha Jiménez is a trans and intersex activist and author who is currently the General Coordinator for, the first host of the Intersex Secretariat for ILGA.

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National archives

National archives are the archives of a country.

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National Photographic Record Association

The National Photographic Record Association was established in 1897 to create a record of English life, towns and landscapes.

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National Socialist black metal

National Socialist black metal (NSBM), sometimes called Aryan black metal or neo-Nazi black metal, is a political philosophy within black metal music that promotes Nazism or similar ideologies.

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Native Son

Native Son (1940) is a novel written by the American author Richard Wright.

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Nature Boy

"Nature Boy" is a song first recorded by American jazz singer Nat King Cole.

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Nazira Zain al-Din

Nazira Zain al-Din (Zain al-Din also translated to Zeineddine, Zain also written Zayn) (1908–1976) was a Druze Lebanese scholar.

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Neo-Riemannian theory

Neo-Riemannian theory is a loose collection of ideas present in the writings of music theorists such as David Lewin, Brian Hyer, Richard Cohn, and Henry Klumpenhouwer.

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Neoliberalism

Neoliberalism or neo-liberalism refers primarily to the 20th-century resurgence of 19th-century ideas associated with laissez-faire economic liberalism.

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Net.wars

Net.wars is a non-fiction book by journalist Wendy M. Grossman about conflict and controversy among stakeholders on the Internet.

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Neuromancer

Neuromancer is a 1984 science fiction novel by American-Canadian writer William Gibson.

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New German Critique

The New German Critique is a contemporary academic journal in German studies.

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New Jerusalem

In the Book of Ezekiel in the Hebrew Bible, New Jerusalem (Jehovah-shammah, or " YHWH there") is Ezekiel's prophetic vision of a city centered on the rebuilt Holy Temple, the Third Temple, to be established in Jerusalem, which would be the capital of the Messianic Kingdom, the meeting place of the twelve tribes of Israel, during the Messianic era.

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Nie Er

Nie Er (14 February 1912 – 17 July 1935), born Nie Shouxin, courtesy name Ziyi (子義 or 子藝), was a Chinese composer best known for "March of the Volunteers", the national anthem of the People's Republic of China.

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Night of the Living Dead

Night of the Living Dead is a 1968 American independent horror film written, directed, photographed and edited by George A. Romero, co-written by John Russo, and starring Duane Jones and Judith O'Dea.

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Night Ripper

Night Ripper is the third studio album by American musician Gregg Gillis, released under his stage name Girl Talk on May 9, 2006 by Illegal Art.

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Nikolai Gogol

Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol (31 March 1809 – 4 March 1852) was a Russian speaking dramatist of Ukrainian origin.

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Nikolai Kondratiev

Nikolai Dmitriyevich Kondratiev (in some sources also referred as Kondratieff; Russian: Никола́й Дми́триевич Кондра́тьев; 4 March 1892 – 17 September 1938) was a Russian economist, who was a proponent of the New Economic Policy (NEP), which promoted small private, free market enterprises in the Soviet Union.

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Nils Jacobsen

Nils Peter Jacobsen is an American historian specializing in the history of Peru.

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Nina Chanel Abney

Nina Chanel Abney (born 1982) is an American artist, based in New York.

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No Me Queda Más

"No Me Queda Más" ("There's Nothing Left for Me") is a song by American singer Selena on her fourth studio album, Amor Prohibido.

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Noise in music

In music, noise is variously described as unpitched, indeterminate, uncontrolled, loud, unmusical, or unwanted sound.

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Nordic aliens

In UFOlogy, Nordic aliens are humanoid extraterrestrials purported to come from the Pleiades who resemble Nordic-Scandinavians.

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Nordic model

The Nordic model (also called Nordic capitalism or Nordic social democracy) refers to the economic and social policies common to the Nordic countries (Denmark, Finland, Norway, Iceland, the Faroe Islands and Sweden).

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Norman Tindale

Norman Barnett Tindale AO (12 October 1900 – 19 November 1993) was an Australian anthropologist, archaeologist, entomologist and ethnologist.

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North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company

NC Mutual (originally the North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association and later North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company) is an American life insurance company located in downtown Durham, North Carolina and one of the most influential African-American businesses in United States history.

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Not in Front of the Children

Not in Front of the Children: "Indecency," Censorship, and the Innocence of Youth is a non-fiction book by attorney and civil libertarian Marjorie Heins about freedom of speech and the relationship between censorship and the "think of the children" argument.

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Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic

The Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic is a quarterly peer-reviewed scientific journal covering the foundations of mathematics and related fields of mathematical logic, as well as philosophy of mathematics.

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Novel: A Forum on Fiction

Novel: A Forum on Fiction is a triannual peer-reviewed academic journal published by Duke University Press.

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Nueva Segovia Department

Nueva Segovia is a department in Nicaragua.

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Oklahoma City bombing

The Oklahoma City bombing was a domestic terrorist truck bombing on the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in downtown Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States on April 19, 1995.

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Okwui Enwezor

Okwui Enwezor (born 1963) is a Nigerian curator, art critic, writer, poet, and educator, specializing in art history.

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Olmec alternative origin speculations

Olmec alternative origin speculations are pseudohistorical theories that have been suggested for the formation of Olmec civilization which contradict generally accepted scholarly consensus.

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Olmecs

The Olmecs were the earliest known major civilization in Mexico following a progressive development in Soconusco.

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Open Your Heart (Madonna song)

"Open Your Heart" is a song by American singer Madonna from her third studio album True Blue (1986).

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Operation Backstop

Operation Backstop was a United Nations Protection Force (UNPROFOR) military plan designed to guard a portion of the United Nations Protected Areas (UNPAs) against attack by the Croatian Army (Hrvatska vojska – HV) during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Operation Baranja

Operation Baranja (Operacija Baranja) was an aborted offensive of the Croatian Army (Hrvatska vojska – HV) north of the towns of Belišće and Valpovo, Croatia on 3 April 1992 during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Operation Flash

Operation Flash (Operacija Bljesak/Операција Бљесак) was a brief Croatian Army (HV) offensive conducted against forces of the self-declared Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK) from 1–3 May 1995.

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Operation Hurricane-91

Operation Hurricane-91 (Operacija Orkan-91) was a military offensive undertaken by the Croatian Army (Hrvatska vojska – HV) against the Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija – JNA) and SAO Western Slavonia Territorial Defense Forces in the Sava River valley, in the region of Western Slavonia during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Operation Labrador

Operation Labrador was a false flag operation carried out by the Yugoslav Air Force's Counterintelligence Service (KOS) in the Croatian capital city of Zagreb during the early stages of the Croatian War of Independence.

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Operation Mistral 2

Operation Mistral 2, officially codenamed Operation Maestral 2, was a Croatian Army (Hrvatska vojska – HV) and Croatian Defence Council (Hrvatsko vijeće obrane – HVO) offensive in western Bosnia and Herzegovina on 8–15 September 1995 as part of the Bosnian War.

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Operation Sana

Operation Sana (Operacija Sana) was a military offensive undertaken by the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Armija Republike Bosne i Hercegovine – ARBiH) in western Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Bosnian War.

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Operation Southern Move

Operation Southern Move (Operacija Južni potez) was the final Croatian Army (HV) and Croatian Defence Council (HVO) offensive of the Bosnian War.

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Operation Storm

Operation Storm (Operacija Oluja, Операција Олуја) was the last major battle of the Croatian War of Independence and a major factor in the outcome of the Bosnian War.

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Operation Swath-10

Operation Swath-10 (Operacija Otkos-10) was a military offensive undertaken by the Croatian Army (Hrvatska vojska, or HV) against the SAO Western Slavonia Territorial Defense Forces on Bilogora Mountain in western Slavonia.

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Operation Una

Operation Una (Operacija Una) was a military offensive conducted by the Croatian Army (Hrvatska vojska – HV) against the Army of Republika Srpska (Vojska Republike Srpske – VRS) in western Bosnia and Herzegovina on 18–19 September 1995, during the Bosnian War.

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Operation Winter '94

Operation Winter '94 (Operacija Zima '94, Операција Зима '94) was a joint military offensive of the Croatian Army (HV) and the Croatian Defence Council (HVO) fought in southwestern Bosnia and Herzegovina between 29 November and 24 December 1994.

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Optimo (EP)

Optimo is the third EP by American dance-punk band Liquid Liquid.

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Origins of rock and roll

Rock and roll emerged as a defined musical style in the United States in the early to mid-1950s.

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Orlando Furioso

Orlando Furioso ("The Frenzy of Orlando", more literally "Raging Roland"; in Italian titled "Orlando furioso" as the "F" is never capitalized) is an Italian epic poem by Ludovico Ariosto which has exerted a wide influence on later culture.

