His targets include politics and religion, but it is not a political play in any agitprop sense. |
|
This last point is crucial because Hare avoids the trap of agitprop by cannily subverting the play's anti-war bias. |
|
Of course, he is in no way obligated to provide solutions, else the play be nothing but a piece of agitprop with an in-your-face agenda. |
|
Outgrowing the constraints of the street and agitprop meant that they started to really work. |
|
Please refer all complaints, communist manifestos, Jeffersonian agitprop, and bills to this address. |
|
Thanks largely to his agitprop and fraternisation with the enemy, his brothers-in-arms were transmogrified into war criminals and baby-killers. |
|
No doubt there were hundreds of agitprop dramas in the 1950s hammering Joe McCarthy's red-baiting campaign. |
|
Radical organizations leverage the militant tone and temper set by the delegates to propagate their malevolent agitprop. |
|
Beijing this winter is festooned with orange banners and billboards that look like Communist agitprop. |
|
If you're going to do agitprop you have to be incredibly focused. |
|
But perhaps Serge Vorobyov had a more subversive precedent in mind: the money-drop as agitprop or performance art. |
|
A cinematic melange of poetic agitprop, shades of Expressionism, and inner-city longing and insomnia. |
|
Having reviewed anti-Israeli agitprop masquerading as theater, I was prepared to join critics in hating The Death of Klinghoffer. |
|
This is unashamedly agitprop, but there is a missed opportunity. |
|
One or two of the dialogue scenes, in particular the one showing international war-profiteers enjoying a grouse shoot, have a dated, agitprop feel. |
|
From 1922 his stylistically radical work was put to utilitarian ends, including the design of speakers' tribunes and latterly agitprop photomontage and graphic design. |
|
Wark explores the post-60s legacy of the French radical agitprop group, The Situationists. |
|
The agitprop comedy, starring Stephanie Cole, right, and Brian Protheroe, asks some searching questions about the future of the service. |
|
He recounts a dream, a typical Reich piece of socialist agitprop, in which corporate bigwigs riding on roller coasters are throwing their workers screaming overboard. |
|
Chapter One begins with a survey of Soviet agitprop itself, focusing on the capacity of the system as well as its strict centralization and regimentation. |
|