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Selecting the most important literature from Wisconsin's rich
historical resources, this bibliography provides 3,400 entries on
the history of Wisconsin. The book is interdisciplinary, covering
titles in economics, political science, sociology, ethnic studies,
religion, and social and cultural history, and includes citations
from archival resources, monographs, journal articles,
dissertations, conference proceedings, local and state historical
publications, and reference works. With no comparable bibliography
available for Wisconsin, this volume is the only comprehensive,
up-to-date bibliography on Wisconsin's 150-year history.
Arranged chronologically, the book includes chapters on
prehistory, Indian tribal history, early exploration and
settlement, statehood, the Progressive Era, the World Wars and the
Depression Era, and the years since 1945. The book also includes a
brief chronology.
This annotated guide to English language materials dealing with
all aspects of the history of the borderlands since the 1700s gives
special attention to conflicts between Germans and Poles and issues
that are again critical in Central Europe. Students, teachers, and
scholars will find this bibliography of over 1200 entries to
primary sources, books, chapters in books, dissertations, journal
articles, government documents, fiction, and films easy to use. The
introduction points to different names given to the region and puts
the bibliography into historical context. The chapters cover
different historical periods and organize material either by genre
of work or by topics significant to a particular era. Author,
title, and subject indexes make the material easily accessible for
a wide variety of research needs.
Profoundly powerful and evocative in voice and tone, this
collection of introspective and visionary poems is inspired by
Barbara Paul-Emile's search for deeper meaning behind the seemingly
disparate experiences of life. The thoughts and feelings expressed
in this collection reveal a compassionate and mystical approach
towards experience. In the words of the poet, the dance of life is
the continual flow between pain and joy, fear and love,
hopelessness and triumphant overcoming demanded of us as we
negotiate the field of existence. This collection is influenced by
the rich shamanic heritage of the West Indian islands and follows
Paul-Emile's recently published novel, SEER, a magical tale of
redemption set against the lush landscape and spicy aromas of the
Caribbean. Described as an exciting new literary voice with broad
cross-cultural appeal, the poet speaks with the interpretive depth
and power of the mythic shaman who has found the bridge that
connects to deeper realities. - Barbara Paul-Emile is Professor of
English and Maurice E. Goldman Distinguished Professor of Arts and
Sciences at Bentley College, Waltham, MA.
The Garden Interior shows the inner workings of the heart and mind
of a gardener and how gardens raise up the gardener as much as the
gardener tends and raises up the garden. This memoir details one
family's story and is filled with beautiful observational writing,
humor, and nostalgia about growing up in the 1960s and '70s, plus
delicious and unusual recipes you will be longing to try. Gardens
make us more than we make them, and you'll come away from The
Garden Interior a better and more engaged gardener by understanding
the rich interior life of this beautiful discipline and craft.
Desire and Distance constitutes an important new departure in
contemporary phenomenological thought, a rethinking and critique of
basic philosophical positions concerning the concept of perception
presented by Husserl and Merleau-Ponty, though it departs in
significant and original ways from their work. Barbaras's overall
goal is to develop a philosophy of what "life" is-one that would do
justice to the question of embodiment and its role in perception
and the formation of the human subject. Barbaras posits that desire
and distance inform the concept of "life." Levinas identified a
similar structure in Descartes's notion of the infinite. For
Barbaras, desire and distance are anchored not in meaning, but in a
rethinking of the philosophy of biology and, in consequence,
cosmology. Barbaras elaborates and extends the formal structure of
desire and distance by drawing on motifs as yet unexplored in the
French phenomenological tradition, especially the notions of "life"
and the "life-world," which are prominent in the later Husserl but
also appear in non-phenomenological thinkers such as Bergson.
Barbaras then filters these notions (especially "life") through
Merleau-Ponty.
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Seer (Hardcover)
Barbara Paul-Emile; Edited by 1stworld Library
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R679
Discovery Miles 6 790
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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SEER, set in the Caribbean, traces the mystical adventures of
Becka, shaman/healer, as she travels into the spirit-world on a
mission to resolve the life and death issues faced by her
neighbor's son. Becka endeavors to heal the spirit and thereby heal
the body. During these dream-travels she encounters entities and
intriguing characters that explode her understanding of "time" and
reconfigure her sense of the "real." The plot builds in such a way
as to reveal startling developments and revelations about
connectedness and the essential unity of people through time. The
element of suspense is strong because the shaman's journey is
hazardous and the outcome uncertain. The prose is interspersed with
poetry and song which serve to heighten its lyricism. Rich in
fantasy, myth and magic-realism, the narrative captures the color
and cadence of village life and the strong mystical and animistic
roots of Caribbean folk culture. ~~~~~~~~~Barbara Paul-Emile,
Professor of English and Maurice E. Goldman Distinguished Professor
of Arts and Sciences, holds a Ph.D. in English. Her work centers on
19th century English Literature, Myth and Caribbean literature. A
member of the faculty at Bentley College, Waltham, MA, she was
named Massachusetts Professor of the Year for 1995 by the Carnegie
Foundation and the Council for the Advancement and Support of
Education (CASE). She has published numerous articles on scholarly
topics, but has remained true to her first love, creative writing.
She is presently completing Mosaic, a Collection of Caribbean Short
Stories and a manuscript on the Mystical Path of the Warrior Woman.
Profoundly powerful and evocative in voice and tone, this
collection of introspective and visionary poems is inspired by
Barbara Paul-Emile's search for deeper meaning behind the seemingly
disparate experiences of life. The thoughts and feelings expressed
in this collection reveal a compassionate and mystical approach
towards experience. In the words of the poet, the dance of life is
the continual flow between pain and joy, fear and love,
hopelessness and triumphant overcoming demanded of us as we
negotiate the field of existence. This collection is influenced by
the rich shamanic heritage of the West Indian islands and follows
Paul-Emile's recently published novel, SEER, a magical tale of
redemption set against the lush landscape and spicy aromas of the
Caribbean. Described as an exciting new literary voice with broad
cross-cultural appeal, the poet speaks with the interpretive depth
and power of the mythic shaman who has found the bridge that
connects to deeper realities. - Barbara Paul-Emile is Professor of
English and Maurice E. Goldman Distinguished Professor of Arts and
Sciences at Bentley College, Waltham, MA.
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