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This enriching cookbook celebrates eight important plants Native
Americans introduced to the rest of the world: corn, beans, squash,
chili, tomato, potato, vanilla, and cacao-with more than 100
recipes. When these eight Native American plants crossed the ocean
after 1492, the world's cuisines were changed forever. In Seed to
Plate, Soil to Sky, James Beard Award-winning author and chef Lois
Ellen Frank introduces the splendour and importance of this Native
culinary history and pairs it with delicious, modern, plant-based
recipes using Native American ingredients. Along with Native
American culinary advisor Walter Whitewater, Seed to Plate, Soil to
Sky shares more than 100 nutritious, plant-based recipes organized
by each of the foundational ingredients in Native American cuisine
as well as a necessary discussion of food sovereignty and
sustainability. A delicious, enlightening celebration of Indigenous
foods and Southwestern flavours, Seed to Plate, Soil to Sky shares
recipes for dishes such as Blue Corn Hotcakes with Prickly Pear
Syrup, Three Sisters Stew, and Green Chile Enchilada Lasagne, as
well as essential basics like Corn Masa, Red and Green Chile
Sauces, and Cacao Spice Rub. The "Magic 8" ingredients share the
page-and plate-to create recipes that will transform your world.
In the scientific theory of sport science four major questions can
be considered: (1) What is the function of science? (2) What is the
body of knowledge of a scientific field? (3) What is the
appropriate research methodology? (4) How are research results
applied to the practical field? This publication structures the
body of knowledge of German sportscience and focuses on the second
question. Answers to the other questions are given implicitly
within the articles relating to the specific subdisciplines of
sport science.
Fundamental Differences brings together lucid interdisciplinary
critiques of social conservative politics and ideas in the areas of
welfare, family and school policy, gender representation, and
conservative doctrine. The distinguished group of authors responds
directly to New Right political discourse, identifying key
ambiguities, ideological convictions, and methodological problems.
Griot Potters of the Folona reconstructs the past of a particular
group of West African women potters using evidence found in their
artistry and techniques. The potters of the Folona region of
southeastern Mali serve a diverse clientele and firing thousands of
pots weekly during the height of the dry season. Although they
identify themselves as Mande, the unique styles and types of
objects the Folona women make, and more importantly, the way they
form and fire them, are fundamentally different from Mande potters
to the north and west. Through a brilliant comparative analysis of
pottery production methods across the region, especially how the
pots are formed and the way the techniques are taught by mothers to
daughters, Barbara Frank concludes that the mothers of the potters
of the Folona very likely came from the south and east, marrying
Mande griots (West African leatherworkers who are better known as
storytellers or musicians), as they made their way south in search
of clientele as early as the 14th or 15th century CE. While the
women may have nominally given up their mothers' identities through
marriage, over the generations the potters preserved their maternal
heritage through their technological style, passing this knowledge
on to their daughters, and thus transforming the very nature of
what it means to be a Mande griot. This is a story of resilience
and the continuity of cultural heritage in the hands of women.
The new edition of Scandalous Providence: The Jesus Story of the
Compassion of God constructs a postmodern interpretation of the
providence of God through a narrative rendering of providence on
the basis of the epochal moments in the story of Jesus, a
distinctive modern reconstruction of the theology of providence
through a critical, non-reductionist interpretation of the Gospel
traditions on the one side, and contemporary narratives of lived
experience within the scientific understanding of the world on the
other. Significant theological problems have rendered the
reformulation of the doctrine of providence elusive and
unachievable for more than half a century. Beyond Karl Barths
neo-orthodox interpretation of providence within the Reformed
tradition in 1947 (Church Dogmatics: The Doctrine of Creation,
Volume III, Part 3), A Scandalous Providence is the first holistic
reconstruction of the doctrine of providence in modern, now
postmodern theology.
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