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Orlando Hernández

Orlando Hernández Pedroso (born October 11, 1965), nicknamed "El Duque", is a Cuban-born right-handed former professional baseball pitcher.

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Orlando Martins

Orlando Martins (8 December 1899 – 25 September 1985) was a pioneering Nigerian film and stage actor.

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Our Mr. Sun

Our Mr.

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Our Town (Producers' Showcase)

Our Town is a 1955 episode of the American series Producers' Showcase directed by Delbert Mann and starring Frank Sinatra, Paul Newman and Eva Marie Saint.

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Out of Athens

Out of Athens is a 2000 two-part gay pornographic film from Falcon Studios, starring John Brosnan and Roland Dane, and directed by Johnny Rutherford.

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Owen Lattimore

Owen Lattimore (July 29, 1900 – May 31, 1989) was an American author, educator, and influential scholar of China and Central Asia, especially Mongolia.

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P-Funk mythology

The P-Funk mythology is a group of recurring characters, themes, and ideas primarily contained in the output of George Clinton's bands Parliament and Funkadelic.

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Paid in Full (Eric B. & Rakim song)

"Paid in Full" is a song by American hip hop duo Eric B. & Rakim.

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Partition of India

The Partition of India was the division of British India in 1947 which accompanied the creation of two independent dominions, India and Pakistan.

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Pastiche

A pastiche is a work of visual art, literature, theatre, or music that imitates the style or character of the work of one or more other artists.

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Pat Hare

Auburn "Pat" Hare (December 20, 1930 – September 26, 1980) was an American Memphis electric blues guitarist and singer.

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Paul Gootenberg

Paul Eliot Gootenberg is a historian of Latin America who specializes in the history of the Andean drug trade, the fields of Peruvian and Mexican history, as well as historical sociology.

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Paul Morris (producer)

Paul Morris (AKA Charles Steven Key) the owner of Treasure Island Media, a San Francisco, California-based gay pornography studio that specializes in bareback pornography.

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Pedro de Alvarado

Pedro de Alvarado y Contreras (Badajoz, Extremadura, Spain, ca. 1485 – Guadalajara, New Spain, 4 July 1541) was a Spanish conquistador and governor of Guatemala.

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Pee Wee Kirkland

Richard "Pee Wee" Kirkland (born May 6, 1945) is a former street basketball player and drug king pin.

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Peeping Tom (film)

Peeping Tom is a 1960 British psychological horror-thriller film directed by Michael Powell, written by Leo Marks, and starring Carl Boehm, Anna Massey, and Moira Shearer.

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Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women

The Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women was established in 1981 at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, as an interdisciplinary research center on gender.

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Pentecostal Union of Romania

The Pentecostal Union of Romania (Uniunea Penticostală din România) is Romania's fourth-largest religious body and one of its eighteen officially recognised religious denominations.

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Peopling of Thailand

The peopling of Thailand refers to the process by which the ethnic groups that comprise the population of present-day Thailand came to inhabit the region.

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Permanent Court of International Justice

The Permanent Court of International Justice, often called the World Court, existed from 1922 to 1946.

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Perth Amboy, New Jersey

Perth Amboy is a city in Middlesex County, New Jersey, United States.

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Peter Jaszi

Peter Jaszi is a widely known expert on copyright law and author, with Patricia Aufderheide, of Reclaiming Fair Use (2012), which examines the state of fair use and the importance to scholarship, art, and free expression of strengthening the doctrine.

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Phil Carreón

Phil Carreón (aka Phillip Lozano Carreón, Jr.; né Alonzo Carreón; 6 May 1923 Los Angeles – 13 October 2010 Boulder City, Nevada) was an American big band leader based in Los Angeles who flourished from 1946 to 1952, retiring from music in 1952.

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Philip S. Gorski

Philip Stephen Gorski is an American sociologist, interested in both the sociology of religion and historical sociology.

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Phillip E. Wegner

Phillip E. Wegner is a professor in the Department of English and the Marston-Milbauer Eminent Scholar in English at the University of Florida.

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Physics envy

The term physics envy is a phrase used to criticize modern writing and research of academics working in areas such as "softer sciences", liberal arts, business studies and humanities.

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Physiocracy

Physiocracy (from the Greek for "government of nature") is an economic theory developed by a group of 18th century Enlightenment French economists who believed that the wealth of nations was derived solely from the value of "land agriculture" or "land development" and that agricultural products should be highly priced.

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Pierre Clastres

Pierre Clastres (17 May 1934 – 29 July 1977) was a French anthropologist and ethnologist.

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Pin-up model

A pin-up model (known as a pin-up girl for a female and less commonly male pin-up for a male) is a model whose mass-produced pictures see wide appeal as popular culture.

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Pipil people

The Pipils or Cuzcatlecs are an indigenous people who live in western El Salvador, which they call Cuzcatlan.

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Pitești

Pitești is a city in Romania, located on the Argeș River.

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Pleasant Dreams

Pleasant Dreams is the sixth studio album by American punk rock band the Ramones released on July 20, 1981, through Sire Records.

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Plitvice Lakes incident

The Plitvice Lakes incident (Krvavi Uskrs na Plitvicama or Plitvički krvavi Uskrs, both translating as "Plitvice Bloody Easter") was an armed clash at the beginning of the Croatian War of Independence.

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Poetics Today

Poetics Today: International Journal for Theory and Analysis of Literature and Communication is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal in the field of poetics.

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Pokémon

is a media franchise managed by The Pokémon Company, a Japanese consortium between Nintendo, Game Freak, and Creatures.

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Police corruption

Police corruption is a form of police misconduct in which law enforcement officers end up breaking their political contract and abuse their power for personal gain.

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Politico-media complex

The politico-media complex (PMC, also referred to as the political-media complex) is a name that has been given to the close, systematized, symbiotic-like network of relationships between a state's political and ruling classes, its media industry, and any interactions with or dependencies upon interest groups with other domains and agencies, such as law (and its enforcement through the police), corporations and the multinationals.

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Pompeyo Márquez

Pompeyo Ezequiel Márquez Millán (28 April 1922 – 21 June 2017) was a Venezuelan politician and former marxist guerrilla member in the 1960s.

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Pontine Marshes

Lake Fogliano, a coastal lagoon in the Pontine Plain. The Pontine Marshes, termed in Latin Pomptinus Ager by Titus Livius, Pomptina Palus (singular) and Pomptinae Paludes (plural) by Pliny the Elder,Natural History 3.59.

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Pop Muzik

"Pop Muzik" is a 1979 song by M, a project by English musician Robin Scott, from the debut album New York • London • Paris • Munich.

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Popular Mechanics

Popular Mechanics is a classic magazine of popular science and technology.

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Pornochanchada

Pornochanchada is the name given to a genre of sex comedy films produced in Brazil that was popular from the late 1960s after popularity of commedia sexy all’italiana.

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Pornography

Pornography (often abbreviated porn) is the portrayal of sexual subject matter for the exclusive purpose of sexual arousal.

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Portuguese Colonial War

The Portuguese Colonial War (Guerra Colonial Portuguesa), also known in Portugal as the Overseas War (Guerra do Ultramar) or in the former colonies as the War of Liberation (Guerra de Libertação), was fought between Portugal's military and the emerging nationalist movements in Portugal's African colonies between 1961 and 1974.

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Post (Björk album)

Post is the second studio album by Icelandic recording artist Björk.

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Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism

Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism is a 1991 book by Fredric Jameson, in which Jameson offers a critique of modernism and postmodernism from a Marxist perspective.

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Poverty in the United States

Poverty is a state of deprivation, lacking the usual or socially acceptable amount of money or material possessions.

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Pretty Modern: Beauty, Sex, and Plastic Surgery in Brazil

Pretty Modern: Beauty, Sex, and Plastic Surgery in Brazil is a book by anthropologist Alexander Edmonds published by Duke University Press in 2010.

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Primitive accumulation of capital

In Marxist economics and preceding theories,Perelman, p. 25 (ch. 2) the problem of primitive accumulation (also called previous accumulation, original accumulation) of capital concerns the origin of capital, and therefore of how class distinctions between possessors and non-possessors came to be.

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Prince Frederick of Württemberg

Prince Frederick Charles Augustus of Württemberg (Friedrich Karl August Prinz von Württemberg) (21 February 1808 – 9 May 1870) was a General in the Army of Württemberg and the father of William II of Württemberg.

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Prince William of Baden (1829–1897)

Prince Louis William Augustus of Baden (Ludwig Wilhelm August Prinz von Baden; 18 December 1829 – 27 April 1897) was a Prussian general and politician.

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Project Euclid

Project Euclid is a collaborative partnership between Cornell University Library and Duke University Press which seeks to advance scholarly communication in theoretical and applied mathematics and statistics through partnerships with independent and society publishers.

