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In the past few decades, awareness of bipolar disorder has
significantly increased, but understanding of the condition remains
vague for most of the general public. Though the term itself is
relatively recent, the condition has affected individuals for
centuries and no more profoundly than in the arts. The historical
connections among manic depression and such fields as poetry,
writing, music, and painting have been previously documented.
However, the impact of bipolar disorder on movie makers and its
depiction on the screen has yet to be thoroughly examined. In The
Bipolar Express: Manic Depression and the Movies, David Coleman
provides an in-depth examination of the entwined natures of mood
disorders and moviemaking. In this volume, Coleman looks at the
writers, directors, and actors who have faced the mood swings and
behavior that are hallmarks of this condition from Greta Garbo,
Orson Welles, and Marilyn Monroe to Jonathan Winters, Carrie
Fisher, and Catherine Zeta-Jones. In addition to recognizing the
cinematic contributions of manic depressive filmmakers, the author
also looks at movies that have portrayed bipolar disorder with
varying degrees of accuracy including Citizen Kane, Rebel without a
Cause, Breakfast at Tiffany s, Hannah and Her Sisters, The Aviator,
and Silver Linings Playbook. From early silents of the twentieth
century through critically acclaimed films of today, this book
compares depictions of mood swings on screen with clinical examples
of actual manic depression, carefully distinguishing real from
stereotypical portrayals. This fascinating study is augmented by a
concise filmography of more than 400 feature-length films from
around the world with themes or characters relating to manic
depressive illness. Though aimed at film fans and anyone interested
in manic depression, mental illness, or related medical studies,
this book will also prove valuable to medical and mental health
professionals."
Region, Religion and English Renaissance Literature brings together
leading scholars of early modern literature and culture to
explicate the ways in which both regional and religious contexts
inform the production, circulation and interpretation of
Renaissance literary texts. Examining texts by a wide variety of
early modern writers - including Edmund Spenser, Lodowick Lloyd,
Richard Nugent, Thomas Middleton and John Webster, Richard Montagu,
and John Milton - the contributors to this volume enhance our
understanding of the complex cultural contexts of early modern
Anglophone writing.
Region, Religion and English Renaissance Literature brings together
leading scholars of early modern literature and culture to
explicate the ways in which both regional and religious contexts
inform the production, circulation and interpretation of
Renaissance literary texts. Examining texts by a wide variety of
early modern writers - including Edmund Spenser, Lodowick Lloyd,
Richard Nugent, Thomas Middleton and John Webster, Richard Montagu,
and John Milton - the contributors to this volume enhance our
understanding of the complex cultural contexts of early modern
Anglophone writing.
The UN is often questioned about its ongoing relevance and overall
effectiveness in the 21st century, particularly in its involvement
with educational policy and co-operation around the globe. This
ground-breaking book examines the four key agencies within the UN
system that share the vital role of addressing educational futures:
UNESCO, the World Bank, UNICEF and UNDP. As the core of educational
multilateralism, these agencies powerfully reflect the UN's
historic grounding in peace, human rights and economic development.
The history of each agency's commitment to education is explored
with critical detachment, with particular attention paid to the
post-Cold War period, during which each agency has needed to
re-think the impact of globalisation on both its modes of operation
as well as the content of its education policies. Just as education
policy itself has been subject to the impact of globalisation, so
to has each agency had to adapt at a time when not only education
but also their own mandates have been thrown open to question. This
timely book will be essential reading for all those working with
and for UN agencies, foreign aid workers and the development
co-operation industry. At a time when education policies, budgets
and strategies appear wide open to profound changes, this book will
provide a much-needed roadmap to the future.
The "Sasquatch" film genre, devoted to the legendary and
notoriously elusive creature also known as Bigfoot, and its
Himalayan counterpart, the Yeti, is the focus of this illustrated
reference guide. Here is a fascinatingly detailed look at the
cinematic history of Sasquatch, from the earliest trick films of
Georges Melies to the most up-to-date CGI efforts. Critical
insights regarding the genre's development are offered, along with
an exhaustively researched filmography that includes every known
film or television appearance of Sasquatch, Bigfoot and Yeti in
both fictitious and documentary formats. Included are in-depth
interviews with such filmmakers as Kevin Tenney, Adam Muto, Ryan
Schifrin, Tim Skousen and Michael Worten, as well as reproductions
of rare movie stills, posters, lobby cards and behind-the-scenes
production photos. Renowned cryptozoologist Loren Coleman provides
an insightful foreword to the text.
