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  1.  5
    Contesting Realms of Memory in Early Cold War France.Adam Piette - 2010 - Theory, Culture and Society 27 (5):86-106.
    The article critiques Ricoeur’s theorizing of amnesty amnesia and political forms of memory through consideration of the Cold War commemoration and forgetting of the Nazi massacres at Tulle and Oradour.
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  2.  24
    Harmony, polyphony, ornamentation: Musical rhetoric in jonson's hymenaei and crashaw's “musicks duell ”.Adam Piette - 1998 - Angelaki 3 (2):119 – 132.
    (1998). Harmony, polyphony, ornamentation: Musical rhetoric in jonson's hymenaei and crashaw's “musicks duell”. Angelaki: Vol. 3, The love of music, pp. 119-132.
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  3.  9
    Lobotomies and Botulism Bombs: Beckett’s Trilogy and the Cold War.Adam Piette - 2016 - Journal of Medical Humanities 37 (2):161-169.
    The article argues that Beckett's Trilogy stages the effects of a lobotomy operation on a potentially politically subversive writer, and that the consequences of the operation can be traced in both the retreat of the narrator of the Trilogy into the mind and into comatose mental states and in the detail of the operation itself, based on the 'icepick' lobotomies performed by neurologist Walter Freeman in the late 1940s and early 1950s. To write about extreme psychiatric situations in the post-war (...)
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  4.  10
    Writing into the Cold War West. [REVIEW]Adam Piette - 2011 - Theory, Culture and Society 28 (7-8):390-395.
    John Beck's fine study of the representation of the postwar American West, analyzes the cultural impact of the secret state's establishment of its arsenals, proving grounds and waste disposal sites after the Manhattan Project. The giant Southwest Defense Complex is registered, with acute and telling political energy, in texts by Cormac MacCarthy, Leslie Marmon Silko, Bradford Morrow and Don DeLillo, as a brute invisible energy field at the edges of national experience. This is one of the best studies of the (...)
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