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"The Great Gatsby vividly depicts a high-spending, decadent society
on the brink of the Great Depression. Learners will enjoy this
story of Jay Gatsby's ill-fated love for Daisy Buchanan. This is
the best edition for use in the classroom because of its excellent
guidelines for answering exam questions. Understanding the text An
informative introduction gives learners a comprehensive background
to the text to facilitate their study. Clear summaries enable
learners to understand the whole text quickly and easily.
Stimulating activities consolidate learners' understanding and
develop learners' ability to comment on language and style. Useful
glossaries of difficult vocabulary and literary terms give learners
the tools to answer exam questions more effectively."
Tuna, a quirky, pack rat squirrel, lives with her husband, Bubble,
in a little room under the eaves of the old brick building just
outside Prospect Park in Brooklyn, New York. One day, after feeling
a knot of acrobats dancing in her tummy, Tuna gives birth to six
babies-and soon discovers that one of her babies is not like the
others. Brooklyn is purple! The Two-Leg world is a dangerous place,
where Brooklyn and his siblings must learn how to survive. As he
embarks on expeditions in Prospect Park and listens to lectures
about Two-Legs, Brooklyn becomes more independent. He is thrilled
when he receives an invitation to attend the park's annual spring
celebration-but when Brooklyn is spotted, a hunt for the rare
purple squirrel begins. Brooklyn the Squirrel is a tale for
children of all ages that proves that being different is not so bad
after all.
With the exception of Haiti, the sensationalized issues of hunger
reported in certain parts of the developing world are largely
unknown in the Caribbean. Despite this, there are growing concerns
about the state of food security in the region, as declining
domestic production and increased dependence on imported food
create vulnerability. This study examines some of the contemporary
issues impacting food production and food and nutrition security in
the CARICOM region of the Caribbean. The authors focus on enhancing
domestic food production as the most appropriate way to improve
food security and discuss strategies for building capacity in local
food production systems. The book is the product of over ten years
of research by the authors. It will be of interest to scholars and
students of Caribbean geography, cultural geography, food and
agricultural geography, and food security.
Authoritative reference on the state of the art in the field with
additional coverage of important foundational concepts Advances in
Electromagnetics Empowered by Artificial Intelligence and Deep
Learning presents cutting-edge research advances in the rapidly
growing areas in optical and RF electromagnetic device modeling,
simulation, and inverse-design. The text provides a comprehensive
treatment of the field on subjects ranging from fundamental
theoretical principles and new technological developments to
state-of-the-art device design, as well as examples encompassing a
wide range of related sub-areas. The content of the book covers
all-dielectric and metallodielectric optical metasurface deep
learning-accelerated inverse-design, deep neural networks for
inverse scattering, applications of deep learning for advanced
antenna design, and other related topics. To aid in reader
comprehension, each chapter contains 10-15 illustrations, including
prototype photos, line graphs, and electric field plots.
Contributed to by leading research groups in the field, sample
topics covered in Advances in Electromagnetics Empowered by
Artificial Intelligence and Deep Learning include: Optical and
photonic design, including generative machine learning for photonic
design and inverse design of electromagnetic systems RF and antenna
design, including artificial neural networks for parametric
electromagnetic modeling and optimization and analysis of uniform
and non-uniform antenna arrays Inverse scattering, target
classification, and other applications, including deep learning for
high contrast inverse scattering of electrically large structures
Advances in Electromagnetics Empowered by Artificial Intelligence
and Deep Learning is a must-have resource on the topic for
university faculty, graduate students, and engineers within the
fields of electromagnetics, wireless communications, antenna/RF
design, and photonics, as well as researchers at large defense
contractors and government laboratories.
In Don't Bury an Ailing Marriage, veteran psychologist Dr. Don
D. Campbell goes beyond surface reasons for most relationship
problems--such as poor communication, financial issues, or sexual
dysfunction--to diagnose the underlying causes of marital discord
that prevent couples from achieving the happiness and fulfillment
they desire and deserve. Several ailments and viruses are
identified, but from among them Dr. Campbell identifies the most
common and damaging virus of all--a fear of closeness. He explains
how the Fear of Closeness Virus is the underlying root for most
symptoms within ailing marriages as well as how to effectively
treat it to sustain emotional and physical intimacy through the
years.
The abundant information in the book is delivered with a sense
of humor and illustrative stories as well as helpful Prescription
Pads--a series of exercises at the end of each chapter to help the
reader apply the doctor's advice and take proactive steps for
positive change.
Resist the temptation to call the mortician (lawyer) and prepare
for the funeral (divorce). For virtually any marriage, regardless
of its current state, put the shovel away--it's not too late to
resuscitate
A Culturally-Centered and Intersectional Approach to Reproductive
Justice investigates and challenges assumptions and pre-existing
notions regarding reproductive justice by grounding this work in a
more inclusive and culturally informed context. Throughout history,
contributors argue, reproductive justice movements have centered
white, cisgendered, and non-disabled women in the West. Along with
women in the Global South being underrepresented in scholarship,
research tends to focus only on the abuses they have suffered,
rather than delving deeper into issues of structures, barriers, or
agency. Each chapter is written from an autoethnographic
perspective to unpack the contributors’ challenges with achieving
reproductive justice for themselves and their respective
communities. Ultimately, this book asserts that when different
facets of reproductive justice are presented in the form of
narrative self-reflexivity, readers find a space to safely evaluate
their positionality within the larger reproductive justice movement
while simultaneously acknowledging the complexity of the movement
itself. Scholars of communication, health, and women’s and gender
studies will find this book of particular interest.