The UN is often questioned about its ongoing relevance and
overall effectiveness in the 21st century, particularly in its
involvement with educational policy and co-operation around the
globe. This ground-breaking book examines the four key agencies
within the UN system that share the vital role of addressing
educational futures: UNESCO, the World Bank, UNICEF and UNDP.
As the core of educational multilateralism, these agencies
powerfully reflect the UN's historic grounding in peace, human
rights and economic development. The history of each agency's
commitment to education is explored with critical detachment, with
particular attention paid to the post-Cold War period, during which
each agency has needed to re-think the impact of globalisation on
both its modes of operation as well as the content of its education
policies. Just as education policy itself has been subject to the
impact of globalisation, so to has each agency had to adapt at a
time when not only education but also their own mandates have been
thrown open to question.
This timely book will be essential reading for all those working
with and for UN agencies, foreign aid workers and the development
co-operation industry. At a time when education policies, budgets
and strategies appear wide open to profound changes, this book will
provide a much-needed roadmap to the future.
Invertebrates are conspicuous, influential components in all of the
ecosystems of the world. Assemblages of invertebrates assume an
organizing function and hence may be considered as "webmasters" in
these ecosystems. This book reviews and assesses our current
understanding of invertebrates in terrestrial and
terrestrially-dominated (lower-order stream) ecosystems. It
emphasizes the centrality of the activity of invertebrates, which
influence ecosystems function far out of proportion to their
physical mass in a wide range of situations, particularly at the
soil interface between land and air (litter/soil), water and land
(sediments) and in tree canopies and root/soil systems.
The historian of photography Helmut Gernsheim (1913-1995) owned
the largest photography collection in the world. For the first time
in half a century, both its sections are reunited in an exhibition
catalog: the historical part, housed in the Harry Ransom Center at
the University of Texas, Austin, and the contemporary collection in
the Reiss-Engelhorn-Museen, Mannheim, Germany. With roughly 220
outstanding photographs, the catalog affords unprecedented insights
into the matchless history of the Gernsheim Collection as well as a
fascinating overview of the history of photography, beginning with
the world's first photographic image by Joseph Nicephore Niepce in
1826.
This volume continues the ambitious project, undertaken by the
Miller Center at the University of Virginia, to transcribe and
annotate secretly recorded White House tapes. The tapes presented
here begin on the day after the Cuban Missile Crisis-and run to 7
February 1963.
Collection of ballets making up the Gala des Étoiles of 2015. David
Coleman conducts the Teatro alla Scala in performances of, amongst
others, 'La Rose Malade' by Gustav Mahler, 'The Dying Swan' by
Camille Saint-Saëns and Aram Khatchaturian's 'Spartacus'.
Whether you are a 5-person team or a 50,000 person company some of
the same rules for successful collaboration apply. The more you
share what you know the more it is worth; understanding a person's
local context is more critical to successful collaboration than any
technology you may use. Based on years of research, an encyclopedic
knowledge of collaborative technologies, and a realization that
collaboration is hard to do successfully, Mr. Coleman provides a
holistic view on collaboration. Through a variety of contributions
from his social networks, others have contributed their best rules
for collaboration based on their experience. The holistic approach
(People, Process and Technology) is the organizing principle for
the book and each rule can be found in the appropriate section.
Managers, CEOs, Venture Capitalists, or anyone that has to work
with other people at a distance every day can get great benefit
from this book.
Readers of this book will walk away with a much better idea how
to be successful in their interactions with others via the
computer. It will help people who are on teams separated
geographically, as well as managers and executives. The book filled
with high-tech nuggets of wisdom for programmers and IT
professionals. But it also has practical rules that apply to anyone
who works with others.
With the advent of Web 2.0, we are seeing dramatic changes in the
way people interact with each other via the Internet. Blogs, Wikis,
online communities, social networks, and distributed teams are just
some of the ways these technologies are shaping our interactions.
David Coleman is an expert in the area of collaborative
processes and technologies and Stewart Levine is an expert on how
to get people to work together more effectively. Together David and
Stewart encompass a holistic view of these new technologies and
processes and help groups, teams, departments and organizations to
work better and more effectively over time and distance.
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