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HUMANITARIAN COMMUNICATION (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   167743


China's cooperation with the U.S.S.R. and Russia in filmmaking (1949-2019) / Isayev, Alexander   Journal Article
ISAYEV, Alexander Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper traces and analyzes the main stages, trends and forms in the development of bilateral cooperation in the cinematic arena between the U.S.S.R./Russia and the People's Republic of China over the last 70 years. It is pointed out that each of the stages introduced qualitatively new elements into the cultural interaction of the two countries using the potential of cinema, the most popular of arts. Cooperation between the two countries in cinema rests today on the experience accumulated during all this time and creates a solid foundation for its furthering.
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2
ID:   139015


Post-feminist spectatorship and the girl effect: “go ahead, really imagine her” / Calkin , Sydney   Article
Calkin , Sydney Article
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Summary/Abstract Women and girls are currently positioned as highly visible subjects of global governance and development, from the agendas of the United Nations and the World Bank to the corporate social responsibility campaigns of Nike, Goldman Sachs and Coca Cola. This paper examines the representations of empowerment in visual (image and video) material from the Nike Foundation’s ‘Girl Effect’ campaign. Drawing on the works of Angela McRobbie and Lilie Chouliaraki, I suggest that this campaign is reflective of a mode of ‘post-feminist spectatorship’ that is now common to corporatised development discourses; it is manifested both in terms of the conservative mode of neoliberal empowerment proposed for distant others and the mode of ironic spectatorship imagined for the viewer. I conclude that the relations constructed in the ‘Girl Effect’ campaign between the (empowered) Western spectator and the (yet-to-be-empowered) Third World Girl work to erode bonds of solidarity and entrench structural inequalities by positioning economically empowered girls as the key to global poverty eradication.
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