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Honey, Ain’t You Glad We’re Texan: The Mythic Narrative of Texas in the Texas Centennial
Paper explores how the Texas Centennial Exposition in 1936 was used to build the mythology of a unified Texas identity and history.
Date:
2016
Creator:
Wilson, Hannah Joan
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
Dis/Appearance, In/Visibility and the Transitioning Body on Social Media: A Post-Qualitative and Multimodal Inquiry
Text component of a doctoral dissertation, which references the full dissertation content in a multi-media web-based format. It includes a background statement, acknowledgements section, printed navigation guide and site map for the website, and a full list of references.
Date:
December 2018
Creator:
Jenkins, Kevin
Object Type:
Thesis or Dissertation
System:
The UNT Digital Library
The Government's Girls: How the United States Government Used War Poster Art to Recruit Women to the Workforce During World War Two
This paper discusses research on the recruitment of women via the medium of posters during World War Two (1941-1945).
Date:
April 15, 2004
Creator:
Pierce, Danielle; Way, Jennifer & Dupont, Jill
Object Type:
Paper
System:
The UNT Digital Library
The Image of Mexico in Letters from Mexico: Hegemonic Relations between the U.S. and Mexico in the Late Nineteenth Century
Paper closely examines images and text in Mexico of To-day by Solomon Bulkley Griffin and discusses how the book demonstrates the United States' attitude towards Mexico during the late nineteenth century.
Date:
2016
Creator:
Kim, Jungwan
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library