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Prostitutes in South Korea for the U.S. military

During and following the Korean War, prostitutes in South Korea were frequently used by the U.S. military.

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Prostitution

Prostitution is the business or practice of engaging in sexual activity in exchange for payment.

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Public

In public relations and communication science, publics are groups of individual people, and the public (a.k.a. the general public) is the totality of such groupings.

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Public Culture

Public Culture is a peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary academic journal of cultural studies, published three times a year—in January, May, and September—by Duke University Press.

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Puchito Records discography

Puchito Records was Cuba’s second independent record label.

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Q'uq'umatz

Q'uq'umatz (alternatively Qucumatz, Gukumatz, Gucumatz, Gugumatz, Kucumatz etc.) was a deity of the Postclassic K'iche' Maya.

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Queer

Queer is an umbrella term for sexual and gender minorities who are not heterosexual or cisgender.

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Queer theory

Queer theory is a field of critical theory that emerged in the early 1990s out of the fields of queer studies and women's studies.

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Quiet storm

Quiet storm is a radio format and a "super genre" of contemporary R&B, jazz fusion and pop music that is characterized by understated, mellow dynamics, slow tempos, and relaxed rhythms.

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Racism in the LGBT community

Racism is a concern in lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) communities.

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Racism in the United States

Racism in the United States against non-whites is widespread and has been so the colonial era.

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Radical History Review

Radical History Review is a scholarly journal published by Duke University Press.

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Raghupathi Venkataratnam Naidu

Dewan Bahadur Sir Raghupati Venkataratnam Nayadu (1862–1939) was an Indian social reformer who hailed from Machilipatnam in Andhra Pradesh in India.

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Ralph Luker

Ralph E. Luker (March 1, 1940 - August 8, 2015) was an American historian, teacher, and the author of several books about race, religion and the Civil Rights Movement.

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Ramón Saldívar

Ramón Saldívar (born 1949) is a Mexican-American author, teacher and researcher of cultural studies and Chicano literature.

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Randian hero

The Randian hero is a ubiquitous figure in the fiction of 20th-century novelist and philosopher Ayn Rand, most famously in the figures of The Fountainheads Howard Roark and Atlas Shruggeds John Galt.

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Randy Martin

Randy Martin (5 October 1957 - 28 January, 2015) was a professor of Art and Policy at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, socialist activist, and dancer.

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Randy Weston

Randy Weston (born April 6, 1926, in Brooklyn, New York) is an American jazz pianist and composer of Jamaican parentage.

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Rantiya

Rantiya (رنتيّة, known to the Romans as Rantia and to the Crusaders as Rentie) was a Palestinian village, located 16 kilometers east of Jaffa.

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Raymond Lee Brown

Raymond Lee Brown is an American jazz trumpeter and flugelhornist who, from 1975 to the mid-2000s, was active as a session musician in Southern California — primarily in Los Angeles, Hollywood, and Beverly Hills.

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Real (Ivy Queen album)

Real is the fourth studio album by Puerto Rican reggaetón recording artist Ivy Queen, released on November 21, 2004, by Universal Music Latino.

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Rebellion of Túpac Amaru II

The Rebellion of Túpac Amaru II (1780–c. 1782) was an uprising of native and mestizo peasants against the Bourbon reforms in the Spanish Viceroyalty of Peru.

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Rec.arts.sf.tv.babylon5.moderated

rec.arts.sf.tv.babylon5.moderated is a moderated Usenet newsgroup that focuses on the science fiction television series Babylon 5 and the works of writer J. Michael Straczynski.

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Reggae

Reggae is a music genre that originated in Jamaica in the late 1960s.

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Reggaeton

Reggaeton (also known as reggaetón and reguetón) is a music genre which originated in Puerto Rico during the late 1990s.

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Religion in the United States

Religion in the United States is characterized by a diversity of religious beliefs and practices.

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Religious war

A religious war or holy war (bellum sacrum) is a war primarily caused or justified by differences in religion.

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Renée Méndez Capote

Renée Méndez Capote y Chaple (12 November 1901 – 14 May 1989), also known by the pseudonyms Io-san, Berenguela, and Suzanne, was a Cuban writer, essayist, journalist, translator, suffragist, and feminist activist.

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Reproduction and pregnancy in speculative fiction

Because speculative genres explore variants of reproduction, as well as possible futures, SF writers have often explored the social, political, technological, and biological consequences of pregnancy and reproduction.

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Resurrection of Eve

Resurrection of Eve is a 1973 American feature-length pornographic film produced by the Mitchell brothers and starring Marilyn Chambers, who had become a star in the Mitchell Brothers's previous picture, Behind the Green Door.

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Rey Chow

Rey Chow is a cultural critic, specializing in 20th-century Chinese fiction and film and postcolonial theory.

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Rhodesian Bush War

The Rhodesian Bush War—also known as the Second Chimurenga or the Zimbabwe War of Liberation—was a civil war that took place from July 1964 to December 1979 in the unrecognised country of Rhodesia (later Zimbabwe-Rhodesia).

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Ribs (recordings)

Ribs (рёбра, translit. ryobra), also known as music on ribs (Музыка на рёбрах), jazz on bones (Джаз на костях), bones or bone music (roentgenizdat) are improvised gramophone recordings made from X-ray films.

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Right to Censor

The Right to Censor (frequently referred to as RTC) was a heel professional wrestling faction in the World Wrestling Federation from mid-2000 to early 2001.

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Right to keep and bear arms

The right to keep and bear arms (often referred to as the right to bear arms) is the people's right to possess weapons (arms) for their own defense, as described in the philosophical and political writings of Aristotle, Cicero, John Locke, Machiavelli, the English Whigs and others.

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Ritu Birla

Ritu Birla is an historian of modern South Asia.

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Robert A. Hill (historian)

Robert A. Hill (born October 1943), UCLA Department of History.

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Robert H. Thayer

Robert Helyer Thayer (September 22, 1901 − January 26, 1984) was an American lawyer, naval officer and diplomat.

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Robert Muise

Robert J. Muise (born 1965) is an American attorney who specializes in constitutional law litigation.

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Roberta Flack

Roberta Cleopatra Flack (born February 10, 1937) is an American singer.

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Roberto Clemente Community Academy

Roberto Clemente Community Academy (commonly known as Clemente, Roberto Clemente High School) is a public 4–year high school located in the West Town community area of Chicago, Illinois, United States.

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Roberto Gerlein Echeverría

Roberto Víctor Gerlein Echeverría (born 18 November 1938) is a Colombian lawyer and politician.

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Rock and roll

Rock and roll (often written as rock & roll or rock 'n' roll) is a genre of popular music that originated and evolved in the United States during the late 1940s and early 1950sJim Dawson and Steve Propes, What Was the First Rock'n'Roll Record (1992),.

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Rock Awhile

"Rock Awhile" is a song by American singer-songwriter Goree Carter, recorded in April 1949 for the Freedom Recording Company in Houston, Texas.

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Rock music

Rock music is a broad genre of popular music that originated as "rock and roll" in the United States in the early 1950s, and developed into a range of different styles in the 1960s and later, particularly in the United Kingdom and in the United States.

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Rocket 88

"Rocket 88" (originally written as Rocket "88") is a rhythm and blues song that was first recorded in Memphis, Tennessee, on March 3 or 5, 1951 (accounts differ).

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Rocky Dzidzornu

Kwasi "Rocky" Dzidzornu (1935 – March 13, 1993), also known as Rocky Dijon, was a Ghanaian-born English percussionist known for his playing contributions to recordings by The Rolling Stones, Nick Drake, Ginger Baker, Stevie Wonder, Billy Preston and Joe Walsh.

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Roger Bartra

Roger Bartra Murià (born Mexico City, November 7, 1942) is a Mexican sociologist and anthropologist, recognized as one of the most important contemporary social scientists of Latin America.

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Roksana Bahramitash

Roksana Bahramitash, is a sociologist of Iranian background whose work focuses on women, employment and the informal economy in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), as well as gender segregation in Islam, and Microeconomics.

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Romanian Union Conference of Seventh-day Adventists

The Romanian Union Conference of Seventh-day Adventists (Uniunea de Conferinţe a Bisericii Adventiste de Ziua a Şaptea din România) is Romania's seventh-largest religious body.

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Romeo and Juliet

Romeo and Juliet is a tragedy written by William Shakespeare early in his career about two young star-crossed lovers whose deaths ultimately reconcile their feuding families.

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Ronda Campesina

Ronda Campesina (Peasant Rounds) is the name given to autonomous peasant patrols in rural Peru.

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Saddeka Arebi

Saddeka Mohammed Arebi (صديقة محمد عربيي, Ṣaddīqah Muḥammad `Arabī) (died July 2007) was a Libyan-American/Arab American social anthropologist and author.

