Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The lyrics incorporated themes that broached the Bush administrations efforts to roll-back gay rights, reproductive rights and in general, the civil liberties of the American people [2] as well as the rise of the moral right wing in the United States. [3] "Sex Is Not the Enemy" was released as the second single from Bleed Like Me in the United ...
Some anti-war songs lament aspects of wars, while others patronize war.Most promote peace in some form, while others sing out against specific armed conflicts. Still others depict the physical and psychological destruction that warfare causes to soldiers, innocent civilians, and humanity as a whole.
Misogynist terrorism is terrorism that is motivated by the desire to punish women. It is an extreme form of misogyny —the policing of women's compliance to patriarchal gender expectations. [ 1 ] Misogynist terrorism uses mass indiscriminate violence in an attempt to avenge nonconformity with those expectations or to reinforce the perceived ...
In 2003, Pancho McFarland conducted an analysis of Chicano rap and found that Chicano rappers depict women as sex objects, morally and intellectually inferior, and objects of violence. 37% of Chicano rap songs depicted women as sex objects and 4% mentioned violence against women. Except for the "good mother" figure, all other women that were ...
A scary, sobering look at fatal domestic violence in the United States
A love song to the group's hometown, New York, which thinks wistfully back to a time when the twin towers completed the New York skyline. Includes the lyrics “I swear it was beautiful before they sent those aeroplanes.” [34] Mark Knopfler and Emmylou Harris "If This Is Goodbye" All the Roadrunning: 2006: Inspired by Ian McEwan's piece in ...
The album's lyrics contain several references to political demonstrations, terrorism and suicide bombers. The accompanying booklet also contains a photo of Leila Khaled. As of 2018, she is commemorated in a mural at the International Wall on the Falls Road, Belfast , Northern Ireland .
The lyrics describe 44 different women, their habits, and their personalities. Campbell wrote the lyrics to the song [6] and has explained that "some of the women [referenced in the song] are real, some are made up." [5] Much of the song was inspired by women the group had encountered while moving from Boulder, Colorado, to New York City. [6]