Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The intelligentsia is a status class composed of the university-educated people of a society who engage in the complex mental labours by which they critique, shape, and lead in the politics, policies, and culture of their society; [1] as such, the intelligentsia consists of scholars, academics, teachers, journalists, and literary writers.
The Intelligenzaktion (German pronunciation: [ɪntɛliˈɡɛnt͡s.akˌt͡sjoːn]), or the Intelligentsia mass shootings [citation needed], was a series of mass murders which was committed against the Polish intelligentsia (teachers, priests, physicians, and other prominent members of Polish society) early in the Second World War (1939–45) by Nazi Germany.
Works about intellectuals, persons who engage in critical thinking, research, and reflection about the reality of society, and who propose solutions for the normative problems of society.
The first-ever reunion of the Ritchie Boys took place from 23–25 July 2011 at the Holocaust Memorial Center, in Farmington Hills, Michigan. [14] Another reunion was held in June 2012 in Washington, D.C., and at Fort Ritchie, which had then closed. [15] In August 2021, the Ritchie Boys were honored in a congressional resolution. [16] [17]
Many of these intellectuals were educated at City College of New York ("Harvard of the Proletariat"), [2] New York University, and Columbia University in the 1930s, [citation needed] and associated in the next two decades with the left-wing political journals Partisan Review, Dissent, and the then-left-wing but later neoconservative-leaning ...
The "Nickel Boys" film was adapted from Colson Whitehead’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about Black teens at a corrupt reform school. 'Nickel Boys' book vs. movie: What's changed in the ...
Author Jenny Han, who also penned The Summer I Turned Pretty trilogy (now a series on Prime Video), chronicles Lara Jean’s journey in love and relationships over three books: To All the Boys I ...
L'Avenir de l'intelligence (The Future of the Intelligentsia) [1] is a philosophical and political essay by the French journalist and politician Charles Maurras, director of L'Action française, published in 1905. This text was published in 1902 in the review Minerva [2] led by journalist René-Marc Ferry. Charles Maurras offers a critique "of ...