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A gentle mystery story engaging mystical and other-worldly forces
for the enlightenment and good of mankind. Set amongst a range of
characters and a powerful, beautifully described landscape.
Entirely about Canada; even passages on Niagara Falls are
Canadian-oriented.
This tale, told through the eyes of a child, traces the journey of
an American woman, dispossessed and struggling for survival through
decades of poverty and homelessness. Her shining emergence from the
depths of destitution, a stubborn social ill still fertile in the
world's richest country, is a lesson in resiliency and hope for all
those seeking freedom from the prison of poverty.
Representing Kink raises awareness about non-normative texts and
non-normative erotic practices and desires. It defines "kink"
broadly, encompassing a range of "inappropriate" texts and
understanding it in frequent reference to non-normative erotic
fantasies and experiences. Kink is treated as both a set of
practices as well as a category of texts at the nexus of subject
and form. In addition to canonical texts that take up erotic and
marginalized themes, the collection also studies forms that are
themselves fringe and feature kink: taboo literature,
self-published erotica, SM narratives, fan fiction, role-playing
games, and other disavowed texts. The purpose of this study is to
focus attention on the margins of an already marginalized subject,
in order to highlight the extent to which non-normative textuality
and eroticism both shape and are shaped by culture and context. It
sheds light on a category of subjects that is at once mainstream in
the form of texts such as Fifty Shades of Grey and yet nevertheless
repeatedly disparaged and undertheorized. This book advocates for
conversations about kinky texts that transcend dichotomous
frameworks of good and bad, and normal and deviant--thinking
instead in new, theoretically rigorous and flexible directions.
Was the Anglophone Caribbean condemned by its colonial history to
permanent conditions of dependency and by Cold War geopolitical
realities to international interventionism? In Dependency and
Socialism in the Modern Caribbean Euclid Rose focuses upon the
efforts made by the English-speaking Caribbean-through case studies
that compare and contrast the political economies of Guyana,
Jamaica, and Grenada-to break out of the legacy of colonial
dependency and underdevelopment through the implementation of a
Caribbean brand of socialism. The work considers the Caribbean's
adoption of Fabian-style socialism as an alternative to capitalist
development and how these socialist policies were impacted by
differences in infrastructure capacity, economic and social
resources and political agendas. It highlights the pivotal role of
race and class, and the hitherto little studied impact of religion,
on the region's political economy. Moreover, the study calculates
the impact of the global economy upon Caribbean socio-economic
conditions, and the ideological, geopolitical, and strategic
implications of the Cold War and the Caribbean's socialist
alignment on the nature, character, and intensity of British and
American interventionism in the region. A must read for political
economists in search of a greater understanding of the postcolonial
political economy of the Caribbean and Latin America.
In this definitive work, Margaret Rose presents an analysis and history of theories of parody from ancient to contemporary times. Her earlier Parody/Meta-fiction (1979) was influential in broadening awareness of parody as a "double-coded" device that could be used for more than mere ridicule. In the present study she both expands and revises the introductory section of her 1979 text and adds substantial new sections on modern and postmodern theories and uses of parody and pastiche that analyze the work of theorists and writers including Bakhtin and Eco.
This book offers an original and challenging study of Marx??'s
contact with the visual arts, aesthetic theories, and art policies
in nineteenth-century Europe. It differs from previous discussions
of Marxist aesthetic theory in looking at Marx??'s views from an
art-historical rather than from a literary perspective, and in
placing those views in the context of the art practices, theories,
and policies of Marx??'s own time. Dr Rose begins her work by
discussing Marx??'s planned treatise on Romantic art of 1842
against the background of the philosophical debates, cultural
policies, and art practices of the 1840s, and looks in particular
at the patronage given to the group of German artists known as the
???Nazarenes??? in those years, who are discussed in relation to
both the English Pre-Raphaelites, popular in the London known to
Marx, and to the Russian Social Realists of the 1860s. The author
goes on to consider claims of twentieth-century Marxist art
theories and practices to have represented Marx??'s own views on
art. The book the conflicting claims made on Marx??'s views by the
Soviet avant-garde Constructivists of the 1920s and of the
Socialist Realists who followed them are considered, and are
related back to the aesthetic theories and practices discussed in
the earlier chapters.
