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Aronowitz and Stanley
* Aronowitz, Stanley, The Crisis in Historical Materialism, ( American criticism of orthodox Marxism and argument for a more radical version of historical materialism that sticks closer to Marx by changing itself to keep up with changes in the historical situation ), 1981
* Stanley Aronowitz
* Aronowitz, Stanley ( 1993 ).
Some notable contributors are Fredric Jameson, Cornel West, Andrew Ross, Judith Butler, Laura Kipnis, Ellen Willis, Edward Said, Stanley Aronowitz, and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak.
In the 2002 election, the Liberal Party, running Andrew Cuomo ( who had withdrawn from the Democratic primary ), and the Green Party, running academic Stanley Aronowitz, failed to reach that threshold and lost the ballot lines they had previously won.
* Aronowitz, Stanley and Peter Bratsis eds.
There is also a minor revival of a more independent, empirical sociology in the spirit of C. Wright Mills, and his studies of the Power Elite in the United States of America, according to Stanley Aronowitz.
Stanley Aronowitz
Stanley Aronowitz ( born 1933 ) is professor of sociology, cultural studies, and urban education at the CUNY Graduate Center.
* Education Still Under Siege ( Critical Studies in Education and Culture ) by Stanley Aronowitz, Henry A. Giroux ( 1985 )
* The Jobless Future: Sci-Tech and the Dogma of Work by Stanley Aronowitz, William Difazio ( 1995 )
* Post-Work: The Wages of Cybernation Stanley Aronowitz ( Co-Editor ) with Jonathan Cutler ( 1997 ) ISBN 0-415-91782-4
* Implicating Empire: Globalization and Resistance in the 21st Century by Stanley Aronowitz ( editor ) ( 2002 )
* Paradigm Lost: State Theory Reconsidered Stanley Aronowitz ( Editor ), Peter Bratsis ( Editor ) ( 2002 ) ISBN 0-8166-3294-4
* Debating Empire ( New Left Review Debates ) by Gopal Balakrishnan ( editor ), Stanley Aronowitz ( editor ) ( 2003 )
* Aronowitz, Stanley ( 1993 ).
* Library of Congress Stanley Aronowitz Election 2002 Web Archive
by Stanley Aronowitz
* Setting the Record Straight: Zionism from the Standpoint of its Jewish Critics by Stanley Aronowitz
* The Democrats Desperately Seeking Defeat by Stanley Aronowitz
* On the AFL-CIO Split by Stanley Aronowitz
She lived in Queens with her husband Stanley Aronowitz and her daughter, Nona Willis-Aronowitz.
Luxemburg's idea of democracy, which Stanley Aronowitz calls " generalized democracy in an unarticulated form ", represents Luxemburgism's greatest break with " mainstream communism ", since it effectively diminishes the role of the Communist Party, but is in fact very similar to the views of Karl Marx (" The emancipation of the working classes must be conquered by the working classes themselves ").
* Aronowitz, Stanley.

Aronowitz and Class
In 2012, Aronowitz was awarded the Center for Study of Working Class Life's Lifetime Achievement Award at Stony Brook University.

Aronowitz and University
A 1950 graduate of Rutgers University, Aronowitz became a journalist in the 1950s and his work in that decade included a 12-part series on the Beat Generation for the New York Post.