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Said al-Ghazzi

Said Al-Ghazzi (سعيد الغزي) (11 June 1893 ‎ – 18 September 1967) was a Syrian lawyer, politician and two time prime minister of Syria.

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Saint-Denis, Seine-Saint-Denis

Saint-Denis is a commune in the northern suburbs of Paris, France.

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Sampling (music)

In music, sampling is the act of taking a portion, or sample, of one sound recording and reusing it as an instrument or a sound recording in a different song or piece.

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Samuel Kamakau

Samuel Mānaiakalani Kamakau (October 29, 1815 – September 5, 1876) was a Hawaiian historian and scholar.

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Sandinista National Liberation Front

The Sandinista National Liberation Front (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional, FSLN) is a democratic socialist political party in Nicaragua.

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Sandungueo

Sandungueo is a style of dance and party music associated with reggaeton that emerged in the late 1980s in Puerto Rico.

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Sangh Parivar

The Sangh Parivar (Family of Organisations) refers to the family of Hindu nationalist organisations which have been started by members of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) or drew inspiration from its ideology.

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Santha Rama Rau

Santha Rama Rau (24 January 1923 – 21 April 2009) was an Indian-born American writer.

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Sara Ahmed

Sara Ahmed (30 August 1969) is a British-Australian scholar whose area of study includes the intersection of feminist theory, queer theory, critical race theory and postcolonialism.

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Sarah Méndez Capote

Sarah Méndez-Capote y Chaple was a Cuban writer, poet, translator, suffragist, and feminist activist.

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Sarah Schulman

Sarah Miriam Schulman (born July 28, 1958) is an American novelist, playwright, nonfiction writer, screenwriter and AIDS historian.

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Sarah Thomason

Sarah Grey Thomason (known as "Sally") is an American scholar of linguistics.

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Sathima Bea Benjamin

Beatrice "Sathima Bea" Benjamin (17 October 1936 – 20 August 2013) was a South African vocalist and composer, based for nearly 45 years in New York City.

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Satire

Satire is a genre of literature, and sometimes graphic and performing arts, in which vices, follies, abuses, and shortcomings are held up to ridicule, ideally with the intent of shaming individuals, corporations, government, or society itself into improvement.

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Saxbe fix

The Saxbe fix, or salary rollback, is a mechanism by which the President of the United States, in appointing a current or former member of the United States Congress whose elected term has not yet expired, can avoid the restriction of the United States Constitution's Ineligibility Clause.

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Scat singing

In vocal jazz, scat singing is vocal improvisation with wordless vocables, nonsense syllables or without words at all.

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Schizophrenia (Sepultura album)

Schizophrenia is the second studio album by Brazilian thrash metal band Sepultura, released on October 30, 1987 by Cogumelo Records.

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Schools of economic thought

In the history of economic thought, a school of economic thought is a group of economic thinkers who share or shared a common perspective on the way economies work.

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Second Opium War

The Second Opium War (第二次鴉片戰爭), the Second Anglo-Chinese War, the Second China War, the Arrow War, or the Anglo-French expedition to China, was a war pitting the United Kingdom and the French Empire against the Qing dynasty of China, lasting from 1856 to 1860.

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Secrecy

Secrecy (also called clandestinity or furtiveness) is the practice of hiding information from certain individuals or groups who do not have the "need to know", perhaps while sharing it with other individuals.

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Selena

Selena Quintanilla-Pérez (April 16, 1971 – March 31, 1995) was an American singer, songwriter, spokesperson, model, actress, and fashion designer.

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Sense8

Sense8 (a play on the word sensate) is an American science fiction drama web television series created by Lana and Lilly Wachowski and J. Michael Straczynski for Netflix.

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Sentimiento (album)

Sentimiento (English: Feeling) is the sixth studio album by Puerto Rican recording artist Ivy Queen.

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Sentimientos (song)

"Sentimientos" (English: Feelings) is a song by Puerto Rican reggaetón recording artist Ivy Queen, from her sixth studio album, Sentimiento (2007).

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Seo Taiji and Boys

Seo Taiji and Boys was a South Korean music group active from 1992 to 1996.

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Seo Taiji and Boys II

Seo Taiji and Boys II is the second studio album by Korean musical trio Seo Taiji and Boys.

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Seo Taiji and Boys III

Seo Taiji and Boys III is the third studio album by Korean musical trio Seo Taiji and Boys.

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Seo Taiji and Boys IV

Seo Taiji and Boys IV is the fourth and final studio album by Korean musical trio Seo Taiji and Boys.

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Sessue Hayakawa filmography

The following lists the film appearances of the actor and film producer Sessue Hayakawa.

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Sessue Hayakawa: Silent Cinema and Transnational Stardom

Sessue Hayakawa: Silent Cinema and Transnational Stardom is a biography of actor Sessue Hayakawa, written by Daisuke Miyao, assistant professor of film at the University of Oregon, and published by Duke University Press.

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Setchūbai

Seijishōsetsu: Setchūbai (政治小説: 雪中梅; "A Political Novel: Plum Blossoms in Snow") is an 1886 novel by (末広 鉄腸).

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Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest

Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest is a 2003 work by ethnohistorian Matthew Restall in which he posits that there are seven myths about the Spanish colonization of the Americas that have come to be widely believed to be true.

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Sex, Sin, and Blasphemy

Sex, Sin, and Blasphemy: A Guide to America's Censorship Wars is a non-fiction book by lawyer and civil libertarian Marjorie Heins that is about freedom of speech and the censorship of works of art in the early 1990s by the U.S. government.

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Sexploitation film

A sexploitation film (or "sex-exploitation film") is a class of independently produced, low-budget feature film that is generally associated with the 1960s, and that serves largely as a vehicle for the exhibition of non-explicit sexual situations and gratuitous nudity.

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Sexual Personae

Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson is a 1990 work about sexual decadence in Western literature and the visual arts by scholar Camille Paglia, in which the author addresses major artists and writers such as Donatello, Sandro Botticelli, Leonardo da Vinci, Edmund Spenser, William Shakespeare, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lord Byron, Emily Brontë, and Oscar Wilde.

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Shawna Robinson

Shawna Robinson (born November 30, 1964) is an American retired professional stock car racing driver.

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Shōnen Sekai

, is one of the first shōnen magazines published by Hakubunkan specializing in children's literature, published from 1895 to 1914.

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Sheikh Mujibur Rahman

Sheikh Mujibur Rahman (শেখ মুজিবুর রহমান);; (17 March 1920 – 15 August 1975), shortened as Sheikh Mujib or just Mujib, was a Bengali politician and statesman.

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Sherrie Tucker

Sherrie Jean Tucker (born 18 March 1957 Modesto, California) is a musicologist, music historian, book author, professor, and journal editor.

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Shindo Renmei

Shindo Renmei (Japanese: was a terrorist organization composed of Japanese immigrants. It was active in the state of São Paulo, Brazil during the 1940s. Refusing to believe the news of Japan's surrender at the end of World War II, some of its most fanatic members used violence against those who did surrender. Shindo Renmei killed at least 23 people, all of whom were Japanese-Brazilians, and wounded 147 others.

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Shine Louise Houston

Shine Louise Houston is a filmmaker and the founding director and producer of Pink and White Productions, an independent production company creating queer pornography in San Francisco.

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Shining Path

The Communist Party of Peru - Shining Path (Partido Comunista del Perú - Sendero Luminoso), more commonly known as the Shining Path (Sendero Luminoso), is a Maoist guerrilla group in Peru.

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Shira (book)

Shira (Hebrew: שירה) is a 1971 posthumously-published unfinished Hebrew-language novel by Shmuel Yosef Agnon first serialized in Haaretz between 1948 and 1966, his longest novel at 558 pages and the last one he wrote.

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Shock rock

Shock rock is an umbrella term for artists who combine rock music or metal with highly theatrical live performances emphasizing shock value.

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Si Una Vez

"Si Una Vez" (If I Once) is a song recorded by Mexican-American recording artist Selena for her fourth studio album, Amor Prohibido (1994).

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Siege of Dubrovnik

The Siege of Dubrovnik (Opsada Dubrovnika, Blokada Dubrovnika) was a military engagement fought between the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) and Croatian forces defending the city of Dubrovnik and its surroundings during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Siege of Kijevo (1991)

The 1991 siege of Kijevo was one of the earliest conflicts in the Croatian War of Independence.

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Sir George Staunton, 1st Baronet

Sir George Leonard Staunton, 1st Baronet (10 April 1737 – 14 January 1801) was an employee of the East India Company and a botanist.

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Sir John Maclean, 1st Baronet

Sir John Maclean, 1st Baronet, (1604 – 7 July 1666) also known as John Makeléer or Hans Makeléer in Sweden, was Lord of Gåsevadholm, and Hageby and Hammarö.

