Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Prime Minister parodies are a long-running feature of the British satirical magazine Private Eye, which have been included in the majority of issues since the magazine's inception. The parodies consist of one arch satirical personification of the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of the day, and use that personification to send up ...

  2. 26 de oct. de 2021 · The purpose of the Private Eye prime ministerial parody was to render its subject unserious. When the subject manages that all by themselves, satire might be seen to have died.

  3. Sarah Vain, a parody of journalist Sarah Vine, writes an egocentric column in which she often refers to the brilliance of her now ex-husband and his likely accession to the role of Prime Minister (Sarah Vine was married to Michael Gove).

  4. 26 de oct. de 2021 · Private Eye at 60: the prime ministerial parodies that tell a history of modern Britain. Martin Farr, Senior Lecturer in Contemporary British History, Newcastle University. 26 October 2021 ·...

  5. 26 de oct. de 2021 · Writing for The Conversation, Dr Martin Farr discusses how Private Eye's prime ministerial parodies provide a political history of modern Britain.

  6. 27 de oct. de 2021 · The fortnightly magazine Private Eye turns 60 this year. When it launched, it helped initiate the "satire boom", and, more profoundly, the increasing lack of deference those in positions of authority could expect from the press, television, and, consequently, the public.

  7. Prime Minister Parodies (Private Eye) : Surhone, Lambert M, Tennoe, Mariam T, Henssonow, Susan F: Amazon.es: Libros