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49 matches in All Departments
This book provides a varied, thorough and informative analysis of how newspapers covered the 2014 Scottish independence referendum in its critical final months.
Providing a wealth of new empirical findings, the book engages with the key themes and issues presented by a variety of newspaper outlets. These main observations include: a major focus on the economic aspects of the debate; persistent concerns regarding an independent Scotland’s prospects on the world stage, both militarily and strategically; the re-emergence of Gordon Brown as a political heavyweight; and a myopic focus on Alex Salmond, who would come to be framed as personally synonymous with the abstract concept of Scottish independence.
The book will be the first point of contact for readers interested in the subject, providing an overview which is meticulously researched, authoritative and engaging, and offering broader insights in the areas of journalism, political communication and media studies.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Scotland and The Press in 2014; 2. It’s the Economy, Stupit: Presenting an Uncertain Future; 3. What Matters Most: The Health Service and Currency; 4. Scotland’s Place in the World: Military and Strategic Considerations; 5. Everyone’s Got an Opinion: Celebrities, Royalty, and the Conservative Party; 6. Beast Mode: Darling, Brown and the Labour Party; 7. Eck of a Story: The Focus on Alex Salmond; 8. Conclusion: The Same Old Script? Thoughts Regarding the Coverage
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Modern Manga Tarot
Hera David; Illustrated by Patrick Miller
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R539
R458
Discovery Miles 4 580
Save R81 (15%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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A fresh, modern take on a classic tarot deck, Modern Manga Tarot
combines two hugely popular trends in a beautifully illustrated and
informative deck. With text by Hera David, author of numerous books
on oracles, astrology and fortune-telling, and illustrations by
Patrick Miller, illustrator of several books, this pack is a great
introduction to tarot and an essential addition to any established
collection. The accompanying booklet explains the background of
tarot and how to manifest and provides detailed explanations of
each card, alongside information on how to clean and energise the
card and suggested spreads.
In January 1804, the once wealthy colony of Saint-Domingue
declared its independence from France and adopted the Amerindian
name "Haiti." Independence was the outcome of the extraordinary
uprising of the colony's slaves. Although a central event in the
history of the French in the New World, the full significance of
the revolution has yet to be realized. These essays deepen our
understanding of Haiti during the period from 1791 to 1815. They
consider the colony's history and material culture; its "free
people of color"; the events leading up to the revolution and its
violent unfolding; the political and economic fallout from the
revolution; and its cultural representations.
This volume brings together for the first time a wide range of essays on culture and related themes by the sociologist and philosopher Georg Simmel (1858-1918). Simmel is now recognized as one of the leading social theorists active in Europe in the early part of the 20th century. This unique collection enables the reader to engage with the full range of SimmelÆs dazzling contributions to the study of culture. The collection opens with SimmelÆs most basic essays on defining culture, its changes, and its crisis. These are followed by more specific explorations of the culture of face-to-face interactions, spatial and urban culture, leisure culture, the culture of money and commodities, the culture of belief, and the politics of female culture. The collection includes a large number of previously untranslated essays together with others that are not readily available. The result is an unparalleled introduction to Simmel on culture. The book not only provides a missing piece in the history of cultural study, it also reveals a new way of studying culture. It will be essential reading for students of cultural studies and sociology.
The Western world's responses to genocide have been slow, unwieldly
and sometimes unfit for purpose. So argues David Patrick in this
essential new contribution to the aid and intervention debate.
While the UK and US have historically been committed to the ideals
of human rights, freedom and equality, their actual material
reactions are more usually dictated by geopolitical 'noise',
pre-conceived ideas of worth and the media attention-spans of
individual elected leaders. Utilizing a wide-ranging quantitative
analysis of media reporting across the globe, Patrick argues that
an over-reliance on the Holocaust as the framing device we use to
try and come to terms with such horrors can lead to slow responses,
misinterpretation and category errors - in both Rwanda and Bosnia,
much energy was expended trying to ascertain whether these regions
qualified for 'genocide' status. The Reporting of Genocide
demonstrates how such tragedies are reduced to stereotypes in the
media - framed in terms of innocent victims and brutal oppressors -
which can over-simplify the situation on the ground. This in turn
can lead to mixed and inadequate responses from governments.