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Skatt Brothers

The Skatt Bros. (or Skatt Brothers) was a band from Los Angeles, California formed in 1979.

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Slovak National Party

The Slovak National Party (Slovenská národná strana, SNS) is a nationalist political party in Slovakia.

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Small Axe Project

The Small Axe Project is an integrated publication undertaking devoted to Caribbean intellectual and artistic work, exercised over four platforms—Small Axe; sx salon, sx visualities, and sx archipelagos—each with a different structure, medium, and practice.

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Social construction of gender

The social construction of gender is a belief in feminism and sociology about the operation of gender and gender differences in societies.

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Social Science History

Social Science History is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal.

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Social Text

Social Text is an academic journal published by Duke University Press.

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Soft butch

A soft butch, or stem (stud-fem), is a woman who exhibits some stereotypical butch and lesbian traits without fitting the masculine stereotype associated with butch lesbians.

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Sonia Boyce

Sonia Dawn Boyce, (born 1962), is a British Afro-Caribbean artist, living and working in London.

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Sophia Delza

Sophia Delza Glassgold (1903 – June 27, 1996), born Sophie Hurwitz, was an American modern dancer, choreographer, author, and practitioner of Wu-style tai chi, which she taught at her school in New York City.

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Soul Sisters Softball Team

The Soul Sisters softball team was Detroit's first all female, all African American softball team.

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South End Press

South End Press was a non-profit book publisher run on a model of participatory economics.

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Soviet occupation of Romania

The Soviet occupation of Romania refers to the period from 1944 to August 1958, during which the Soviet Union maintained a significant military presence in Romania.

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Spanish conquest of Guatemala

The Spanish conquest of Guatemala was a protracted conflict during the Spanish colonization of the Americas, in which Spanish colonisers gradually incorporated the territory that became the modern country of Guatemala into the colonial Viceroyalty of New Spain.

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Spanish conquest of the Maya

The Spanish conquest of the Maya was a protracted conflict during the Spanish colonisation of the Americas, in which the Spanish conquistadores and their allies gradually incorporated the territory of the Late Postclassic Maya states and polities into the colonial Viceroyalty of New Spain.

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Spanish conquest of Yucatán

The Spanish conquest of Yucatán was the campaign undertaken by the Spanish conquistadores against the Late Postclassic Maya states and polities in the Yucatán Peninsula, a vast limestone plain covering south-eastern Mexico, northern Guatemala, and all of Belize.

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Speaking in Tongues (speech)

Speaking in Tongues: A Letter to 3rd World Women Writers is a letter written by Gloria E. Anzaldúa.

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Stalinism

Stalinism is the means of governing and related policies implemented from the 1920s to 1953 by Joseph Stalin (1878–1953).

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State of Palestine

Palestine (فلسطين), officially the State of Palestine (دولة فلسطين), is a ''de jure'' sovereign state in the Middle East claiming the West Bank (bordering Israel and Jordan) and Gaza Strip (bordering Israel and Egypt) with East Jerusalem as the designated capital, although its administrative center is currently located in Ramallah.

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Statue of Sir Thomas Jackson, 1st Baronet

The statue of Sir Thomas Jackson, 1st Baronet is a bronze sculpture by Mario Raggi, installed in Statue Square, a public pedestrian square in Central, Hong Kong.

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Statue Square

Statue Square (lit. "Empress' Statue Square") is a public pedestrian square in Central, Hong Kong.

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Staying with the Trouble

Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene is a 2016 book by Donna Haraway, published by Duke University Press.

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Stephen Crane

Stephen Crane (November 1, 1871 – June 5, 1900) was an American poet, novelist, and short story writer.

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Stephen Paul Miller

Stephen Paul Miller (born 1951) is an American poet and academic.

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Stereotypes of South Asians

Stereotypes of South Asians are broadly believed impressions about individuals of South Asian origin that are often inconsistent with reality.

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Steve Fuller (sociologist)

Steve William Fuller (born 12 July 1959) is an American philosopher-sociologist in the field of science and technology studies.

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Still Time (book)

Still Time is a 1994 photography book by Sally Mann.

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Stone Cold Hustler

"Stone Cold Hustler" is the debut single released in 1987 by the Washington, D.C.-based hip-hop artist D.C. Scorpio.

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Storming of the Bastille

The Storming of the Bastille (Prise de la Bastille) occurred in Paris, France, on the afternoon of 14 July 1789.

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Storming the Reality Studio

Storming the Reality Studio: A Casebook of Cyberpunk and Postmodern Science Fiction, edited by Larry McCaffery, was published by Duke University Press in 1992, though most of its contents had been featured in Mississippi Review in 1988.

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Sturm (novella)

Sturm is a 1923 World War I novella by the German writer Ernst Jünger.

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Suad Joseph

Suad Joseph (سعاد جوزيف; born 6 September 1943).

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Subterranean Jungle

Subterranean Jungle is the seventh studio album by the American punk rock band the Ramones, released by Sire Records on February 23, 1983.

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Sugar Soul

was a Japanese three-member R&B group which formed in 1996.

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Superman

Superman is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story

Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story is a 1987 American short biographical film portraying the last 17 years of singer Karen Carpenter's life.

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Susan Stryker

Susan O'Neal Stryker is an American professor, author, filmmaker, and theorist whose work focuses on gender and human sexuality.

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Suzanna Danuta Walters

Suzanna Danuta Walters is the director of the Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Program and professor of sociology at Northeastern University, Boston.

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Sylvia M. Broadbent

Sylvia Marguerite Broadbent (London, United Kingdom, 26 February 1932 - Arlington, California, United States, 30 July 2015) was an American anthropologist and professor, specializing in Amerindian peoples.

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Syrian Turkmen

Syrian Turkmen (also referred to as Syrian Turkomans or simply Syrian Turks or Turks of Syria) (تركمان سوريا, Suriye Türkmenleri or Suriye Türkleri), are Syrian citizens of mainly Turkish origin whose families had migrated to Syria from Anatolia during the centuries of Ottoman rule (1516-1918).

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Székely Land

The Székely Land or Szeklerland (Székelyföld,; Ținutul Secuiesc (also Secuimea); Szeklerland; Terra Siculorum)James Minahan,, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002, p. 1810 is a historic and ethnographic area in Romania, inhabited mainly by Hungarians.

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Székelys

The Székelys, sometimes also referred to as Szeklers (székelyek, Secui, Szekler, Siculi), are a subgroup of the Hungarian people living mostly in the Székely Land in Romania.

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Tai Kato

was a Japanese film director and screenwriter.

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Take a Bow (Madonna song)

"Take a Bow" is a song by American singer Madonna from her sixth studio album Bedtime Stories (1994).

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Tang Danian

Tang Danian (唐大年 1968) is a Chinese film director, screenwriter and sometime actor.

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Tashkent

Tashkent (Toshkent, Тошкент, تاشكېنت,; Ташкент) is the capital and largest city of Uzbekistan, as well as the most populated city in Central Asia with a population in 2012 of 2,309,300.

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Táhirih

Tahereh (Tāhirih) (طاهره, "The Pure One," also called Qurrat al-ʿAyn ("Solace/Consolation of the Eyes") are both titles of Fatimah Baraghani/Umm-i-Salmih|"Fatima Begum Zarin Tajj Umm Salmih Baraghani Qazvini" |www.geni.com |url.

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Te He Querido, Te He Llorado

"Te He Querido, Te He Llorado" (English: I Have Loved You, I Have Cried For You) is a song by Puerto Rican reggaetón recording artist Ivy Queen, from her fifth studio album, Flashback (2005).

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Teška Industrija

Teška Industrija is a rock band from Bosnia and Herzegovina, based in Sarajevo.

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Techno Cumbia

"Techno Cumbia" is a song recorded by American singer Selena for her fourth studio album, Amor Prohibido (1994).

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Technodelic

Technodelic is the fifth studio album by Yellow Magic Orchestra, released in 1981.

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Ted Gioia

Ted Gioia (born 21 October 1957) is an American jazz critic and music historian who wrote The History of Jazz and Delta Blues, both selected as notable books of the year by The New York Times.

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Teiaiagon

Teiaiagon was an Iroquoian village on the east bank of the Humber River in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

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Tejaswini Niranjana

Tejaswini Niranjana (born 26 July 1958) is an Indian professor, cultural theorist, translator and author.

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Tela

Tela is a town in Honduras on the northern Caribbean coast.

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Television in Cuba

Television arrived in Cuba on October 25, 1950.

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Ten (2002 film)

Ten (appears as 10 during the opening credits) is a 2002 Iranian film, a docufiction directed by Abbas Kiarostami, starring Mania Akbari and Amin Maher.

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Tenpō Reforms

The were an array of economic policies introduced in 1842 by the Tokugawa Shogunate in Japan.

