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MEGA-CITY ONE IS UNDER SIEGE! Mega-City One's a powderkeg waiting
to blow on its best day. There isn't a moment when tensions aren't
running high and the city isn't ready to crack. But there's
something new going on: block war. It's Block Mania, and no one is
immune, not even the Judges. But this is all prelude to invasion.
The East-Meg One Sovs have infected Mega-City One with Block Mania
to throw the city into massive, bloody turf wars. There are troops
on the ground, bombs are dropping and the Big Meg is on fire. And
the Judges are drawing the line. Apocalypse War Dossier tells the
on-the-ground stories of the Judges of Mega-City One during the
events of the epic Block Mania and Apocalyse War story arcs.
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Practical Therapeutics
Edward John Waring
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R2,814
R2,615
Discovery Miles 26 150
Save R199 (7%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Practical Therapeutics
Edward John Waring
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R3,351
R3,104
Discovery Miles 31 040
Save R247 (7%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In A Pueblo Social History, John Ware challenges modern
anthropologists to break down the walls between archaeology and
ethnography in order to obtain a more complete understanding of
Pueblo prehistory in the American Southwest. This book stands or
falls on two arguments. The first is Pueblo ethnographies by early
scholars - including Cushing, Bandelier, and Fewkes who were
simultaneously ethnographers and archaeologists and therefore
incorporated origin stories, migration narratives, and other oral
traditions along with lines of evidence such as artifacts and
architecture - are more than speculative analogies. Pueblo
ethnographies are end points on trajectories that preserve
important information about the contingent histories of Pueblo
social practises and institutions. Ware argues that archaeologists
and other historical scholars need to put aside their biases and
become, once again, serious students of the historical
ethnographies. The second argument is that a solid understanding of
kinship theory is required to understand social practises in Pueblo
prehistory. Ware claims that modern Southwestern archaeologists
have gone the other way, convincing themselves that answers to
kinship questions cannot be derived from the material data of deep
prehistory. A Pueblo Social History does not pretend to offer a
comprehensive map for the change in approach but rather seeks to
provoke much-needed discussion.
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Gloria
Sam Smith
CD
R407
Discovery Miles 4 070
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