Reporting on Genocide also seeks to address how responses to
genocides across the globe can be improved, and will be essential
reading for policy-makers and for scholars of genocide and the
media.
Arnold Schwarzenegger stars in this director's cut edition of Mark
L. Lester's classic 80's action thriller. John Matrix
(Schwarzenegger), a retired Secret Service colonel, is on the trail
of right-wing renegades and a Central American dictator, whom he
had once helped to depose. The renegades have kidnapped his
eleven-year-old daughter and Matrix is not going to rest until he
has her back. The cast also includes Rae Dawn Chong, James Olson
and Bill Duke.
American foreign policy often looks like a trail of man-made debris
and disaster. Of course, the explanations for many poorly-made
decisions are rather complex. In this brief and cogent analysis,
Houghton shows us that understanding American foreign policy often
comes down to recognizing the cognitive limitations of the
decision-makers, which affects the foreign policy process. Then
there is the nature of the decisions themselves. Quite a few
decisions in American foreign policy involve 'tragic' choices,
where leaders are effectively confronted with a series of
progressively bad or uncomfortable options. And it is equally clear
that some policies are not the product of any one individual's
preferences, but emerge as a consequence of the way in which
complex modern governments with large bureaucracies operate.
Written with the interested layperson in mind, as well as students
of international affairs, this Citizen's Guide to American Foreign
Policy asks questions like, "Why do presidents so often do things
which seem to be directly against the national interests of the
United States - not just in retrospect, but even at the time?" "Why
do there seem to be so many fiascoes in US foreign policy?" "Why
does Congress sometimes tie the hands of the president in foreign
affairs?" "Why do presidents seem to respond more to opinion polls
or to what's on CNN and Fox News than they do to the core interests
of the United States?" Houghton's overview helps us see past the
partisan in-fighting that too often obscures the central issues in
foreign affairs. This is vital, required reading for all readers
who wish to better understand America's involvement in the world.
This four-volume anthology contains a sparkling selection of pieces
and represents all the major composers of the period. It includes
pieces in all the main genres, with Cornet and Trumpet Voluntaries,
Echo Voluntaries, fugal works with slow introductions, and Full
Voluntaries; as such, the collection offers a wide range of
attractive music suitable for both church and recital use. Each
volume contains an extended Introduction, with information on
instruments of the period, registration, ornamentation, and notes
on the composers. An important feature of the collection is an
editorial realization of the cadenzas which occur at key points in
some of the pieces; these complete the works and demonstrate how
they would have been performed at the time. With extended
historical information and a wonderful array of pieces carefully
edited from original sources, this is a major collection that will
be of interest to organists of all abilities.
This four-volume anthology contains a sparkling selection of pieces
and represents all the major composers of the period. It includes
pieces in all the main genres, with Cornet and Trumpet Voluntaries,
Echo Voluntaries, fugal works with slow introductions, and Full
Voluntaries; as such, the collection offers a wide range of
attractive music suitable for both church and recital use. Each
volume contains an extended Introduction, with information on
instruments of the period, registration, ornamentation, and notes
on the composers. An important feature of the collection is an
editorial realization of the cadenzas which occur at key points in
some of the pieces; these complete the works and demonstrate how
they would have been performed at the time. With extended
historical information and a wonderful array of pieces carefully
edited from original sources, this is a major collection that will
be of interest to organists of all abilities.
This four-volume anthology contains a sparkling selection of pieces
and represents all the major composers of the period. It includes
pieces in all the main genres, with Cornet and Trumpet Voluntaries,
Echo Voluntaries, fugal works with slow introductions, and Full
Voluntaries; as such, the collection offers a wide range of
attractive music suitable for both church and recital use. Each
volume contains an extended Introduction, with information on
instruments of the period, registration, ornamentation, and notes
on the composers. An important feature of the collection is an
editorial realization of the cadenzas which occur at key points in
some of the pieces; these complete the works and demonstrate how
they would have been performed at the time. With extended
historical information and a wonderful array of pieces carefully
edited from original sources, this is a major collection that will
be of interest to organists of all abilities.