Representing Kink raises awareness about nonnormative texts and
non-normative erotic practices and desires. It defines “kink”
broadly, encompassing a range of “inappropriate” texts and
practices and understanding it in frequent reference to
nonnormative erotic fantasies and experiences. Kink is treated as
both a set of practices as well as a category of texts at the nexus
of subject and form. In addition to canonical texts that take up
erotic and marginalized themes, the collection also studies forms
that are themselves fringe and feature kink: taboo literature,
self-published erotica, SM narratives, fan fiction, role-playing
games, and other disavowed texts. The purpose of this study is to
focus attention on the margins of an already marginalized subject,
in order to highlight the extent to which nonnormative textuality
and eroticism both shape and are shaped by our culture. It sheds
light on a category of subjects that is at once mainstream in the
form of texts such as Fifty Shades of Grey and yet nevertheless
repeatedly disparaged and undertheorized. This book advocates for
conversations about kinky texts that transcend dichotomous
frameworks of good and bad, and normal and deviant, thinking
instead in new, theoretically rigorous and flexible directions.
Since 1998, this book has been the go-to resource for scholars
seeking guidance at every phase of the process. This revised and
updated fourth edition is the most comprehensive guide yet to
researching, writing, and publishing a successful thesis or
dissertation
Plan your goals and find your peace every day of the year with
guided meditations and journal prompts to keep you inspired and
motivated. Finding the Joy in the Journey: 365 Days of Planning My
Goals is the ultimate guide for maintaining a schedule and
collecting all of your thoughts in one space. There are 365 days'
worth of journal prompts and guided meditations to help you
discover the joy in your journey to success and peace, with
beautiful designs throughout to keep you motivated and inspired. On
your joyous journey, find inspiration through prompts like: - If
money were not an issue, you knew you couldn't fail, and all your
dreams came true, what would your ideal life be like? Write in the
present tense as if you are already living it! Get as detailed as
possible because this prompt will help you gain clarity. It's great
to repeat because the more you write it out in present tense, the
more it'll feel real to you and help you manifest it. - It's always
great to give yourself space to deeply heal and let go. So, it's
time to release everything that's bothering you. Write down
anything that's currently bring you down, no matter how small, and
then imagine letting it all go. After that, write about the things
that you love in your life. Focus on the things that make you smile
and make your heart happy. - A fairy godmother is granting you 3
wishes. What would they be? She's also letting you grant 1 wish to
everyone you love. What would they be? After each, take a moment to
really envision it happening for yourself and the others. Take the
leap and see what you can achieve with Finding the Joy in the
Journey!
This book offers an historical and critical guide to the concepts
of the post-modern and the post-industrial. It brings admirable
clarity and thoroughness to a discussion of the many different uses
made of the term post-modern across a number of different
disciplines (including literature, architecture, art history,
philosophy, anthropology and geography). It also analyses the
concept of the post-industrial society to which the concept of the
post-modern has often been related. Dr Rose discusses the work of
many theorists in the area, including Hassan, Lyotard, Jameson and
the architectural historian Charles Jencks, and also looks at
analyses and uses of the concepts of the post-modern and
post-industrial by Frampton, Portoghesi, Peter Fuller and others.
Bound Fast with Letters brings together in one volume many of the
significant contributions that Richard H. Rouse and Mary A. Rouse
have made over the past forty years to the study of medieval
manuscripts through the prism of textual transmission and
manuscript production. The eighteen essays collected here address
medieval authors, craftsmen, book producers, and patrons of
manuscripts from different epochs in the Middle Ages, extending
from late antiquity to the early Renaissance, and ranging from
North Africa to northern England. Their investigations reveal
valuable information about the history of texts and their
transmission, and their careful scrutiny of texts and of the
physical manuscripts that convey them illuminate the societies that
created, read, and preserved these objects. The book begins in Part
I with articles on writers from the patristic era through the
twelfth century who experimented with, and mastered, various
physical forms of presenting ideas in writing. Part II contains
essays on patronage and patrons, including Richard de Fournival,
Jean de Brienne, Watriquet de Couvin, Pope Clement V, the Counts of
Saint-Pol, and Christine de Pizan. Part III, on manuscript
producers, discusses the questions, for whom? and by whom? were
manuscripts made. The four essays in this section each reflect on a
different part of the process of book-making. Throughout, Bound
Fast with Letters focuses on the close ties between the physical
remains of literate culture-from the wax tablets of the patristic
era to the vernacular literature of the wealthy laity of the late
Middle Ages-and their social and economic context.
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