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The contents include a chapter on Conversion and the following. In
Act Two, we have, "Words Before Blows" by Sammie Byron, Brutus;
"Most Noble Brother, You Have Done Me Wrong" by DeMond Bush, Mark
Antony; and, "Have You Not Love Enough to Bear with Me?" by Ron
Brown, Cassius. In Intermission, we have Othello: Unplugged at
Luther Luckett Correctional Complex. In Act Three, we have The
Luckett Symposium on Shakespeare and Race: Titus Andronicus,
Merchant of Venice, and Othello; "George Bush Doesn't Care about
Black People": Agnes Wilcox's Julius Caesar at Northeast
Correctional Center. In Act Four, we have "Romans, Countrymen,
Lovers!" The Shakespeare Behind Bars Tour at the Kentucky
Correctional Institute for Women; "Unsex Me Here": Playing the Lady
at Luckett; and, Rapshrew: Jean Trounstine and the Framingham
Women's Prison. In Act Five, we have: A Visit with Warden Larry
Chandler; Desdemona Speaks: Mike Smith on the Outside; and,
Shakespeare in Solitary: "To Revenge or to Forgive?": Laura Bates'
Hamlet and Othello at the Wabash Valley Correctional Facility. The
contents also include an epilogue.
Folk tales are stories full of adventure, courage, daring, fighting
dragons, trolls, and giants, and overcoming challenges. How many of
them have girls as the main heroic characters though? These twelve
folk tales from all over the world have been specially selected as
they feature strong, adventurous heroines. Some are funny, some
make you think, and some - like the story of Fearless Mary - keep
you on the edge of your seat with scares and surprises. Meet Louisa
Freya, the brave dragon slayer, funny and clever Sigrun, and honest
and humble Scarface as well as other heroines from Serbia, Norway,
China, Japan, South Africa, and Indonesia. Amy Scott Robinson's
distinctive voice, expertise and experience as a performance
storyteller makes this a unique and fascinating collection, aimed
at readers aged 7-9 years. At the end of each story, Amy shares a
bit about where the story comes from, how she has retold it, and
what the tale makes her think about when she is hearing or telling
it, including Bible verses. These folk tales deserve to be told as
often as the more famous and well-known ones. After all, why should
boys defeat all the dragons? Enjoy the adventure!
Bible stories are full of adventure and courageous characters.
However many that feature women and girls are not told so often.
These twelve Bible stories have been specially selected as they
feature strong, inspiring girls. Some are funny, some make you
think, and some - like the story of Queen Esther - keep you on the
edge of your seat with scares and surprises. Meet quick-thinking
Miriam, unflappable Abigail, and determined Lydia as well as other
stories from the books of Numbers, Judges, Ruth, 2 Kings, and the
Gospels of Luke and John. Amy Scott Robinson's distinctive voice,
expertise and experience as a performance storyteller makes this a
unique and fascinating collection, aimed at readers aged 7-9 years.
At the end of each story, Amy shares a bit about where the story is
found in the Bible, how she has retold it, and what the story makes
her think about when she is hearing or telling it. These Bible
stories deserve to be told as often as the more well-known ones.
Enjoy the adventure!
When you hear the name ‘God’, does an image come into your
head? Do you think of him as a shining light, or with a human
shape, or as an anchor in the storm, a rock, a fortress? As we look
towards celebrating the incarnation at Christmas, we consider how
God chose to express himself, in a moment in history, as a tiny
baby. But what other images describe God in the Bible, and what can
we learn about his character through them? How does an invisible
God reveal himself to us in scripture and in Jesus? Amy Scott
Robinson, a poet and storyteller, answers this question with
imagination and a close reading of the text. Week 1: When God
appears Week 2: God the creator Week 3: God the owner Week 4:
Veiled in flesh Week 5: Visible in creation
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La Raza (Hardcover)
Colin Gunckel; As told to Luis C. Garza, Amy Scott
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R1,071
R930
Discovery Miles 9 300
Save R141 (13%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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La Raza, launched in 1967 in the basement of an Eastside LA church,
was conceived as a tool for community-based organizing during the
early days of the Chicano movement. The all-volunteer staff of the
newspaper-and the magazine that followed-informed readers and
exhorted them to action through images and articles that showcased
protests and demonstrations and documented pervasive social
inequity and police abuse. La Raza's photographers played a
critical role as artists, journalists, and activists, creating an
unparalleled record of the determination, resilience, and
achievements of the Chicano community during a period of profound
social change. This catalog presents photographs from the La Raza
exhibition at the Autry Museum of the American West and the more
than 25,000 images in the La Raza Photograph Collection at the UCLA
Chicano Studies Research Center. The essays offer not only
scholarly assessments of the role of Chicanx photographers in
social movements and art history but also personal perspectives
from La Raza photographers.
