Keyword [Wars] Result: 121 - 140 | Page: 7 of 10 |
121. | From small wars to Armageddon: Explaining variation in interstate war duration and severity |
122. | Media depictions of the Vietnam and Iraq wars |
123. | Securing the heartland: The militarization of American women's lives in one small midwestern town during the Iraqi and Afghanistan wars, 2003--2006 |
124. | French Milan: Citizens, occupiers, and the Italian Wars, 1499--1529 |
125. | Celestial crusades and wars in heaven: The biblical epics of the late 1500s |
126. | Lost in translation: The search for 3D in Afghanistan |
127. | John Bull's proconsuls: Military officers who administered the British Empire, 1815--1840 |
128. | Ideas have consequences: Conservative philanthropy, Black Studies and the evolution and enduring legacy of the academic culture wars, 1945--2005 |
129. | Living in 'Guild Wars': A cultural analysis of the discourse, dance and evolution of an MMOG phenomenon |
130. | Guerram publice et palam faciendo: Local war and royal authority in late medieval southern France |
131. | Tacitus' epic wars: Epic tradition and allusion in 'Histories' 1--3 |
132. | Contesting late Roman Illyricum: Invasions and transformations in the Danubian-Balkan provinces |
133. | A bitter homecoming: Tunisian veterans of the first and second world wars |
134. | Pietro Bembo's Bias: Patronage and History During the Italic Wars |
135. | Southern crossroads: Science, religion and gender in southern women's literature between the World Wars (Ellen Glasgow, Frances Newman, Zora Neale Hurston, Katherine Anne Porter) |
136. | Tourneys, wars and dancing men: Re-creation as performance in the Society for Creative Anachronism |
137. | Identity wars: Postmodern versus modern in Paul Auster's 'The New York Trilogy' |
138. | Novelizing the Muslim Wars of Conquests: The Christian Pioneers of the Arabic Historical Novel |
139. | Ghosts between the wars: History and the imagination in Proust, Woolf, and Greene (France, Marcel Proust, Virginia Woolf, Graham Greene) |
140. | Why we fight: The visual rhetoric of American wars, 1860---1918 |
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