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Teorema (film)

Teorema is a 1968 Italian film written and directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini and starring Terence Stamp, Laura Betti, Silvana Mangano, Massimo Girotti, and Anne Wiazemsky.

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Territory band

Territory bands were dance bands that crisscrossed specific regions of the United States from the 1920s through the 1960s.

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Texas blues

Texas blues is a style of blues music.

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Texas country music

Texas country music (more popularly known just as Texas country or Texas music) is a rapidly growing subgenre of American country music.

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Tha Blue Herb

Tha Blue Herb is a Japanese alternative hip hop trio based in Sapporo, Hokkaido.

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Thaddeus B. Hurd

Thaddeus Baker Hurd (October 23, 1903 – March 12, 1989) was an architect and historian who is known for his interest and extensive research in the history of the city of Clyde, Ohio, United States.

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Thai Chinese

Thai of Chinese origin, often called Thai Chinese, consist of Thai people of full or partial Chinese ancestry – particularly Han Chinese.

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The Alphabet Versus the Goddess

The Alphabet Versus the Goddess: The Conflict Between Word and Image is a work of critical theory by American surgeon Leonard Shlain, published by Viking Press in 1998.

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The Analysis of Beauty

The Analysis of Beauty is a book written by the 18th-century artist and writer William Hogarth, published in 1753, which describes Hogarth's theories of visual beauty and grace in a manner accessible to the common man of his day.

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The Best American Magazine Writing 2007

The Best American Magazine Writing 2007 is a non-fiction book published by Columbia University Press, and edited by the American Society of Magazine Editors.

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The Big Ballad Jamboree

The Big Ballad Jamboree is a novel by the American writer Donald Davidson, written in the 1950s and published posthumously in 1996.

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The Black Book of Communism

The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression is a 1997 book by Stéphane Courtois, Nicolas Werth, Andrzej Paczkowski and several other European academics documenting a history of political repressions by Communist states, including genocides, extrajudicial executions, deportations, killing population in labor camps and artificially created famines.

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The Crime and the Glory of Commander Suzdal

"The Crime and the Glory of Commander Suzdal" is a science fiction short story by Cordwainer Smith, set in Smith's "Instrumentality" universe.

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The Eternal Road (opera)

The Eternal Road is an opera-oratorio with spoken dialogue in four acts by Kurt Weill with a libretto (originally in German: – The Way of the Covenant), by Austrian novelist and playwright Franz Werfel and translated into English by Ludwig Lewisohn.

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The Galaxy Being

"The Galaxy Being" is the first episode of the original The Outer Limits television series, originally broadcast on September 16, 1963.

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The Girl Who Knew Too Much (1963 film)

The Girl Who Knew Too Much (La ragazza che sapeva troppo) is a 1963 Italian giallo film.

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The Good Terrorist

The Good Terrorist is a 1985 political novel written by the British novelist Doris Lessing.

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The Hispanic American Historical Review

The Hispanic American Historical Review is a quarterly, peer-reviewed, scholarly journal of Latin American history, the official publication of the Conference on Latin American History, the professional organization of Latin American historians.

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The Immobile Empire

The Immobile Empire is the English translation of L'empire Immobile, Ou, Le Choc Des Mondes: Récit Historique, a book of history published in French 1989 by the French politician and writer Alain Peyrefitte and translated into English in 1992.

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The Invasion of 1910

The Invasion of 1910 is a 1906 novel written mainly by William Le Queux (along with H. W. Wilson providing the naval chapters).

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The Jade Pussycat

The Jade Pussycat is a 1977 pornographic film starring John Holmes.

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The Jezebel Spirit (song)

"The Jezebel Spirit" is the fourth song from the 1981 album My Life in the Bush of Ghosts by David Byrne and Brian Eno.

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The Journal of Korean Studies

The Journal of Korean Studies is a biannual peer-reviewed academic journal covering Korean studies.

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The Kid (book)

The Kid: What Happened After My Boyfriend and I Decided to Go Get Pregnant is a non-fiction book by Dan Savage.

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The Latino World Order

The Latino World Order (abbreviated lWo or LWO) was a professional wrestling stable that existed in World Championship Wrestling (WCW) in 1998 and 1999 led by Eddie Guerrero.

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The Magic Flute (1975 film)

The Magic Flute (Trollflöjten) is Ingmar Bergman's 1975 film version of Mozart's opera Die Zauberflöte.

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The Minnesota Review

The Minnesota Review is a literary magazine covering literary and cultural studies which places a special emphasis on politically engaged criticism, fiction, and poetry.

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The Namesake (short story)

The Namesake is a short story by Willa Cather.

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The Open Source Definition

The Open Source Definition is a document published by the Open Source Initiative, to determine whether a software license can be labeled with the open-source certification mark.

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The Original Pinettes Brass Band

The Original Pinettes Brass Band are a New Orleans brass band.

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The Padlock

The Padlock is a two-act 'afterpiece' opera by Charles Dibdin.

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The Painful Experience

The Painful Experience is the third full-length studio album by Indonesian extreme metal band Kekal.

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The Philosophical Review

The Philosophical Review is a quarterly journal of philosophy edited by the faculty of the Sage School of Philosophy at Cornell University and published by Duke University Press (since September 2006).

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The Song of Everlasting Sorrow (novel)

The Song of Everlasting Sorrow is a 1995 Chinese novel by Wang Anyi.

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The Thirteenth Tribe

The Thirteenth Tribe is a 1976 book by Arthur Koestler, in which the author advances the thesis that Ashkenazi Jews are not descended from the historical Israelites of antiquity, but from Khazars, a Turkic people.

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The Tingler

The Tingler is a 1959 American horror/thriller film produced and directed by William Castle.

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The Ultimate Warrior

Warrior (born James Brian Hellwig; June 16, 1959 – April 8, 2014) was an American professional wrestler, who most famously wrestled under the ring name The Ultimate Warrior for the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) from 1987 to 1991 and again in 1992 and 1996.

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The Watermelon Woman

The Watermelon Woman is a 1996 romantic comedy-drama film written, directed, and edited by Cheryl Dunye.

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The Way I See It

The Way I See It is the 2008 third studio album by American R&B singer, songwriter, and producer Raphael Saadiq.

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The Way to Eden

"The Way to Eden" is the twentieth episode of the third season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek, broadcast on February 21, 1969.

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The World of Lucha Libre

The World of Lucha Libre: Secrets, Revelations, and Mexican National Identity is a book, published in 2008, by Heather Levi.

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Theodore G. Bilbo

Theodore Gilmore Bilbo (October 13, 1877August 21, 1947) was an American politician who twice served as governor of Mississippi (1916–20, 1928–32) and later was elected a U.S. Senator (1935–47).

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Thomas Glave

Thomas Glave (born November 10, 1964) is an American author who has published widely and won numerous awards.

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Thomas M'Clintock

Thomas M’Clintock (1792–1876) was an anti-slavery activist and devoted Hicksite Quaker.

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Thomas R. Cole

Thomas R. Cole (born 1949) is a writer, historian, filmmaker, and gerontologist.

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Tikkun (magazine)

Tikkun is a quarterly interfaith Jewish left-progressive magazine, published in the United States, that analyzes American and Israeli culture, politics, religion, and history in the English language.

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Timeline of second-wave feminism

This is a Timeline of second-wave feminism, from its beginning in the mid-twentieth century, to the start of Third-wave feminism in the early 1990s.

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Tobias Hecht

Tobias Hecht (born 18 February 1964) is an American anthropologist, ethnographer, and translator.

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Todd Haynes

Todd Haynes (born January 2, 1961) is an American independent film director, screenwriter, and producer.

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Tohil

Tohil (also spelled Tojil) was a deity of the K'iche' Maya in the Late Postclassic period of Mesoamerica.

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Tom Boellstorff

Tom Boellstorff is an anthropologist based at the University of California, Irvine.

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Tomás Moulian

Tomás Moulian Emparanza (born 21 September 1939) is a Chilean political scientist and sociologist.

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Tony Allen (musician)

Tony Oladipo Allen (born 1940 in Lagos, Nigeria) is a Nigerian drummer, composer and songwriter who currently lives and works in Paris.

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Tony Ballantyne (historian)

Tony Ballantyne (born Dunedin, 1972) is a New Zealand historian whose works examined the development of imperial intellectual and cultural life in Ireland, India, New Zealand, and Britain.

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Tourniquet (band)

Tourniquet is a Christian metal band that was formed in 1989 by Ted Kirkpatrick, Guy Ritter and Gary Lenaire in Los Angeles, California, United States.

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Trade union

A trade union or trades union, also called a labour union (Canada) or labor union (US), is an organization of workers who have come together to achieve many common goals; such as protecting the integrity of its trade, improving safety standards, and attaining better wages, benefits (such as vacation, health care, and retirement), and working conditions through the increased bargaining power wielded by the creation of a monopoly of the workers.

