Class snapshot: Introduction to American Popular Culture princeton.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from princeton.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Earlier this year, a virtual event hosted by the School of Religion was subject to an attack.
Guest lectured by Professor Kathryn Lofton of Yale University, the event was called “The Present Life of Blasphemy: Kanye West in American Popular Culture.”
The attack came after the presentation concluded when students were given the chance to ask questions.
“I think people are just bored,” Carly Baldachin, ArtSci ’22, said in an interview with
The Journal. She was one of the students affected by the incident.
“When I first heard that this happened, again, my mind went directly thinking that this was a student,” she said. “I was really scared because I m very proudly Jewish and people know that I don t hide it.”
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You Are Here:Home → Exploring Witchcraft and Witch Persecution in Early New England Virtual Lecture Hosted by the Norwalk Historical Society
Exploring Witchcraft and Witch Persecution in Early New England Virtual Lecture Hosted by the Norwalk Historical Society By Norwalk Historical Society | Posted by
March 1, 2021
A most unique Women’s History Month lecture hosted by the Norwalk Historical Society. “’Giving Entertainment to Satan’: Witchcraft and Witch Persecution in Early New England” with guest presenter Dr. Leslie Lindenauer of Western CT State University on Thursday, March 25, 2021 at 5:30pm (Eastern Time) via Zoom. This lecture will explore witchcraft and witch-hunting in New England in the seventeenth century, with special attention to the role that gender played in accusations and trials, and in Puritan culture in general. Tickets at www.norwalkhistoricalsociety.org (Image Credits: Wellcome Collection/contributed)
Exploring Witchcraft and Witch Persecution in Early New England Virtual Lecture Hosted by the Norwalk Historical Society – ConnecticutPlus com connecticutplus.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from connecticutplus.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Part 1.
Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis and Buddy Holly are all typically considered to have been rockabilly artists in the 1950s. Do you feel that the similarities in their music are significant enough for them to all belong in this sub-category?
Part 2.
In the rock world, Pat Boone has gone down as something of a villain for his commercially successful “whitewashing” of R&B hits. Listen to his version of “Tutti Frutti” and compare it to Little Richard’s version. What do you think? Did Boone squeeze the life out of the song, and if so, how? How different is it from the original?