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570 matches in All Departments
Unearth the secrets of our natural world with The Lore of the Land,
a richly illustrated compendium of folklore and wisdom from the
land, skies and seas. From thundering rivers to shady groves,
flickering marshes to lightless caves, and from snow-capped
mountains to the depths of the ocean, discover the folklore of
Earth's wildest places. Stories and spirits abound in these land-
and seascapes, where traditional wisdom and mysterious magics have
intertwined over centuries. Each of the six chapters covers a
different natural landscape, revealing the worldwide folklore
surrounding Woodlands, Seas & Oceans, Wetlands, Mountains,
Rivers & Streams and Hills & Caves. Beginning with tales
from cultures spanning the globe, each chapter then dives into the
legends of how these places were formed, their place in the human
imagination and their natural and otherworldly denizens. Learn how
the forests hold up the sky in Maori tradition; how in Ireland,
seaweed was once thought to predict the weather; and that the
ancient Greeks believed Mount Etna housed the fiery forge of the
gods. All this and more is accompanied by beautiful artwork based
on real folklore, uncovering the secrets of our natural world as
never before. A treasury of fascinating tales and ancient wisdom,
The Lore of the Land is sure to fire the imaginations of young
nature-lovers, and delight anyone who has ever wondered whether
there is more to our natural world than meets the eye. Also in the
series: The Lore of the Wild: Folklore and Wisdom from Nature
Global Progress on Molten Salt Reactors: A Companion to Dolan’s
Molten Salt Reactors and Thorium Energy, Second Edition presents
global perspectives on the latest research and technological
advances. Each case study utilizes a comprehensive template that
guides the reader through country specific research. Useful data
which can be applied to work and research is included, along with a
list of references for further research. Researchers, professional
engineers and policymakers will gain a broad picture of worldwide
MSR activity and a deep understanding of how theory and practical
guidance is applied in a variety of settings, including budgets,
approaches and constraints.
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A to Z Baby Poetry (Hardcover)
Colleen Reding Mearn; Illustrated by E S Dolan Dix; Edited by Erika Nichols-Frazer
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R440
Discovery Miles 4 400
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The experiences of a diverse range of progressive theater and
performance makers in their own words. Curated stories from over 75
interviews and informal exchanges offer insight into the field and
point out limitations due to discrimination and unequal opportunity
for performance artists in the United States over the past 55
years. In this work, performers, often unknown beyond their
immediate audience, articulate diverse influences. They also
reflect on how artists are educated and supported, what content is
deemed valuable and how it is brought to bear, as well as which
audiences are welcome and whether cross-community exchange is
encouraged. The book's voices bring the reader from 1965 through
the first wave of the covid-19 pandemic in 2020. They point to more
diverse and inclusive practices and give hope for the future of the
art.
A myth-shattering, inspiring book that combines research, reportage, and memoir to explore the growing phenomenon of estrangement from toxic relatives—showing it not as a tragedy, but as an empowering and effective solution to the heartbreak of family abuse.
After decades of enduring his mother’s physical and psychological torment, after years of trying in vain to set boundaries, Eamon Dolan took a radical step: he cut his mother out of his life. No more phone calls, no more visits, no more contact. Parting with his abuser gave him immediate relief and set him on a path toward freedom, confidence, and joy like none he had ever felt before.
In The Power of Parting, Dolan has written the book he wishes he’d had when he was struggling to free himself from his mother’s abuse. In the process, he discovered how widespread estrangement really is. At least 27 percent of Americans are estranged from a parent, sibling, or other family member. He also learned why so much stigma surrounds this common—and often lifesaving—phenomenon. Even among therapists—the professionals who would seem most attuned to the pain relatives can inflict—there’s a bias toward reconciliation, when millions of their patients need instead to escape their abusers’ grip. Estrangement, Dolan realized, should be understood and embraced, not shrouded in shame.
Drawing on his own suffering and healing, as well as experts’ advice and the testimony of other courageous survivors, Dolan first explains why abuse is much different and more prevalent than we may think, how it harms us in childhood and beyond, and why limiting or eliminating contact might be our best possible choice. Then, he walks readers through the steps of a successful, positive estrangement: how to take crucial time for yourself; how to make sure no one can gaslight you into minimizing or forgetting; how to set rules for your abuser and—if they can’t or won’t respect your limits—how to end a toxic relationship. He also offers valuable counsel on how to ease the guilt and grief that often accompany parting, and how to break the cycle of abuse that was likely passed down to you through many generations.
With a convincing blend of clarity and empathy, Dolan encourages others to do what he ultimately did for himself: determine whether the people in your life treat you with the care and concern you deserve—and part ways with them if they don’t.
The explorations of 18th-century travellers to the "European
frontiers" were often geared to define the cultural, political and
historical boundaries of "European civilization". In an age when
political revolutions shocked nations into reassessing what
separated the civilized from the barbaric, how did literary
travellers contemplate the characteristics of their continental
neighbours? Focusing on the writings of British travellers, we see
how a new view of Europe was created, one that juxtaposed the
customs and living conditions of populations in an attempt to
define "modern" Europe against a "yet unenlightened" Europe.
This resource provides hands-on, manipulative-based activities
keyed to the text that involve future elementary school teachers
discovering concepts, solving problems, and exploring mathematical
ideas. These activities can be adapted for use with elementary
students at a later time. Colorful, perforated paper manipulatives
are provided in a convenient pouch at the back of the manual.