Aronowitz and .
* Metamorphosis ( 2009 ), directed by Keith Aronowitz.
The writer Al Aronowitz, while working on a profile of Jane Fonda for The Saturday Evening Post in the 1960s, asked Henry Fonda about Method acting: " I can't articulate about the Method ", he told me, " because I never studied it.
Aronowitz reported Jane saying, " My father can't articulate the way he works.
* Al Aronowitz ( 1928 – 2005 ), rock journalist who claimed that Bob Dylan wrote his famous " Mr. Tambourine Man " in Aronowitz's former Berkeley Heights home.
For concerts as well as recordings of string quintets ( Mozart, Franz Schubert, Johannes Brahms, Anton Bruckner ) and string sextets ( Brahms ) they invited regularly Cecil Aronowitz as second viola and William Pleeth as second cello.
There have been different accounts regarding Dylan's attitude towards The Beatles at this time, but it's known that Suze Rotolo and Al Aronowitz immediately took to them and championed their music to Dylan.
Aronowitz later claimed that Dylan dismissed them as " bubblegum ", but in an interview in 1971, Dylan recalls being impressed by their music.
Al Aronowitz quotes Murray as saying, about his this formula, " You didn't have to hype the record any more.
Writers included Al Aronowitz, George Barkin, Ann Louis Barsach, Chip Berlet, Steve Bloom, Michael Bloomfield, Victor Bockris, William S. Burroughs, Mark Christensen, Ed Dwyer, Bruce Eisner, David Enders, Thomas King Forcade, Andrew Kowl, Bruce Jay Friedman, Josh Alan Friedman, Kinky Friedman, Steven Hager, Debbie “ Blondie ” Harry, J. Hoberman, Mark Jacobson, David Katz, Paul Krassner, Dean Latimer, Carlo McCormick, Barry Miles, Cookie Mueller, Glenn O ' Brien, Joey Ramone, Ron Rosenbaum, Jerry Rubin, Luc Sante, Larry “ Ratso ” Sloman, Terry Southern, Peter Stafford, Richard Stratton, Teun Voeten, Andy Warhol, Andrew Weil, Mike Wilmington, Robert Anton Wilson, and Frank Zappa.
Instrumentalists have included Ruggiero Ricci, Mstislav Rostropovich, Dennis Brain, Osian Ellis, Cecil Aronowitz, Nia Harries, John Ogdon to name a few, and more recently euphonium player David Childs, cellist Kathryn Price, trombonist Mark Eager and song pianist Andrew Matthews-Owen.
* Al Aronowitz, Writer, influential behind-the-scenes 60's culture-broker, wrote the seminal articles that brought Beat culture and Beatlemania into American consciousness, friend of Ginsberg, Kerouac, Neal Cassady, Amiri Baraka, George Harrison and others, introduced the Beatles to Bob Dylan and marijuana.
Journalist Al Aronowitz wrote "... whatever the Beatles did was acceptable, especially for young people.
by S. Aronowitz
" Aronowitz, however, was not a working editor at the time of the Sokal scandal and had not seen the paper before publication.

