Children Of The Revolution (2016 Documentary)
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Children Of The Revolution (2016 Documentary)
Children of the revolution may refer to: * Children of the revolution (concept) Children of the revolution is a concept associated with the generation growing up after revolutionary activity. It refers to the first generation of persons born after a revolution. They are the children of the Revolutionary generation. Usage The ... * ''Children of the Revolution'' (song), a 1972 song by T. Rex * ''Children of the Revolution'' (1996 film), a 1996 comedy film * ''Children of the Revolution'' (2002 film), a 2002 film by Zola Maseko * ''Children of the Revolution'' (2010 film), a 2010 documentary film * ''Children of the Revolution'' (novel), a 2013 novel by Peter Robinson {{disambiguation ...
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Children Of The Revolution (concept)
Children of the revolution is a concept associated with the generation growing up after revolutionary activity. It refers to the first generation of persons born after a revolution. They are the children of the Revolutionary generation. Usage The children of the revolution are a blank slate on which the Norm (sociology), values of the revolution are Biopower, imposed. Because the generation have no shared memory of the prior world they cannot compare the new system with the old and will uncritically accept the new system as the natural order. The phrase usually refers to political revolutions. The concept is also applied to revolutions in culture, science, and art. References External links''Children of the Revolution'', CentrePiece, Summer 2005ht ...
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Children Of The Revolution (song)
"Children of the Revolution" is a song by T. Rex, written by Marc Bolan. It was a UK No. 2 hit single in September 1972. The song broke their sequence of four official single releases all reaching No. 1 on the UK Singles Chart (" Hot Love", " Get It On", " Telegram Sam", "Metal Guru"). It did not receive a regular album release. Recording "Children of the Revolution" "Children of the Revolution" was first recorded at Ascot Sound Studios for the film '' Born to Boogie'', and featured Elton John on piano and Ringo Starr on a second drum kit. A longer version of the song, at over twelve minutes in length, was recorded on 31 March 1972 at Copenhagen's Rosenberg Studios during sessions for the band's third album '' The Slider''. Flo & Eddie, formerly of the Turtles, contribute backing vocals to this version of the release. The tape box contained the note that the jam was "for the attention of Ringo". The recording of the single version of the song began during the sessions for ...
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Children Of The Revolution (1996 Film)
''Children of the Revolution'' is a 1996 Australian black comedy film, depicting Joseph Stalin and his son's somewhat deterministic path into The Revolution in modern-day Australia. It stars Richard Roxburgh Judy Davis, Geoffrey Rush, Sam Neill, and F. Murray Abraham as Joseph Stalin. Plot Joan is a young Australian communist who goes to the Soviet Union as part of a work study program in the 1950s. There she catches the eye of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin and the two sleep together just before Stalin dies. Returning to Australia, Joan discovers she is pregnant and gives birth to Stalin's love child, whom she names Joe. Her son (who does not know who his father is) has a troubled upbringing, rebelling against both his mother's left wing politics and Australian society in general. He spends time in jail where he learns about Stalin's crimes from a fellow inmate. Upon release, he marries Anna, a police officer who had arrested him. She is the child of Latvian refugees who fl ...
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Children Of The Revolution (2002 Film)
Children of the revolution may refer to: * Children of the revolution (concept) * ''Children of the Revolution'' (song), a 1972 song by T. Rex * ''Children of the Revolution'' (1996 film), a 1996 comedy film * ''Children of the Revolution'' (2002 film), a 2002 film by Zola Maseko Zola Maseko (born 1967) is a Swazi film director and screenwriter. He is noted for his documentary films related to xenophobia. Biography Maseko was born in exile in 1967 and educated in Swaziland (now Eswatini) and Tanzania. After moving to the ... * ''Children of the Revolution'' (2010 film), a 2010 documentary film * ''Children of the Revolution'' (novel), a 2013 novel by Peter Robinson {{disambiguation ...
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Zola Maseko
Zola Maseko (born 1967) is a Swazi film director and screenwriter. He is noted for his documentary films related to xenophobia. Biography Maseko was born in exile in 1967 and educated in Swaziland (now Eswatini) and Tanzania. After moving to the United Kingdom, he graduated from the National Film and Television School in Beaconsfield in 1994. Maseko's first film was the documentary ''Dear Sunshine'', released in 1992. He participated in several uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK) guerrilla campaigns. He moved to South Africa in 1994 and wrote ''The Foreigner'', a short fiction film about xenophobia in this country. In 1996, after Maseko drove to his house, an unknown assailant pointed a gun at the director and fired twice. He fled after the gun did not fire. A few minutes later, he called his house, and the assailant was on the phone. He "thought aseko wasa foreigner. We are a vigilante group going around killing foreigners. We don't want them here." In 1998 he directed ''The Life and Time ...
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Children Of The Revolution (2010 Film)
''Children of the Revolution'' is a 2010 documentary by Irish filmmaker Shane O'Sullivan about Ulrike Meinhof and Fusako Shigenobu, leaders of the German Red Army Faction and the Japanese Red Army. Inspired by the student revolutions of 1968 and appalled by the killing in Vietnam, Meinhof and Shigenobu set out to destroy capitalist power through world revolution. They travelled to the Middle East to train with Palestinian militants and, alongside Leila Khaled, became the leading female revolutionaries of their time. Authors and journalists Bettina Röhl and Mei Shigenobu explore the lives of their mothers, Ulrike and Fusako, providing a unique perspective on two of the most notorious freedom fighters in contemporary history. On the run or kidnapped when their mothers went underground, Mei and Bettina emerged from difficult childhoods to lead their own extraordinary lives. They reflect on their mothers' actions as the film asks: what were they fighting for and what have we learn ...
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