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The Female Entrepreneur's Guide to Winning Sales Funnels
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 33

The Female Entrepreneur's Guide to Winning Sales Funnels

Are you a female entrepreneur ready to ditch the overwhelm and turn your expertise into a consistent flow of clients and revenue? This comprehensive guide is your roadmap to building profitable online sales funnels designed specifically for the needs and preferences of female buyers. Inside, you'll discover: How to craft magnetic offers that resonate deeply with your ideal customer, moving them from strangers to devoted clients. The art of content marketing that builds genuine connection and positions you as the go-to expert in your field. Strategies for nurturing leads with email sequences that win their trust and make selling feel effortless. Paid advertising secrets for reaching your perfect audience on the platforms where they already spend time. ...and much more!

The Currency of Cultural Patrimony: The Spanish Golden Age
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 176

The Currency of Cultural Patrimony: The Spanish Golden Age

The Spanish Golden Age, a cultural narrative that has developed and over four centuries, remains a key element of how Spaniards articulate cultural identities, both within Spain and to the outside world. The Currency of Cultural Patrimony examines the development of this narrative by artists, intellectuals, historians, academics, and institutions. By defining the Spanish Golden Age as a diachronic problem, it examines several of Spain’s most canonical golden-age literary narratives (including Don Quixote, Fuenteovejuna, and Las mocedades del Cid) as texts whose institutionalization, mediation, and commercialization over the course of four hundred years inform their meaning both for contemp...

Research Grants
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 408

Research Grants

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1975
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Remaking the Comedia
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 325

Remaking the Comedia

Leading Golden Age theatre experts examine the ways that comedias have been adapted and reinvented, offering a broad performance history of the genre for scholars and practicioners alike. This volume brings together twenty-six essays from the world's leading scholars and practitioners of Spanish Golden Age theatre. Examining the startlingly wide variety of ways that Spanish comedias have been adapted, re-envisioned, and reinvented, the book makes the case that adaptation is a crucial lens for understanding the performance history of the genre. The essays cover a wide range of topics, from the early stage history of the comedia through numerous modern and contemporary case studies, as well as...

Public Health Service Grants and Awards by the National Institutes of Health
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1238

Public Health Service Grants and Awards by the National Institutes of Health

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1975
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Federico García Lorca
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 157

Federico García Lorca

Lauded as one of the most important poets and playwrights of the twentieth century, Federico García Lorca was also an accomplished theatre director with a clear process and philosophy of how drama should be staged. Directing both his own work and that of others, Lorca was also closely involved in the rehearsals for productions of many of his plays, and from his own writings and those of his collaborators, a determined agenda to stimulate audiences and renovate theatre can be seen. This is the first book in English to fully consider Lorca as a director and his rehearsal methodology. The book combines: - A biographical account of Lorca’s work as a director and rehearsal leader, revealing hi...

Lights, Camera, Execution!
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 197

Lights, Camera, Execution!

Lights, Camera, Execution!: Cinematic Portrayals of Capital Punishment fills a prominent void in the existing film studies and death penalty literature. Each chapter focuses on a particular cinematic portrayal of the death penalty in the United States. Some of the analyzed films are well-known Hollywood blockbusters, such as Dead Man Walking (1995); others are more obscure, such as the made-for-television movie Murder in Coweta County (1983). By contrasting different portrayals where appropriate and identifying themes common to many of the studied films – such as the concept of dignity and the role of race (and racial discrimination) – the volume strengthens the reader’s ability to engage in comparative analysis of topics, stories, and cinematic techniques.Written by three professors with extensive experience teaching, and writing about the death penalty, film studies, and criminal justice, Lights, Camera, Execution! is deliberately designed for both classroom use and general readership.

Traveler, There Is No Road
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 265

Traveler, There Is No Road

Traveler, There Is No Road offers a compelling and complex vision of the decolonial imagination in the United States from 1931 to 1943 and beyond. This book offers a unique perspective on 1930s theatre and performance, encompassing the theatrical work of the Cuban, Puerto Rican, and Spanish diasporas in the United States, as well as the better-known Anglophone communities. Author Lisa Jackson-Schebetta situates well-known figures, such as Langston Hughes and Clifford Odets, alongside lesser-known ones, such as Erasmo Vando, Franca de Armiño, and Manuel Aparicio. Traveler conclusively demonstrates that theatre and performance scholars must position US performances within the Americas writ broadly, and in doing so they must recognize the centrality of the hemisphere's longest-lived colonial power, Spain.

Reception and Renewal in Modern Spanish Theatre, 1939-1963
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 300

Reception and Renewal in Modern Spanish Theatre, 1939-1963

  • Categories: Art
  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1997
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  • Publisher: MHRA

The book constitutes the first attempt to provide an overview of the reception of foreign drama in Spain during the Franco dictatorship. John London analyses performance, stage design, translation, censorship, and critical reviews in relation to the works of many authors, including Noel Coward, Arthur Miller, Eugene Ionesco, and Samuel Beckett. He compares the original reception of these dramatists with the treatment they were given in Spain. However, his study is also a reassessment of the Spanish drama of the period. Dr London argues that only by tracing the reception of non-Spanish drama can we understand the praise lavished on playwrights such as Antonio Buero Vallejo and Alfonso Sastre, alongside the simultaneous rejection of Spanish avant-garde styles. A concluding reinterpretation of the early plays of Fernando Arrabal indicates the richness of an alternative route largely ignored in histories of Spanish theatre.