|
Showing 1 - 25 of
288 matches in All Departments
Overworked and Undervalued: Black Women and Successin America is a
collection of essays written by Black female scholars, educators,
and students as well as public policy, behavioral, and mental
health professionals. The contributors' share their experiences and
frustrations with White America which continues to demand excessive
labor and one-sided relationships of Black women while it
simultaneously diminishes them. The book describes the ongoing
struggle for women of color in general, but Black women in
particular, which derives from the experience that only certain
parts of our identities are deemed acceptable. The essays reflect
on the events of the last few years and the toll the related stress
has taken on each author. As a whole, the book offers its readers
an opportunity to gain insight into these women's experiences and
to find their place in supporting the Black women in their lives.
"This Crazy Thing Called Life" is a book that makes witty and
satirical comments about the journey we're all on, the journey we
call life. Through his observations of human nature, and the human
condition the author has formed his own unique perspective and has
made comments, regarding those matters that most effects our lives,
focusing on love, marriage, money, politics, education, religion,
and life in general. At the same time he continually makes the
point that we are all responsible for our own lives and that we can
make it what ever we want. With comments, quotes, paraphrases, as
well as pictures, the writer drives home his observations much in
the style of Andy Rooney, and Art Buchwald. "This CrazyThing Called
Life" entertains with humorous comments and pictures, but all the
while it provokes thought about a multitude of subjects that we all
experience on the roller coaster ride of life.
HAVE YOU EVER WANTED TO REALLY UNDERSTAND BIBLICAL PROPHECY? NOW
YOU CAN. There is an absolute Truth that everyone should know: The
world as we know it will come to an end, and it will be in the near
future. There is going to be a day of reckoning for our world. God
Almighty is going to judge the Earth and the entire universe and it
will all be destroyed in an instant. This is an absolute fact,
whether you choose to believe it or not. Within the pages of The
Ultimate End, you will find a clear and concise explanation of the
very synopsis of the end times written by the Apostle John in the
Book of Revelation. Here you can discover that The Revelation is
not a book of vague mystery, but rather a writing of true
revelation, which is intended to be understood by anyone who will
trust and believe God's Word.
This new book on Black public schooling in St. Louis is the first
to fully explore deep racialized antagonisms in St. Louis,
Missouri. It accomplishes this by addressing the white supremacist
context and anti-Black policies that resulted. In addition, this
work attends directly to community agitation and protest against
racist school policies. The book begins with post-Civil War
schooling of Black children to the important Liddell case that
declared unconstitutional the St. Louis Public Schools. The
judicial wrangling in the Liddell case, its aftermath, and
community reaction against it awaits a next book by the authors of
Anti-blackness and public schools.
Ever wish you d had that chance to visit with your Dad or
Grandfather and talk about their time in the service during World
War II? Here is the author?'s response to his daughter?'s request
for that story. From the new recruit to the bombing missions over
Europe through the dark period as a Prisoner of War, the author?'s
story unfolds in a straight forward manner with pathos and humor.
It will find a place in your library of favorites.
An in-depth examination of the different forms of privilege
perpetuating inequality within American society In this era of
#MeToo and #BlackLivesMatter, inequality is at the forefront of
American thought like never before. Yet many of the systems of
privilege upholding the status quo remain unchanged. Many Americans
who advocate a merit-based, race-free worldview do not acknowledge
the systems of privilege which benefit them. Men remain at the top
of the gender wage gap and white people are five times less likely
to be stopped by police than their Black neighbors. White families
can build lives using social and financial inheritances that have
been denied to Black Americans and immigrants for centuries.
Individual chapters focus on language, the workplace, the
implications of comparing racism and sexism, race-based housing
privilege, the dream of diversity and the cycle of exclusion, the
rule of law and invisible systems of privilege, and the power of
law to transform society. Twenty-five years since its first
publication, Privilege Revealed is more relevant than ever. With a
new preface and substantive foreword, this book offers readers
important insight into the inequalities still pervading American
society and encourages us all to confront our own relationship to
these too often invisible privileges.
Black Genders and Sexualities provides a survey of new work by
scholars who grapple with the ways gender and sexuality constellate
with race. Cutting across the humanities and social sciences, and
situated in sites across the black diaspora, the works collectively
challenge notions that we are living in a post-racial age and
instead argue for the specificity of black cultural experiences as
shaped by gender and sex. The volume underscores the ways an array
of violence impacts and shapes black life, while also testifying to
the resiliency, creativity, and vitality of black people.
A memorable lost soul, full of sadness and humor, Dr. Jonathan
McNeill is larger than life, a sane maniac. Dallas Star Book Review
Raising and control have figured in every comprehensive model of
syntax for forty years. Recent renewed attention to them makes this
collection a timely one. The contributions, representing some of
the most exciting recent work, address many fundamental research
questions. What beside the canonical constructions might be subject
to raising or control analyses? What constructions traditionally
treated as raising or control might not actually be so? What
classes of control must be recognized? How do tense, agreement, or
clausal completeness figure in their distribution? The chapters
address these and other relevant issues, and bring new empirical
data into focus.
The Math of Money is filled with wha at first glance looks like anomaly and paradox, but it ends up showing us that a good deal of what we consider common sense actually make no sense at all. With a wealth of entertaining and counterintuitive examples, it delights as well as informs, and will help readers treat their financial resources more rationally. The Math of Money is filled with wha at first glance looks like anomaly and paradox, but it ends up showing us that a good deal of what we consider common sense actually make no sense at all. With a wealth of entertaining and counterintuitive examples, it delights as well as informs, and will help readers treat their financial resources more rationally. The Math of Money is filled with wha at first glance looks like anomaly and paradox, but it ends up showing us that a good deal of what we consider common sense actually make no sense at all. With a wealth of entertaining and counterintuitive examples, it delights as well as informs, and will help readers treat their financial resources more rationally. The Math of Money is filled with wha at first glance looks like anomaly and paradox, but it ends up showing us that a gooate consider common sense actually make no sense at all. With a wealth of entertaining and counterintuitive examples, it delights as well as informs, and will help readers treat their financial resources more rationally. The Math of Money is filled with what at first glance looks like anomaly and paradox, but it ends up showing us that a good deal of what we consider common sense actually make no sense at all. With a wealth of entertaining and counterintuitive examples, it delights as well as informs, and will help readers treat their financial resources more rationally.
According to Platonists, entities such as numbers, sets,
propositions and properties are abstract objects. But abstract
objects lack causal powers and a location in space and time, so how
we could ever come to know of them? Cheyne presents a systematic
and detailed account of this epistemological objection to the
Platonist doctrine that abstract objects exist and can be known.
Since mathematics has such a central role in the acquisition of
scientific knowledge, he concentrates on mathematical Platonism. He
also concentrates on our knowledge of what exists, and argues for a
causal constraint on such existential knowledge. Finally, he
exposes the weaknesses of recent attempts by Platonists to account
for our supposed Platonic knowledge.
Madurese is a major regional language of Indonesia, with some 14
million speakers, mainly on the island of Madura and adjacent parts
of Java, making it the fourth largest language of Indonesia after
Indonesian, Javanese, and Sundanese. There is no existing
comprehensive descriptive grammar of the language, with existing
studies being either sketches of the whole grammar, or detailed
descriptions of phonology and morphology or some particular topics
within these components of the grammar. There is no competing work
that provides the breadth and depth of coverage of this grammar, in
particular (though not exclusively) with regard to syntax.
|
|