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René Viénet at 2024 Shanghai Book Fair. René Viénet (born 6 February 1944, in Le Havre) is a French sinologist who is famous as a situationist writer and filmmaker. Viénet used the situationist technique of détournement — the diversion of already existing cultural elements to new subversive purposes.
La dialectique peut-elle casser des briques ?, in English, "Can Dialectics Break Bricks?", is a 1973 Situationist film produced by the French director René Viénet which explores the development of class conflict through revolutionary agitation against a backdrop of graphic kung-fu fighting.
A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at [[:fr:Chinois, encore un effort pour être révolutionnaires !]]; see its history for attribution. You may also add the template {{Translated|fr|Chinois, encore un effort pour être révolutionnaires !}} to the talk page.
The siege of Lille or Lille pocket (28–31 May 1940) took place during the Battle of France in the Second World War.The siege of the French IV Corps and V Corps (about 40,000 men) of the First Army (General René Prioux) was conducted by four German infantry divisions supported by three panzer divisions.
Therefore, the best that can be understood about German Music during the war is the official Nazi government policy, the level of enforcement, and some notion of the diversity of other music listened to, but as the losers in the war German Music and Nazi songs from World War II has not been assigned the high heroic status of American and ...
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Ardennes 1944: The Battle of the Bulge. New York: Penguin. ISBN 978-0-1431098-6-0. Cirillo, Roger. The Ardennes-Alsace. The U.S. Army Campaigns of World War II. United States Army Center of Military History. CMH Pub 72-26. Archived from the original on 2008-12-06 Clarke, Jeffrey J.; Ross Smith, Robert (1993). Riviera to the Rhine.
The council favored the continuation of wildcat general strikes and factory occupations across France, maintaining them through directly democratic workers' councils. [1] Within the revolutionary movement, it opposed the influence of major trade unions and the French Communist Party who intended to contain the revolt and compromise with General ...