Traditional patterns of educating and training clergy face not only
crises of increasing cost and declining enrollment, but also a
crisis of identity, since at present it is the academy, not the
church, that shapes formation for ministry. This collection of
essays outlines a history and a new vision of the church as the
primary location of ministerial formation for the future of
theological education.
First full study of the life and career of the Glaswegian minister
Robert Baillie, establishing his significance and influence. From
1637 to 1660, the Scots witnessed rapid and confused changes in
government and violent skirmishing, whilst impassioned religious
disputes divided neighbours, friends and family. One of the most
vivid accounts of this period may be found in the letters of the
Glaswegian minister, Robert Baillie; but whilst his correspondence
has long featured in historical accounts of the period, the man
behind these writings has largely been forgotten. This biography
draws together for the first time an analysis of Baillie's career
and writings, establishing his significance as a polemicist,
minister, theologian, and contemporary historian. It is based on
the first, systematic reading ofBaillie's extensive surviving
manuscripts, comprising thousands of leaves of correspondence,
treatises, sermons, and notebooks. Chapters address Baillie's
writings on monarchy, church government, Reformed theology,
liturgical change, Biblical scholarship, and Baillie's practice of
record-keeping. Overall, the book challenges prevalent
understandings of the intellectual landscape of Covenanted
Scotland, situating Baillie and his contemporaries on the
peripheries of a dynamic, European Republic of Letters. Alexander
D. Campbell is Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of
Canada Post-Doctoral Fellow, Queen's University, Canada.
The late Toni Morrison was the first African-American to win the
Nobel Prize for Literature in 1993. A powerful writer, she wove
stories depicting the largely overlooked Black experience in
America and exploring the intersection of gender and race through
the lives of Black women. Morrison's writing continues to move
people and push readers to reassess their beliefs about what it
means to be Black in America. Synthesizing some 250 scholarly works
about Morrison's writing, this book examines eight novels as well
as the short story "Recitatif." They are analyzed for techniques
used to deepen meaning and emotional weight, and reveal Morrison's
mastery over prose.
This book presents cutting-edge research advances in the rapidly
growing areas of nanoantennas and plasmonics as well as their
related enabling technologies and applications. It provides a
comprehensive treatment of the field on subjects ranging from
fundamental theoretical principles and new technological
developments, to state-of-the-art device design, as well as
examples encompassing a wide range of related sub-areas. The
content of the book also covers highly-directive nanoantennas,
all-dielectric and tuneable/reconfigurable devices, metasurface
optical components, and other related topics. Intended to provide
valuable information for researchers and graduate students in
electromagnetics, antennas and propagation, coverage includes the
following topics: optical properties of plasmonic nanoloop
antennas; passive and active nano cylinders; coherent control of
light scattering; time domain modeling with the generalized
dispersive material model; inverse-design of plasmonic and
dielectric optical nanoantennas; multi-level atomic systems for
modeling nonlinear light-matter interactions; nonlinear multipolar
interference: from non-reciprocal directionality to one-way
nonlinear mirrors; plasmonic metasurfaces for controlling harmonic
generations; optical nanoantennas for enhanced THz emission; active
photonics based on phase-change materials and reconfigurable
nanowire systems; and nanofabrication techniques for subwavelength
optics.
This title was first published in 2001. The essays in this highly
cosmopolitan collection were selected from over 250 contributions
presented at the 19th World Congress in Philosophy of Law and
Social Philosophy (IVR) held in New York in 1999. They represent a
cross-section of contemporary work on human rights derived from
eleven different countries.
This title was first published in 2001. The essays in this highly
cosmopolitan collection were selected from over 250 contributions
presented at the 19th World Congress in Philosophy of Law and
Social Philosophy (IVR) held in New York in 1999. They represent a
cross-section of contemporary work on human rights derived from
eleven different countries.
Between the Crimean War and the end of the First World War the
British Army underwent a dramatic change from being an
anachronistic and frequently ineffective organization to being
perhaps the most professional and highly trained army in the world.
Historians have tended to view that transformation through the
successive political reform efforts of those years, but have
largely overlooked the ways in which the Army transformed itself
from within. This change was effected through the modernization of
training, operational and leadership doctrines. The adoption of
formal physical training and organized games played a central part
in this process. With its origins in elite public schools and
upper-class country homes, the Army's philosophy of Athleticism was
a part of the ethos of 'muscular Christianity' widely held in
contemporary British institutions. Under the potent influence of
this philosophy, military sport went from a means of keeping
soldiers from drink and the officers from duty, to an
institutionalized form of combat training. This book documents the
origins and development of formal physical training in the late
Victorian Army and the ways in which the Army's gymnastic training
evolved into a vital building block of the process of turning a
civilian into a fighting man. It also assesses the nature and
extent of British military sport, particularly regimental sports,
during this period of evolution for the Army. Through an
investigation of the Army's physical culture during this dynamic
period, one can gain an understanding of not only how the Army's
change from within occurred, but also of some of the important
links between the Army and its parent society.
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