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In: Routledge companions
"The Routledge Companion to Media and Activism is a wide-ranging collection of original essays by leading contributors from around the world. In 42 essays, with an extensive editor's introduction, it introduces and explores central debates about the relationships between media and protest, communication and social movements" --
In: The international library of critical essays in the history of philosophy
In: Transformative Works and Cultures: TWC, Band 37
ISSN: 1941-2258
The theme park ride-through video—a first-person recording of a themed attraction, usually shared on YouTube—operates in the past, present, and future tense, offering viewers a record, simulation, and projection of the theme park experience. These different tenses encourage us to see the theme park ride-through video as, variously and at the same time, an archive, a performance, and a promotion.
In: Interventions: international journal of postcolonial studies, Band 22, Heft 1, S. 106-115
ISSN: 1469-929X
In: Meikle , M 2017 , ' The Scottish Covenanters and the Borough of Sunderland, 1639–1647: A Hidden Axis of the British Civil Wars ' , Northern History , vol. 54 , no. 2 , pp. 167-188 . https://doi.org/10.1080/0078172X.2016.1256063
Few sources have survived relating to the borough of Sunderland in the seventeenth century. However, during the Civil Wars Sunderland was noticed for its support of Parliament and the Scottish Covenanters. A Puritan elite, led by George Lilburne, had established Sunderland as a radical borough by the 1630s. Good relations between Sunderland and the Covenanting Scots began in 1639 and continued throughout the Bishops' Wars (1639–41) and the first British Civil Wars (1642–46). This was unusual in the North East of England as most of County Durham, Northumberland and Newcastle upon Tyne would remain loyal to King Charles I. A trade blockade of Newcastle, Sunderland and Blyth during 1643–44 was quickly lifted at Sunderland after the Scots garrisoned the town in March 1644. This gave Sunderland a temporary, but advantageous, lead over their rivals in Newcastle. Sunderland's port was crucial for supplying the Scottish Covenanting army and Parliamentarian forces during 1644–46, and the coal mines along the River Wear proved a vital source of revenue for paying the army. The borough's leaders were well rewarded for their loyalty and, unlike other leading supporters of Parliament in the North, they did not object to paying for the Scottish occupation of the North East.
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In: Curtis's botanical magazine, Band 26, Heft 1-2, S. 192-194
ISSN: 1467-8748
In: Contemporary Security Studies; Cyber-Conflict and Global Politics
In: Curtis's botanical magazine, Band 24, Heft 2, S. 127-127
ISSN: 1467-8748