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The author met 'his philosopher' fifty-four yars ago--a man who
teaches by the Socratic method, who stays in touch with his
students for their whole career, and who values non-conformity in
the best sense of the word. Most faculty deeply learn their field,
plumb its depths zealously, and relish the fruits of their labor.
Some continue the quest--for knowledge, for the frontier, for the
important 'next questions'--which means giving up the accolades and
perquisites of the learned for the unknown field yet unplowed.
Fewer still imbue their students with these same qualities, which
was the gift of Carver Mead for the author. This monograph
pinpoints the lessons that Mead provided--and the sometimes
unexpected results--with the thought that such ideas may inspire
others to assert their maverick, independent ways...cheerfully
abandoning the cloak of success for the next great quest to help
advance knowledge, products, and services for a world sorely in
need of contribution on many fronts.
From 1897 to 1899 Rev. John J. Dickey recorded the outrageous
violence of the nationally-famous Clay County, Ky. feuds as an
eyewitness. When he wasn't witnessing gunplay, he was interviewing
elderly residents who remembered the earliest days of the county.
A memoir about an estranged mother and adult son traveling through
Europe, discovering adventure, pleasure, and each other. Coincident
with American bombing of Libya, the duo become immersed in the
aftermath--hiding in a bunker, espying OPEC ministers debating the
next action, becoming unwitting targets of terrorists, strolling in
the radiation-laden air of Chernobyl. The outcome is surprising --
opening the doors to a second family. learning about a secret
genetic heritage, coming to terms with and respecting life choices
for each.
The Kayans believe themselves to be surrounded by many intelligent
powers capable of influencing their welfare for good or ill. Some
of these are embodied in animals or plants, or are closely
connected with other natural objects, such as mountains, rocks,
rivers, caves; or manifest themselves in such processes as thunder,
storm, and disease, the growth of the crops and disasters of
various kinds.
The Kayans believe themselves to be surrounded by many intelligent
powers capable of influencing their welfare for good or ill. Some
of these are embodied in animals or plants, or are closely
connected with other natural objects, such as mountains, rocks,
rivers, caves; or manifest themselves in such processes as thunder,
storm, and disease, the growth of the crops and disasters of
various kinds.
"Being of these hills," James Still writes in his poem, Heritage,
"being one with the fox ...I cannot pass beyond." A thread that
winds through the essays in this book is this notion of being able
to take the boy out of the hills but not the hills out of the boy.
The essays are not only about eastern Kentucky. They are about
seeing and experiencing things through an eastern Kentucky filter
no matter how far and wide the author has travelled.
The life of painter and poet Henry Faulkner, from his childhood in
rural Kentucky to a flamboyant bohemian existence in New York, Los
Angeles, Key West, and Sicily. The author sheds light on the tragic
tensions experienced by the artist in contemporary America.
The Kayans believe themselves to be surrounded by many intelligent
powers capable of influencing their welfare for good or ill. Some
of these are embodied in animals or plants, or are closely
connected with other natural objects, such as mountains, rocks,
rivers, caves; or manifest themselves in such processes as thunder,
storm, and disease, the growth of the crops and disasters of
various kinds.
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Atmosfire
Jan Braai
Hardcover
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Discovery Miles 4 250
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