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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Typology And Analysis Of Ceramic Vessels And Pottery Shards Found At The Long Swamp Site: Lamar And Mary Folwer Holcomb Collection, Maxwell Mackenzie
Typology And Analysis Of Ceramic Vessels And Pottery Shards Found At The Long Swamp Site: Lamar And Mary Folwer Holcomb Collection, Maxwell Mackenzie
Georgia State Undergraduate Research Conference
No abstract provided.
Race, Class And Wealth: Thomas Gainsborough's Mr. And Mrs. Andrews (1750) And Yinka Shonibare's Mr. And Mrs. Andrews Without Their Heads (1998), Yema Thomas
Georgia State Undergraduate Research Conference
No abstract provided.
Crumbling, Katharine S. Miele
Crumbling, Katharine S. Miele
Georgia State Undergraduate Research Conference
No abstract provided.
Digging Up Different Kinds Of Dirt: Archaeological Espionage During The Great War And Beyond, Gabrielle Nockelin
Digging Up Different Kinds Of Dirt: Archaeological Espionage During The Great War And Beyond, Gabrielle Nockelin
Georgia State Undergraduate Research Conference
No abstract provided.
A History Of Nexus: How An Arist Co-Op Transformed Atlanta, Alexandra Troxell
A History Of Nexus: How An Arist Co-Op Transformed Atlanta, Alexandra Troxell
Georgia State Undergraduate Research Conference
No abstract provided.
The Media Center: Functions And Organization Of A Collaboration Based Library, Stacy King
The Media Center: Functions And Organization Of A Collaboration Based Library, Stacy King
Georgia State Undergraduate Research Conference
No abstract provided.
The Neue Frau And The Significance Of Beetle Imagery In The Photomontages Of Hannah Hӧch, Hannah C. Waara
The Neue Frau And The Significance Of Beetle Imagery In The Photomontages Of Hannah Hӧch, Hannah C. Waara
DISCOVERY: Georgia State Honors College Undergraduate Research Journal
Hannah Höch incorporated the image of a beetle into several of her photomontages. By analyzing three of her works, Untitled (c. 1920), From Above (c. 1922), and The Coquette (1923-25), I propose Höch’s beetle to be a response to the archeological understanding of the Egyptian scarab’s meaning of rebirth, which directly relates to the contemporary social phenomenon of the neue Frau, or New Woman. Thus, by removing the beetle from the focal points of these works, Höch represents the society’s rejection of the neue Frau as well as the Berlin Dadaists’ rejection of her.
To evaluate the significance of these …
The Neue Frau And The Significance Of Beetle Imagery In The Photomontages Of Hannah Höch, Hannah C. Waara
The Neue Frau And The Significance Of Beetle Imagery In The Photomontages Of Hannah Höch, Hannah C. Waara
Georgia State Undergraduate Research Conference
No abstract provided.