Stanley and How
How She Could Yacki, Hacki, Wicki, Wacki, Woo " w. Stanley Murphy & Charles McCarron m. Albert Von Tilzer
For many, the scheme epitomized the extremes of the suicidal logic behind the strategy of mutual assured destruction, and it was famously parodied in the Stanley Kubrick film from 1964, Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.
* 1964 — The film Dr. Strangelove, or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb ( aka Dr. Strangelove ), a black comedy directed by Stanley Kubrick about an accidentally triggered nuclear war, was released.
How would I Found Stanley look in the libraries with I Found Livingstone?
Stanley Kubrick's 1964 film Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, adapted from Peter George's 1958 novel " Red Alert ", was heavily influenced by Kahn's writings.
He played the character of Charley in the 1966 dramatization of Death of a Salesman, and constantly acted throughout the 1970s as Elton Dykstra on The Intruders, Ernest W. Stanley on The Man Who Came to Dinner, Mayor Chrisholm alongside Don Knotts in the 1971 film How to Frame a Figg, and Mayor Massey on The Whiz Kid and the Mystery at Riverton.
* Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, a 1964 Stanley Kubrick comedy about a fictional element of the cold war
The book was the basis for Stanley Kubrick's 1964 film, Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.
Among the trend setters were Stanley Kubrick with his montage trailers for Lolita, Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, and 2001: A Space Odyssey.
The book was the inspiration for Stanley Kubrick's classic film Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.
Drawn from personal experience, Red Alert was the inspiration for Stanley Kubrick's classic film Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.
See, for example, Jason Stanley & Timothy Williamson, ' Knowing How ', Journal of Philosophy, 98: 8, 2001.
( 1955 ), the Olivier Richard III ( 1955 ), the travelogue Cinerama Holiday ( 1955 ), Helen of Troy ( 1956 ), the Audrey Hepburn-Henry Fonda War and Peace ( 1956 ), the all-star Around the World in 80 Days ( 1956 ), the Technicolor Ten Commandments ( 1956 ), the Cinerama documentary Seven Wonders of the World ( 1956 ), Giant ( 1956 ), The Bridge on the River Kwai ( 1957 ), Raintree County ( 1957 ), the Cinerama Search for Paradise ( 1957 ), the Cinemiracle documentary Windjammer ( 1958 ), South Pacific ( 1958 ), the Cinerama travelogue South Seas Adventure ( 1958 ), The Big Country ( 1958 ), the Sidney Poitier-Dorothy Dandridge Porgy and Bess ( 1959 ), The Diary of Anne Frank ( 1959 ), Ben-Hur ( 1959 ) with Charlton Heston, Disney's Sleeping Beauty ( 1959 ) ( an animated feature only seventy-five minutes long with no intermission ), John Wayne's The Alamo ( 1960 ), Spartacus ( 1960 ), Exodus ( 1960 ), Can-Can ( 1960 ), Scent of Mystery ( 1961 ), El Cid ( 1961 ), King of Kings ( 1961 ), The Guns of Navarone ( 1961 ), ( shown only occasionally in roadshow format despite its length of more than two-and-a-half hours ), Lawrence of Arabia ( 1962 ), the Marlon Brando Mutiny on the Bounty ( 1962 ), The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm ( 1962 ), How the West Was Won ( 1962 ), The Longest Day ( 1962 ), It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World ( 1963 ), The Cardinal ( 1963 ), Cleopatra ( 1963 ), the Richard Burton Hamlet ( 1964 ), My Fair Lady ( 1964 ), The Fall of the Roman Empire ( 1964 ), The Sound of Music ( 1965 ), The Greatest Story Ever Told ( 1965 ), the Olivier Othello ( 1965 ), Doctor Zhivago ( 1965 ), The Great Race ( 1965 ), Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines ( 1965 ), The Agony and the Ecstasy ( 1965 ), Battle of the Bulge ( 1965 ), Khartoum ( 1966 ), Cinerama's Russian Adventure ( 1966 ), Hawaii ( 1966 ), The Blue Max ( 1966 ), Grand Prix ( 1966 ), Half a Sixpence ( 1967 ), Camelot ( 1967 ), The Happiest Millionaire ( 1967 ), Ice Station Zebra ( 1968 ), The Lion in Winter ( 1968 ), Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey ( 1968 ), Oliver!
The movie begins with the opening credits, using a style similar to Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb ( the movie trailer also makes references to Dr. Strangelove ).
This movie is a cautionary tale regarding the dangers of nuclear weapon capability, a common theme of films dating back to Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.
Stanley Kubrick's film Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb satirically portrayed the events and the thinking that could begin a nuclear war.
Herman Kahn's innovative non-fiction book On Thermonuclear War, ( 1961 ) describing various nuclear war scenarios, was never widely popular, but the seeming outlandishness of its projections and the possibility of a " Doomsday Machine " ( an idea Kahn got from Leo Szilard before relatively small, deliverable thermonuclear weapons were developed in 1954 ) as a way to prevent war were direct inspirations for director Stanley Kubrick to handle Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb as a black comedy.
Human psychologist and dog trainer Stanley Coren in the 2001 book " How to Speak Dog " says " you are the Alpha dog ... You must communicate that you are the pack leader and dominant ".
* Greenspan, Stanley I. and Shanker, Stuart ( 2004 ) The First Idea: How symbols, language, and intelligence evolved from our early primate ancestors to modern humans Da Capo Press, Cambridge, Mass., ISBN 0-7382-0680-6

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