Despite its importance as a central feature of musical sounds,
timbre has rarely stood in the limelight. First defined in the
eighteenth century, denigrated during the nineteenth, the concept
of timbre came into its own during the twentieth century and its
fascination with synthesizers and electronic music-or so the story
goes. But in fact, timbre cuts across all the boundaries that make
up musical thought-combining scientific and artistic approaches to
music, material and philosophical aspects, and historical and
theoretical perspectives. Timbre challenges us to fundamentally
reorganize the way we think about music. The twenty-five essays
that make up this collection offer a variety of engagements with
music from the perspective of timbre. The boundaries are set as
broad as possible: from ancient Homeric sounds to contemporary
sound installations, from birdsong to cochlear implants, from Tuvan
overtone singing to the tv show The Voice, from violin mutes to
Moog synthesizers. What unifies the essays across this vast
diversity is the material starting point of the sounding object.
This focus on the listening experience is radical departure from
the musical work that has traditionally dominated musical discourse
since its academic inception in late-nineteenth-century Europe.
Timbre remains a slippery concept that has continuously demanded
more, be it more precise vocabulary, a more systematic theory, or
more rigorous analysis. Rooted in the psychology of listening,
timbre consistently resists pinning complete down. This collection
of essays provides an invitation for further engagement with the
range of fascinating questions that timbre opens up.
Desperate and overwhelmed by the mind-numbing sameness of each
day during ten months of unemployment and no interviews, our
heroine Laurie slowly unravels as she lowers her employment
expectations. Coming apart at the seams from the pounding boredom,
she accepts a job she is extremely overqualified for, because she
is willing to "take anything at this point." Watch as Laurie's
flawed and negative thinking takes her "anything" job from bad to
worse to intolerable. Based on a true story, "Unemployed "shows how
Laurie's family, including a crazy and outspoken mother-in-law,
gets what they're thinking about, for better or worse, each and
every time. Like a swarming band of locusts, the family brings on
nervousness, lack of money, a raucous trip in an inner tube, a
whopping case of hemorrhoids, the pursuit of a replacement dog
(just in case), the medicinal consumption of gallons of red wine,
and some pretty lively dinner conversation. Laurie's thoughts take
one shockingly simple turn, and the door to the life of her dreams
swings wide open. If you're unemployed, working in a job you hate,
have the boss from hell, have a crazy mother-in-law, or you simply
like to laugh, you will relate to "Unemployed: How Desperation Led
Me to the Worst Job Ever."
One of the most pressing questions in neuroscience, psychology
and economics today is how does the brain generate preferences and
make choices? With a unique interdisciplinary approach, this volume
is among the first to explore the cognitive and neural mechanisms
mediating the generation of the preferences that guide choice. From
preferences determining mundane purchases, to social preferences
influencing mating choice, through to moral decisions, the authors
adopt diverse approaches to answer the question. Chapters explore
the instability of preferences and thecommon neural processes that
occur across preferences. Edited by one of the world s most
renowned cognitive neuroscientists, each chapter is authored by an
expert in the field, with a host of international
contributors.
Emphasis on common process underlying preference generation makes
material applicable to a variety of disciplines - neuroscience,
psychology, economics, law, philosophy, etc.Offers specific focus
on how preferences are generated to guide decision making,
carefully examining one aspect of the broad field of neuroeconomics
and complementing existing volumesFeatures outstanding,
international scholarship, with chapters written by an expert in
the topic area"
Based on her award-winning blog, "The Feminist Spectator," Jill
Dolan presents a lively feminist perspective in reviews and essays
on a variety of theatre productions, films and television
series--from The Social Network and Homeland to Split Britches'
Lost Lounge.
Demonstrating the importance of critiquing mainstream culture
through a feminist lens, Dolan also offers invaluable advice on how
to develop feminist critical thinking and writing skills. This is
an essential read for budding critics and any avid spectator of the
stage and screen.
Rural Families and Work focuses on the findings of the Rural
Families Speak research study and the theoretical frameworks that
are utilized to examine the context of rural low-income families'
employment. This volume provides a solid foundation for
understanding rural employment problems and issues. Family
ecological theory is the central framework with a discussion of
theories that contribute to the opportunities for the contextual
research, including family economic stress theory, human capital,
human capability, and some selected policy frameworks. Employment
is addressed through review of policy issues, community contexts,
family and social support, and available resources. Throughout the
volume future research directions and applications are highlighted.
The issue of Child Sexual Exploitation (CSE) is firmly in the
public spotlight internationally and in the UK, but just how well
is it understood? To date, many CSE-related services have been
developed in reaction to high profile cases rather than being
designed more strategically. This much-needed book breaks new
ground by considering how psychosocial, feminist and
geo-environmental theories, amongst others, can improve practice
understanding and interventions. Edited by one of the leading
scholars in the field, this is an essential text for students and
those planning strategic interventions and practice activities in
social, youth and therapeutic work with young people, as it
supports understanding of how CSE arises and how to challenge the
nature of the abuse.
Drug Law Reform in East and Southeast Asia is a multi-author look
at drugs in East and Southeast Asia, on drug policy, patterns and
trends, local problems, human rights abuses, treatment prospects,
and potential reforms. From the history of drugs in Asia, the book
examines recent trends in illicit drugs, especially the present
enormous amphetamine problems. It addresses recent policy shifts,
especially harm reduction responses to the devastating
drug-associated HIV epidemics. It explores further necessary
reform, especially in regard to the abysmally inhuman current
emphasis on detention and the death penalty for drug offences, and
present the most recent evidence on effective and humane approaches
to drug treatments. As the first comprehensive collection on
illicit drug and harm reduction in East and Southeast Asia, it will
be a vital resource for health professionals, policymakers, and
others working there and elsewhere on drug policy reform. As the
first comprehensive collection on illicit drugs and harm reduction
in East and Southeast Asia, it will be a vital resource for health
professionals, policymakers, and others working on East and
Southeast Asia--and elsewhere--on drug policy."
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The Warning
James Patterson, Robison Wells
Paperback
(1)
R261
R238
Discovery Miles 2 380
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