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Trade unions in Colombia

see also Human rights in Colombia Trade unions in Colombia were until around 1990 among the strongest in Latin America.

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Transgender History (book)

Transgender History is a non-fiction book by professor Susan Stryker that provides a concise history of transgender people in the United States from the middle of the 19th century to the 2000s.

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Transgender Studies Quarterly

TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly is a peer-reviewed academic journal devoted to transgender studies emphasizing cultural studies and the humanities.

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Transport in the Soviet Union

Transport in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) was an important part of the nation's economy.

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Transylvania

Transylvania is a historical region in today's central Romania.

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Tripartite Declaration of 1950

The Tripartite Declaration of 1950, also called the Tripartite Agreement of 1950, was a joint statement by the United States, United Kingdom, and France to guarantee the territorial status quo that had been determined by the 1949 Arab–Israeli Armistice Agreements.

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Truth or Consequences, New Mexico

Truth or Consequences is a city in and the county seat of Sierra County, New Mexico, United States.

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Tsuru Aoki

was a popular Japanese stage and screen actress whose career was most prolific during the silent film era of the 1910s through the 1920s.

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Tunisian Communist Party

Tunisian Communist Party (الحزب الشيوعي التونسي; Parti communiste tunisien) was a Marxist political party in Tunisia.

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Turks in Lebanon

Turks in Lebanon, also known as Lebanese Turks (Lübnan Türkleri), are people of Turkish ancestry that live in Lebanon.

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Tyntesfield

Tyntesfield is a Victorian Gothic Revival house and estate near Wraxall, North Somerset, England.

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Ukrainian language

No description.

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Unitarian Church of Transylvania

The Unitarian Church of Transylvania (Erdélyi Unitárius Egyház; Biserica Unitariană din Transilvania) is a church of the Unitarian denomination, based in the city of Cluj, Transylvania, Romania.

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Unitarianism

Unitarianism (from Latin unitas "unity, oneness", from unus "one") is historically a Christian theological movement named for its belief that the God in Christianity is one entity, as opposed to the Trinity (tri- from Latin tres "three") which defines God as three persons in one being; the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

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United Fruit Company

The United Fruit Company was an American corporation that traded in tropical fruit (primarily bananas), grown on Central and South American plantations, and sold in the United States and Europe.

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United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine

The United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine was a proposal by the United Nations, which recommended a partition of Mandatory Palestine at the end of the British Mandate. On 29 November 1947, the UN General Assembly adopted the Plan as Resolution 181 (II). The resolution recommended the creation of independent Arab and Jewish States and a Special International Regime for the city of Jerusalem. The Partition Plan, a four-part document attached to the resolution, provided for the termination of the Mandate, the progressive withdrawal of British armed forces and the delineation of boundaries between the two States and Jerusalem. Part I of the Plan stipulated that the Mandate would be terminated as soon as possible and the United Kingdom would withdraw no later than 1 August 1948. The new states would come into existence two months after the withdrawal, but no later than 1 October 1948. The Plan sought to address the conflicting objectives and claims of two competing movements, Palestinian nationalism and Jewish nationalism, or Zionism. Molinaro, Enrico The Holy Places of Jerusalem in Middle East Peace Agreements Page 78 The Plan also called for Economic Union between the proposed states, and for the protection of religious and minority rights. The Plan was accepted by the Jewish Agency for Palestine, despite its perceived limitations. Arab leaders and governments rejected it and indicated an unwillingness to accept any form of territorial division, arguing that it violated the principles of national self-determination in the UN Charter which granted people the right to decide their own destiny.Sami Hadawi, Olive Branch Press, (1989)1991 p.76. Immediately after adoption of the Resolution by the General Assembly, a civil war broke out and the plan was not implemented.

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United States and state-sponsored terrorism

The United States has at various times in recent history provided support to terrorist and paramilitary organizations around the world.

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United States Court for Berlin

The United States Court for Berlin was a United States Article II court that had extraterritorial jurisdiction over American-occupied Berlin.

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University of Massachusetts Boston

The University of Massachusetts Boston, also known as UMass Boston, is an urban public research university and the third-largest campus in the five-campus University of Massachusetts system.

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Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan, officially also the Republic of Uzbekistan (Oʻzbekiston Respublikasi), is a doubly landlocked Central Asian Sovereign state.

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Vance plan

The Vance plan (Vanceov plan, Vensov plan) was a peace plan negotiated by the former United States Secretary of State Cyrus Vance in November 1991 during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Varivode massacre

The Varivode massacre was a mass killing that occurred on 28 September 1995 in the village of Varivode, Croatia during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Vasil Levski

Vasil Levski (Васил Левски, originally spelled Василъ Лѣвскій, pronounced), born Vasil Ivanov Kunchev (Васил Иванов Кунчев; 18 July 1837 – 18 February 1873), was a Bulgarian revolutionary and is a national hero of Bulgaria today.

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Vera (film)

Vera is a 1986 Brazilian drama film written and directed by Sérgio Toledo.

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Vernita Gray

Vernita Gray (December 8, 1948 – March 18, 2014) was an African-American lesbian and women's liberation activist from the beginning of those movements in Chicago.

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Vespertine

Vespertine is the fourth solo album by Icelandic musician Björk, released on 27 August 2001, on One Little Indian Records.

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Vicente L. Rafael

Vicente L. Rafael is a professor of Southeast Asian history at the University of Washington, Seattle.

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Viennese Actionism

Viennese Actionism was a short and violent movement in 20th-century art.

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Viking metal

Viking metal is a style of heavy metal music characterized by a lyrical and thematic focus on Norse mythology, Norse paganism, and the Viking Age.

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Vilnius Castle Complex

The Vilnius Castle Complex (Vilniaus pilių kompleksas or Vilniaus pilys) is a group of cultural, and historic structures on the left bank of the Neris River, near its confluence with the Vilnia River, in Vilnius, Lithuania.

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Vogue (magazine)

Vogue is a fashion and lifestyle magazine covering many topics including fashion, beauty, culture, living, and runway.

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Vukovar massacre

The Vukovar massacre, also known as the Vukovar hospital massacre or the Ovčara massacre, was the killing of Croatian prisoners of war and civilians by Serb paramilitaries, to whom they had been turned over by the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA), at the Ovčara farm southeast of Vukovar on 20 November 1991, during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Wahhabism

Wahhabism (الوهابية) is an Islamic doctrine and religious movement founded by Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab.

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Walter Benjamin

Walter Bendix Schönflies Benjamin (15 July 1892 – 26 September 1940) was a German Jewish philosopher, cultural critic and essayist.

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Walter Gempp

Walter Gempp (13 September 1878 - 2 May 1939) was a firefighting expert.

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Walter Mignolo

Walter D. Mignolo (born May 1, 1941) is an Argentine semiotician (École des Hautes Études) and professor at Duke University, who has published extensively on semiotics and literary theory, and worked on different aspects of the modern and colonial world, exploring concepts such as global coloniality, the geopolitics of knowledge, transmodernity, Border-Thinking, and pluriversality.

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Wangga

Wangga (sometimes spelled Wongga) is an indigenous Australian genre of traditional music and ceremony which originated in northern areas of the country from South Alligator River south east towards Ngukurr, south to the Katherine region of Northern Territory and west into the Kimberley of Western Australia.

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Warrendale, Detroit

Warrendale is a community in far western Detroit, Michigan.

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Wartime sexual violence

Wartime sexual violence is rape or other forms of sexual violence committed by combatants during armed conflict or war or military occupation often as spoils of war; but sometimes, particularly in ethnic conflict, the phenomenon has broader sociological motives.

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Wayne Marshall (ethnomusicologist)

Wayne Marshall is an American ethnomusicologist college professor.

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Weequahic High School

Weequahic High School is a four-year comprehensive public high school serving students in ninth through twelfth grades, located in the Weequahic section of Newark in Essex County, New Jersey, United States.

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West Indian Gazette

The West Indian Gazette (WIG) was a newspaper founded in Brixton, London, England, by Trinidadian activist Claudia Jones (1915–1964) in 1958.

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Western cosmetics in the 1970s

Western cosmetics in the 1970s reflected the multiple roles ascribed to the modern woman.

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Whedonesque.com

Whedonesque.com (also referred to as Whedonesque) is a collaborative weblog devoted to the works of Joss Whedon.

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William C. Owen

William Charles Owen (1854–1929) was a British–American anarchist best known for his activism during the Mexican Revolution and English-language translations of Mexican anarchist Ricardo Flores Magón.

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William Eldridge Odom

William Eldridge Odom (June 23, 1932 – May 30, 2008) was a retired U.S. Army 3-star general, and former Director of the NSA under President Ronald Reagan, which culminated a 31-year career in military intelligence, mainly specializing in matters relating to the Soviet Union.

