000 | 01417nam a22001697a 4500 | ||
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008 | 180220b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
020 | _a9789380164731 | ||
082 |
_223 _a306 _bJAI |
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100 | _aJaiswal, Shipra. | ||
245 |
_aThe Study of Popular Culture / _cShipra Jaiswal and Dr. Oinam Shuraj. |
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250 |
_a1st ed. _b2013. |
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260 |
_aGhaziabad: _bA.K. Publicaton, _c2013. |
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300 |
_a243 p. ; _bHard. |
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505 | _a1. Post Feminism in Popular Culture; 2. Popular Culture: Literacy Development among Urban Youth; 3. Popular Culture on the "Feminist Movement" Women's "Liberation"; 4. News Media Coverage of Popular-Culture Culpability; 5. Popular Culture and Public Space; 6. Fear and Antipathy of Popular Culture; 7. Reflections on marketing Popular Culture; 8. Remaking Gender and Popular Culture; 9. Popular Culture in Literacy; 10. Popular Culture and the Pleasure of Transgression; 11. Negotiating in Culture and the Self-constructions of Women; REFERENCES... | ||
520 | _aThe Anthropological concept of culture can be explained best by an analogy with the language. Just as Language is more than vocabulary, culture is more than, say, art and music. Language has rules of grammar and sound that limit and give structure to communication, usually without conscious thought. In English, for example, we use word order to convey the relationship among the words in a sentence. | ||
942 |
_2ddc _cBK |