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In an apocalyptic vision of a world decimated by plague and
embroiled in an elemental struggle between good and evil, the fate
of mankind rests on the frail shoulders of the 108-year-old Mother
Abagail and a handful of survivors. Their worst nightmares are
embodied in a man with a lethal smile and unspeakable powers:
Randall Flagg, the Dark Man. In 1979 Stephen King published The
Stand, a massive apocalyptic tale that set the standard for all
those stories that followed. The book was another King bestseller,
leading to the release of The Complete and Uncut version in 1990, a
1994 ABC four-part mini-series and a 31-issue Marvel Comics
adaptation in 2009. Now, in 2020, King's opus is being revisited
yet again, with a 9-episode series for CBS All Access, bringing the
story into the 21st Century. This new version will feature a
brand-new coda written specifically for the new series by Stephen
King himself.
A rich picture of the complexities of early industrial development
in the north-east of England. Historians increasingly emphasise
that, in order to understand the industrial revolution fully as an
economic, social and political process, the subject is best viewed
from a regional, rather than a national, perspective. This book
applies such an approach to the north-east of England in the early
modern period, when, it is argued, the region experienced an early
industrial revolution. Putting forward several new research
findings and much new thinking, and covering many aspects of the
economy of north-east England in the period, the book shows how
rich and varied it was, and how vital the interplay of social,
political and cultural forces was for industrial development. The
book demonstrates that the economy of north-east England was not
dominated by coal alone, and that previous historians' focus on
'the working class' misrepresents the full complexities of society
in the period. Overall, the book has much to offer economic and
social historians and historians of regional development generally,
not just those interested in north-east England. ADRIAN GREEN is
Lecturer in History at Durham University. He is co-editor
ofRegional Identities in North-East England, 1300-2000 (The Boydell
Press, 2007). BARBARA CROSBIE is Assistant Professor in History at
Durham University, and is completing a study of The Rising
Generations: AgeRelations and Cultural Change in Eighteenth-Century
England. Contributors: A. T. BROWN, JOHN BROWN, ANDY BURN, BARBARA
CROSBIE, ADRIAN GREEN , MATTHEW D. GREENHALL, LINDSAY HOUPT-VARNER,
GWENDA MORGAN, PETER RUSHTON, LEONA SKELTON, PETER D. WRIGHT, KEITH
WRIGHTSON
Exploring how crises have shaped economic and social life from the
thirteenth century to the twenty-first. This collection of essays
brings together historians examining social and economic crises
from the thirteenth century to the twenty-first. Crisis is an
almost ubiquitous concept for historians, applicable across
(amongst others) the histories of agriculture, disease, finance and
trade. Yet there has been little attempt to compare its use as an
explanatory tool between these discrete fields of research. This
volume breaks down the boundaries between traditional historical
time periods and sub-disciplines of history to examine the ways in
which past societies have coped with crises, and the role of crisis
in generating economic and social change. Should we conceptualise a
medieval agrarian or financial crisis differently from their modern
counterparts? Were there similarities in how contemporaries
responded to famine or outbreaks of disease? How comparable are
crises within households, within institutions, or across national
and international networks of trade? Contributors examine how
crises have shaped economic and social life in a range of studies
from the Great Depression in 1930s Latin America to the outbreak of
plague in seventeenth-century central Europe, and from sheep and
cattle murrain in fourteenth-century England to the Northern Rock
building society collapse of 2007. A.T. BROWN is an Addison Wheeler
Research Fellow at the Institute of Advanced Studies at Durham
University. ANDY BURN is a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute
of Medieval and Early Modern Studies at Durham University. ROB
DOHERTY is a doctoral candidate in history at DurhamUniversity.
CONTRIBUTORS: Peter H. Bent, A.T. Brown, Andy Burn, Catherine
Casson, Mark Casson, Samuel K. Cohn, Jr., Rob Doherty, Josette
Duncan, Matthew Hollow, Pavla Jirkova, Alan Knight, John S. Lee,
Cinzia Lorandini,John Martin, Ranald Michie, Anne L. Murphy, Pamela
Nightingale, John Singleton, Philip Slavin, Paul Warde
A4 40pgs includes interactive board activities and sheets for
printing This book is a series of lessons with activities for
teachers covering functional skills/ Essential Skills Wales/ Core
Skills Scotland Application of Number. The lessons provide a
scenario where students have to engage in stock control. The actual
numeracy being delivered is the use of percentages, decimals and
fractions. It is essential that this cohort of students can work
comfortably within each of these basic skill areas and can switch
when required. The contextualisation of these skills within the
motor vehicle trade motivates them to learn since they are given a
purpose. The book also comes with language based smartboard
activities which should also work on other platforms. These are
designed to develop the use of appropriate language with students
and help to develop their communication skills. There are also a
number of powerpoint slides (and their Open office equivalents) to
support colleagues in delivering learning sessions to their
students. This book will save teachers hours of preparation time
and enable them to deliver quality application of number learning
experiences. Contents Session One: Addition Session Two: Rounding
Session Three: Time Session Four: Percentages Session Five :
Reading Graphs Session Six: The mean, median and mode Session
Seven: Area Session Eight: Volume Interactive White Board
Activities
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