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This comprehensive method of music instruction enables the beginner
to progress to an advanced stage of technical skill.
This comprehensive method of music instruction enables the beginner
to progress to an advanced stage of technical skill.
In the company of wolves presents further research from the Open
Graves, Open Minds Project. It connects together innovative
research from a variety of perspectives on the cultural
significance of wolves, wild children and werewolves as portrayed
in different media and genres. We begin with the wolf itself as it
has been interpreted as a cultural symbol and how it figures in
contemporary debates about wilderness and nature. Alongside this,
we consider eighteenth-century debates about wild children –
often thought to have been raised by wolves and other animals –
and their role in key questions about the origins of language and
society. The collection continues with essays on werewolves and
other shapeshifters as depicted in folk tales, literature, film and
TV, concluding with the transition from animal to human in
contemporary art, poetry and fashion. -- .
This comprehensive method of music instruction enables the beginner
to progress to an advanced stage of technical skill.
Covering the period from Antiquity to Early Modernity, A Historical
Sociology of Disability argues that disabled people have been
treated in Western society as good to mistreat and - with the rise
of Christianity - good to be good to. It examines the place and
role of disabled people in the moral economy of the successive
cultures that have constituted 'Western civilisation'. This book is
the story of disability as it is imagined and re-imagined through
the cultural lens of ableism. It is a story of invalidation; of the
material habituations of culture and moral sentiment that paint
pictures of disability as 'what not to be'. The author examines the
forces of moral regulation that fall violently in behind the
dehumanising, ontological fait accompli of disability invalidation,
and explores the ways in which the normate community conceived of,
narrated and acted in relation to disability. A Historical
Sociology of Disability will be of interest to all scholars,
students and activists working in the field of Disability Studies,
as well as sociology, education, philosophy, theology and history.
It will appeal to anyone who is interested in the past, present and
future of the 'last civil rights movement'.
In the company of wolves presents further research from the Open
Graves, Open Minds Project. It connects together innovative
research from a variety of perspectives on the cultural
significance of wolves, wild children and werewolves as portrayed
in different media and genres. We begin with the wolf itself as it
has been interpreted as a cultural symbol and how it figures in
contemporary debates about wilderness and nature. Alongside this,
we consider eighteenth-century debates about wild children - often
thought to have been raised by wolves and other animals - and their
role in key questions about the origins of language and society.
The collection continues with essays on werewolves and other
shapeshifters as depicted in folk tales, literature, film and TV,
concluding with the transition from animal to human in contemporary
art, poetry and fashion. -- .
Covering the period from Antiquity to Early Modernity, A Historical
Sociology of Disability argues that disabled people have been
treated in Western society as good to mistreat and - with the rise
of Christianity - good to be good to. It examines the place and
role of disabled people in the moral economy of the successive
cultures that have constituted 'Western civilisation'. This book is
the story of disability as it is imagined and re-imagined through
the cultural lens of ableism. It is a story of invalidation; of the
material habituations of culture and moral sentiment that paint
pictures of disability as 'what not to be'. The author examines the
forces of moral regulation that fall violently in behind the
dehumanising, ontological fait accompli of disability invalidation,
and explores the ways in which the normate community conceived of,
narrated and acted in relation to disability. A Historical
Sociology of Disability will be of interest to all scholars,
students and activists working in the field of Disability Studies,
as well as sociology, education, philosophy, theology and history.
It will appeal to anyone who is interested in the past, present and
future of the 'last civil rights movement'.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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