This four-volume anthology contains a sparkling selection of pieces
and represents all the major composers of the period. It includes
pieces in all the main genres, with Cornet and Trumpet Voluntaries,
Echo Voluntaries, fugal works with slow introductions, and Full
Voluntaries; as such, the collection offers a wide range of
attractive music suitable for both church and recital use. Each
volume contains an extended Introduction, with information on
instruments of the period, registration, ornamentation, and notes
on the composers. An important feature of the collection is an
editorial realization of the cadenzas which occur at key points in
some of the pieces; these complete the works and demonstrate how
they would have been performed at the time. With extended
historical information and a wonderful array of pieces carefully
edited from original sources, this is a major collection that will
be of interest to organists of all abilities.
American foreign policy often looks like a trail of man-made debris
and disaster. Of course, the explanations for many poorly-made
decisions are rather complex. In this brief and cogent analysis,
Houghton shows us that understanding American foreign policy often
comes down to recognizing the cognitive limitations of the
decision-makers, which affects the foreign policy process. Then
there is the nature of the decisions themselves. Quite a few
decisions in American foreign policy involve 'tragic' choices,
where leaders are effectively confronted with a series of
progressively bad or uncomfortable options. And it is equally clear
that some policies are not the product of any one individual's
preferences, but emerge as a consequence of the way in which
complex modern governments with large bureaucracies operate.
Written with the interested layperson in mind, as well as students
of international affairs, this Citizen's Guide to American Foreign
Policy asks questions like, "Why do presidents so often do things
which seem to be directly against the national interests of the
United States - not just in retrospect, but even at the time?" "Why
do there seem to be so many fiascoes in US foreign policy?" "Why
does Congress sometimes tie the hands of the president in foreign
affairs?" "Why do presidents seem to respond more to opinion polls
or to what's on CNN and Fox News than they do to the core interests
of the United States?" Houghton's overview helps us see past the
partisan in-fighting that too often obscures the central issues in
foreign affairs. This is vital, required reading for all readers
who wish to better understand America's involvement in the world.
Why did Iranian students seize the American embassy in Tehran in 1979? Why did the Carter administration launch a rescue mission, and why did it fail so spectacularly? This book answers these and other puzzles using an analogical reasoning approach that highlights the role of historical analogies in decision making. Using interviews with key decision makers on both sides, Houghton provides an original analysis of one of the United States' greatest foreign policy disasters of recent years. The book will interest students and scholars of foreign policy analysis and international relations.
Why did Iranian students seize the American embassy in Tehran in 1979? Why did the Carter administration launch a rescue mission, and why did it fail so spectacularly? This book answers these and other puzzles using an analogical reasoning approach that highlights the role of historical analogies in decision making. Using interviews with key decision makers on both sides, Houghton provides an original analysis of one of the United States' greatest foreign policy disasters of recent years. The book will interest students and scholars of foreign policy analysis and international relations.
After a city-wide gang meeting, a downtown New York gang called the
Warriors is forced to make its way back across enemy territory
after being framed for the killing of a rival unit's leader.
Unarmed and desperate, they come up against one hostile gang after
another as they fight their way back through the city streets to
the one place where they will be safe. Directed by Walter Hill ('48
Hrs', 'Southern Comfort').
The slave revolution that two hundred years ago created the state
of Haiti alarmed and excited public opinion on both sides of the
Atlantic. Its repercussions ranged from the world commodity markets
to the imagination of poets, from the council chambers of the great
powers to slave quarters in Virginia and Brazil and most points in
between. Sharing attention with such tumultuous events as the
French Revolution and the Napoleonic War, Haiti's fifteen-year
struggle for racial equality, slave emancipation, and colonial
independence challenged notions about racial hierarchy that were
gaining legitimacy in an Atlantic world dominated by Europeans and
the slave trade. The Impact of the Haitian Revolution in the
Atlantic World explores the multifarious influence -- from economic
to ideological to psychological -- that a revolt on a small
Caribbean island had on the continents surrounding it.
Fifteen international scholars, including eminent historians
David Brion Davis, Seymour Drescher, and Robin Blackburn, explicate
such diverse ramifications as the spawning of slave resistance and
the stimulation of slavery's expansion, the opening of economic
frontiers, and the formation of black and white diasporas. They
show how the Haitian Revolution embittered contemporary debates
about race and abolition and inspired poetry, plays, and novels.
Seeking to disentangle its effects from those of the French
Revolution, they demonstrate that its impact was ambiguous,
complex, and contradictory.
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