Best Art Book and Best of Show - 2018 New Mexico-Arizona Book Award
Born in San Diego in 1946 and raised in the American Southwest,
painter Paul Pletka has created a body of work that owes much to
the West of his childhood, and more to the West of his imagination.
Infused with an operatic sense of theater and drama, his paintings
conjure scenes from the cultures, history, and religions of the
American West and Mexico - diffused, as Pletka writes, ""through
the lens of personal experiences, dreams, research, and ancestral
memory."" In Paul Pletka: Imagined Wests, the first book on this
major American artist in over thirty years, readers will encounter
the full range of Pletka's oeuvre through more than eighty color
reproductions of his best-known and most influential works. Images
of warriors and shamans are paired with depictions of George
Armstrong Custer, Christian saints, and the lost gods of North and
South America, their forms rendered in a distinctive style that
mixes classical drawing and expressionist distortion with elements
of surrealism and European symbolism. An artist statement and notes
on selected paintings provide rare insight into Pletka's creative
process, and an introductory essay by art historian Amy Scott
discusses how Pletka's studies of indigenous cultures of the
American West and Mexico, as well as art historical and critical
influences, have informed his work. Complex, mysterious, and
mesmerizing, Pletka's paintings are designed to make it almost
impossible to look away. In their boldly conceived subject matter,
vivid color, and ethnographic detail, these works - and their
creator - are true originals in the rich artistic landscape of the
American West.
‘At the heart of the Christian message is a collection of
abstract nouns: love; sin; forgiveness; grace. It is quite
difficult to explain what the gospel message is without using some
or all of those words. But the problem with abstract nouns is that
when we use them, we assume that the person we are talking to
understands them, and not only that, we assume that they have the
same understanding of the word that we do…’ Lent is
traditionally a time of repentance, fasting and prayer as we
prepare to celebrate our salvation at Easter. Through daily
readings and reflections from Ash Wednesday to Easter Day, Amy
Scott Robinson explores different biblical images of repentance,
sin, forgiveness and grace, bringing them together in Holy Week as
a lens through which to view Christ’s work of reconciliation on
the cross. ‘Amy is an expert storyteller, a well of emotion and
reflection, and a follower of Jesus with a deep, genuine hunger for
the reality of God.’ Adrian Plass, author and speaker
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Reverie (Paperback)
Amy Scott; Camella Wade
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R543
Discovery Miles 5 430
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The contents include a chapter on Conversion and the following. In
Act Two, we have, "Words Before Blows" by Sammie Byron, Brutus;
"Most Noble Brother, You Have Done Me Wrong" by DeMond Bush, Mark
Antony; and, "Have You Not Love Enough to Bear with Me?" by Ron
Brown, Cassius. In Intermission, we have Othello: Unplugged at
Luther Luckett Correctional Complex. In Act Three, we have The
Luckett Symposium on Shakespeare and Race: Titus Andronicus,
Merchant of Venice, and Othello; "George Bush Doesn't Care about
Black People": Agnes Wilcox's Julius Caesar at Northeast
Correctional Center. In Act Four, we have "Romans, Countrymen,
Lovers!" The Shakespeare Behind Bars Tour at the Kentucky
Correctional Institute for Women; "Unsex Me Here": Playing the Lady
at Luckett; and, Rapshrew: Jean Trounstine and the Framingham
Women's Prison. In Act Five, we have: A Visit with Warden Larry
Chandler; Desdemona Speaks: Mike Smith on the Outside; and,
Shakespeare in Solitary: "To Revenge or to Forgive?": Laura Bates'
Hamlet and Othello at the Wabash Valley Correctional Facility. The
contents also include an epilogue.
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