Finding Masculinity in the "Great War": An Analytical Study of A Long Long Way by Sebastian Barry Abstract This paper intends to show the relation between war and masculinity, through drawing a sketch of the masculine identity of the soldiers during the First World War (also known as the Great War). It studies the association between “ideal manhood” and wartime duties. The paper travels though the experience of Willie Dunne, a young Irish soldier in A Long Long Way (2005) by the Irish writer, Sebastian Barry. Through the paper, the researcher traces the social and familial pressures that lead Willie to enlist in the army, and to experience the atrocities of the First World War in order to search for his masculinity. Raywne Connell's concept of “hegemonic masculinity” is used to investigate how masculinity is represented in the selected novel and how war is considered a masculine field where society in general and parents in particular, push their sons to enlist in order to become real men.
التدفق العلاماتي في تحليل العرض المسرحي
السخرية والمفارقة في شعر احمد مطر
الغنائية في الشعر ميخا يوسف ليبنزون
الدلالة المجازية في الفهم الأُصولي واللُّغوي
ملخـــص البحــــث
الحمد لله ، والصلاة والسلام على سيدنا محمد رسول الله ، وعلى أله وصحبه ومن والاه .
أما بعد : فمّما لا خلاف فيه أن النجاح في إدارة الأعمال سواء أكانت سياسية أم اقتصادية أم إجتماعية أم غيرها ، تقتضي تولية المؤهلين للإدارة والقيادة ، وقد سبق الرسول صلى الله عليه وسلم المجتمع المعاصر في قاعدته : الرجل المناسب في الم
... Show MoreThe study aimed to monitor all the obstacles that stand in the way of the development of women's sports and to develop radical and realistic solutions to advance it and seek its programs to build a strong women's sports community. The descriptive-analytical approach was adopted to monitor the obstacles, by collecting relevant data from the individuals in the research sample using a questionnaire prepared for this purpose that includes (9) axes and (52) phrases distributed to players and practitioners of sports activities in sports forums throughout Iraq except for the Kurdistan region, whose number is (167) girls. The researchers concluded that there are strict social and cultural restrictions, and fears of society's view that prevents girl
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