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William Gibson

William Ford Gibson (born March 17, 1948) is an American-Canadian speculative fiction writer and essayist widely credited with pioneering the science fiction subgenre known as cyberpunk.

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William H. Poteat

William H. Poteat (19 April 1919 – 17 May 2000) was a philosopher, scholar, and charismatic professor of philosophy, religion, and culture at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill from 1947 to 1957 and at Duke University from 1960 to 1987.

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William O. Douglas Prize

The William O. Douglas Prize (also known as the William O. Douglas Award) is given by the Commission on Freedom of Expression of the Speech Communication Association to honor those who contribute to writing about freedom of speech.

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William Pannapacker

William Pannapacker is a professor of American literature and culture, an academic administrator and consultant, and a higher education journalist.

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William Pūnohu White

William Pūnohuʻāweoweoʻulaokalani White (August 6, 1851 – November 2, 1925) was a Hawaiian lawyer, sheriff, politician, and newspaper editor.

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William Treanor

William Michael Treanor (born November 16, 1957) is an attorney and legal scholar.

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Willy Brandt

Willy Brandt (born Herbert Ernst Karl Frahm; 18 December 1913 – 8 October 1992) was a German statesman who was leader of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) from 1964 to 1987 and served as Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) from 1969 to 1974.

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Women in Latin music

Women have made significant contributions to Latin music, a genre which predates Italian explorer Christopher Columbus' arrival in Latin America in 1492 and the Spanish colonization of the Americas.

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Women's liberation movement

The women's liberation movement (also Women's Liberation Movement, WLM) was a political alignment of women and feminist intellectualism that emerged in the late 1960s, and continued to the 1980s, primarily in the industrialized nations of the Western world, and which effected great change (political, intellectual, cultural) throughout the world.

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Women's liberation movement in North America

The Women's liberation movement in North America was part of the feminist movement in the late 1960s and through the 1980s.

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Women's studies

Women's studies is an academic field that draws on feminist and interdisciplinary methods in order to place women’s lives and experiences at the center of study, while examining social and cultural constructs of gender; systems of privilege and oppression; and the relationships between power and gender as they intersect with other identities and social locations such as race, sexual orientation, socio-economic class, and disability.

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Women-only space

A women-only space is an area where only women are allowed, thus providing a place where they do not have to interact with men.

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Womyn's land

Womyn's land (also called lesbian land, wimmin's land, landdyke communities, or women's land) is a term which refers to intentional communities organized by women to empower women.

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Womyn-born womyn

Womyn-born womyn (WBW) is a term developed during second-wave feminism to designate women who were identified as female at birth, were raised as girls, and identify as women (or womyn, a deliberately alternative spelling that challenges the centering of male as norm).

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Woolsey Hall

Woolsey Hall is the primary auditorium at Yale University, located on the campus' Hewitt Quadrangle in New Haven, Connecticut.

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Workers World Party

The Workers World Party (WWP) is a Marxist–Leninist political party in the United States.

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World Broadcasting System

World Broadcasting System, Inc., was an American recording service for the radio industry founded in 1929 by Percy L. Deutsch (1885–1968), with key investors and creative artists (Walter) Gustave Haenschen and Milton Diamond (both of whom had worked with Deutsch at the Brunswick Record Company) and was originally based in New York.

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World Policy Journal

World Policy Journal is the flagship publication of the World Policy Institute, published by Duke University Press.

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Xcaret Park

Xcaret Park (el parque Xcaret) is a privately owned and operated theme park, resort and self-described ecotourism development located in the Riviera Maya, a portion of the Caribbean coastline of Mexico's state of Quintana Roo.

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Xel-Ha Park

Xel-Ha Park (Parque Xel-Há) is a commercial aquatic theme park and ecotourism development located on the Caribbean coast of the state of Quintana Roo, Mexico, in the municipality of Solidaridad.

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Yalo

Yalo (يالو, also transliterated Yalu) was a Palestinian Arab village located 13 kilometres southeast of Ramla.

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Yamasee War

The Yamasee or Yemassee War (1715–1717) was a conflict between British settlers of colonial South Carolina and various Native American tribes, including the Yamasee, Muscogee, Cherokee, Catawba, Apalachee, Apalachicola, Yuchi, Savannah River Shawnee, Congaree, Waxhaw, Pee Dee, Cape Fear, Cheraw, and others.

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Yamila Cafrune

Yamila Cafrune (born in Buenos Aires, November 16, 1965) is an Argentine folk music singer.

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Yanakuna

Yanakuna (Quechua, from the verb yanapa to help, -kuna, a suffix to indicate the plural, "servants" or "slaves", hispanicized spelling Yanacona, also Yanaconas) were originally individuals in the Inca Empire who left the ayllu system and worked full-time at a variety of tasks for the Inca, the quya (Inca queen) or the religious establishment.

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Yearbook on International Communist Affairs

Yearbook on International Communist Affairs is a series of 25 books published annually between 1966 and 1991, which chronicle the activities of communist parties throughout the world.

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Yellow Magic Orchestra

Yellow Magic Orchestra (YMO) is a Japanese electronic music band formed in Tokyo in 1978 by Haruomi Hosono (bass, keyboards, vocals), Yukihiro Takahashi (drums, lead vocals) and Ryuichi Sakamoto (keyboards, vocals).

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Yonsei (Japanese diaspora)

is a Japanese diasporic term used in countries, particularly in North America and in Latin America, to specify the great-grandchildren of Japanese immigrants (Issei).

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Youth International Party

The Youth International Party, whose members were commonly called Yippies, was an American radically youth-oriented and countercultural revolutionary offshoot of the free speech and anti-war movements of the 1960s.

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Yvette Christiansë

Yvette Christiansë (born 12 December 1954) is a South African-born poet and novelist.

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Z-4 Plan

The Z-4 Plan was a proposed basis for negotiations to end the Croatian War of Independence with a political settlement.

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Zagreb rocket attacks

The Zagreb rocket attacks were a series of two rocket attacks conducted by the Army of the Republic of Serbian Krajina that used multiple rocket launchers to strike the Croatian capital of Zagreb during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Zakaria Hashemi

Zakaria Hashemi (زکریا هاشمی; born in 1936 in Rey, Iran) is an Iranian actor and film director.

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Zong-qi Cai

Zong-qi Cai (蔡宗齊) is a bicultural U.S./China academic based at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he teaches Chinese literature and Classical Chinese poetry and leads the Forum on Chinese Poetic Culture.

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Zou huo ru mo

Zou huo ru mo or is a Chinese-culture concept traditionally used to indicate that something has gone wrong in spiritual or martial arts training.

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1899 Atlantic hurricane season

The 1899 Atlantic hurricane season featured the longest-lasting tropical cyclone in the Atlantic basin on record.

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1899 San Ciriaco hurricane

1899 San Ciriaco hurricane, also known as the 1899 Puerto Rico Hurricane, was the longest-lived Atlantic hurricane on record, and the second-longest-lived tropical cyclone globally on record (in terms of tropical duration).

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1947 Fort Lauderdale hurricane

The 1947 Fort Lauderdale hurricane was an intense tropical cyclone that affected the Bahamas, southernmost Florida, and the Gulf Coast of the United States in September 1947.

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1954 Guatemalan coup d'état

The 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état was a covert operation carried out by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) that deposed the democratically elected Guatemalan President Jacobo Árbenz and ended the Guatemalan Revolution of 1944–1954.

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1973 oil crisis

The 1973 oil crisis began in October 1973 when the members of the Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries proclaimed an oil embargo.

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1982 Barnard Conference on Sexuality

The Barnard Conference on Sexuality is often credited as the moment that signaled the beginning of the Feminist Sex Wars.

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1991 protest in Split

The 1991 protest in Split was a street protest against the Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija – JNA) held in Split, Croatia on 6 May 1991.

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1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia

The 1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia was a series of engagements between the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA), the Yugoslav Navy and the Yugoslav Air Force, and the Croatian National Guard (ZNG) then the Croatian Army (HV) during the Croatian War of Independence.

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1992 European Community Monitor Mission helicopter downing

The 1992 European Community Monitor Mission helicopter downing was an incident that occurred on 7 January 1992, during the Croatian War of Independence, in which a European Community Monitor Mission (ECMM) helicopter carrying five European Community (EC) observers was downed by a Yugoslav Air Force Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21, in the air space above the village of Podrute, near Novi Marof, Croatia.

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1996 in philosophy

1996 in philosophy.

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1996 in science

The year 1996 in science and technology involved many significant events, listed below.

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99 Records

99 Records was an American independent record label, active from 1980 to 1984.

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Redirects here:

Duke UP, Duke Univ. Press, Duke University Press Books, Trinity College Press.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duke_University_Press

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