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Erebus (Paperback)
Elizabeth Lewis Williams
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R327
Discovery Miles 3 270
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Hank Willis Thomas: All Things Being Equal presents a survey of the
artist's prolific and extraordinary interdisciplinary career, with
a particular focus on the work's relationship to the photographic
image and to issues of representation and perception. At the core
of Hank Willis Thomas's practice, is his ability to parse and
critically dissect the flow of images that comprises American
culture, and to do so with particular attention to race, gender,
and cultural identity. Other powerful themes include the
commodification of identity through popular media, sports, and
advertising. In the ten years since his first publication, Pitch
Blackness , Thomas has established himself as a significant voice
in contemporary art, equally at home with collaborative,
trans-media projects such as Question Bridge, Philly Block, and For
Freedoms as he is with high-profile, international solo
exhibitions. This extensive presentation of his work contextualizes
the material with incisive essays from Portland Art Museum curators
Julia Dolan and Sara Krajewski and art historian Sarah Elizabeth
Lewis, and an in-depth interview between Dr. Kellie Jones and the
artist that elaborates on Thomas's influences and inspirations.
Between 1651 and 1740 hundreds of fables, fable collections, and biographies of the ancient Greek slave Aesop were published in England. Jayne Elizabeth Lewis decribes the explosion of interest in fable from its origins at the end of the English Civil Wars to its decline, and shows how three Augustan writers--John Dryden, Anne Finch and John Gay--experimented with fable as a literary form. Often underestimated because of its links with popular nonliterary forms, fable is shown to have played a major role in the formation of the modern English culture.
Examine group work's roots and fundamental beliefs to get a glimpse
of the future For more than 80 years, social group work has
survived difficult timesa testament to the persistence of its
practitioners as well as the strength of its methods. Growth and
Development Through Group Work chronicles the evolution of this
groundbreaking practice through a collection of peer-reviewed
papers presented at the 23rd Annual International Symposium on
Social Work with Groups. The book examines practice, policy, and
education issues in specific settings and populations from both
theoretical and historical perspectives. Presented in the wake of
the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York City and Washington,
DC, the papers that comprise Growth and Development Through Group
Work reflect a heightened awareness of the importance of social
action group worknow, and in the future. The book represents the
best of social work's tradition of social reform and concern for
oppressed people, never straying far from the concept of the group,
with its multiple helping relationships, as the primary source of
change. A comprehensive overview of the field in international,
intercultural, and cross-gender contexts, Growth and Development
Through Group Work is equally effective for coursework or
independent reading. Topics addressed in Growth and Development
Through Group Work include: contributions of the late Ruby B.
Pernell to the development of social group work research in support
of group work education and practice group work in Germany-its
development from American roots and its current advances social
justice as a major objective of group work practice teaching group
work mutual aid in support groups for particularly sensitive health
problems psychoeducational group work contributions from Hull House
as guides for the future of social group work Growth and
Development Through Group Work is an invaluable resource for
clinicians, neighborhood and community activists, educators and
students, researchers, therapists, administrators, and anyone
working in policy and/or program development.
Between 1651 and 1740 hundreds of fables, fable collections, and
biographies of the ancient Greek slave Aesop were published in
England. In The English Fable, Jayne Elizabeth Lewis describes the
national obsession with Aesop's fables during this period as both a
figural response to sociopolitical crises, and an antidote to
emerging anxieties about authorship. Lewis traces the role that
fable collections, Augustan fable theory, and debates about the
figure of Aesop played in the formation of a modern, literate, and
self-consciously English culture, and shows how three Augustan
writers - John Dryden, Anne Finch, and John Gay - experimented with
the seemingly marginal symbolic form of fable to gain access to new
centres of English culture. Often interpreted as a discourse of the
dispossessed, the fable in fact offered Augustan writers access to
a unique form of cultural authority.
Architecture 2030; BUG; Biophilic Design; BIPV; Circular Economy;
LEED; Passive Design; Solar Chimney; Systems Thinking; WELL;
Xeriscaping. What does it all mean? The complex and evolving
language used in the sustainable design community can be very
challenging, particularly to those new to environmentally friendly
and resource-efficient design strategies that are needed today.
Definitions of over two hundred terms with further sources. Clearly
cross-referenced with Sustainaspeak, Theoryspeak, and Archispeak
terms. Illustrated throughout with sustainable award-winning
buildings by e.g. Behnisch, Brooks + Scarpa, EHDD,
KieranTimberlake, Lake|Flato, Leddy Mahtum Stacy, SmithGroup,
Perkins+Will, ZGF, VMDO, and McDonough + Partners. Sustainaspeak: A
Guide to Sustainable Design Terms provides a current guide to the
sustainable design strategies, terms, and practices needed for the
next generation of designers, architects, students, and community
leaders to design a carbon-neutral world for future generations.
In "Air's Appearance", Jayne Elizabeth Lewis enlists her readers in
pursuit of the elusive concept of atmosphere in literary works. She
shows how diverse conceptions of air in the eighteenth century
converged in British fiction, producing the modern literary sense
of atmosphere and moving novelists to explore the threshold between
material and immaterial worlds. "Air's Appearance" links the
emergence of literary atmosphere to changing ideas about air and
the earth's atmosphere in natural philosophy, as well as to the
era's theories of the supernatural and fascination with social
manners - or, as they are now known, "airs". Lewis thus offers a
striking new interpretation of several standard features of the
Enlightenment - the scientific revolution, the decline of magic,
character-based sociability, and the rise of the novel - that
considers them in terms of the romance of air that permeates and
connects them. As it explores key episodes in the history of
natural philosophy and in major literary works like "Paradise
Lost", "The Rape of the Lock", "Robinson Crusoe", and "The
Mysteries of Udolpho", this book promises to change the atmosphere
of eighteenth-century studies and the history of the novel.
Architecture 2030; BUG; Biophilic Design; BIPV; Circular Economy;
LEED; Passive Design; Solar Chimney; Systems Thinking; WELL;
Xeriscaping. What does it all mean? The complex and evolving
language used in the sustainable design community can be very
challenging, particularly to those new to environmentally friendly
and resource-efficient design strategies that are needed today.
Definitions of over two hundred terms with further sources. Clearly
cross-referenced with Sustainaspeak, Theoryspeak, and Archispeak
terms. Illustrated throughout with sustainable award-winning
buildings by e.g. Behnisch, Brooks + Scarpa, EHDD,
KieranTimberlake, Lake|Flato, Leddy Mahtum Stacy, SmithGroup,
Perkins+Will, ZGF, VMDO, and McDonough + Partners. Sustainaspeak: A
Guide to Sustainable Design Terms provides a current guide to the
sustainable design strategies, terms, and practices needed for the
next generation of designers, architects, students, and community
leaders to design a carbon-neutral world for future generations.
Religion in Enlightenment England introduces its readers to a rich
array of BritishChristian texts published between 1660 and 1750.
The anthology documents the arc of Christian writings from the
reestablishment of the Church of England to the rise of the
Methodist movement in the middle of the eighteenth century. The
Enlightenment era witnessed the explosion ofmass print culture and
the unprecedented expansion of literacy across society. These
changes transformed many inherited Christian genresasuch as the
sermon and the devotional manualawhile also generating new ones,
from the modern church hymn to spiritual autobiography. The authors
included in this collection confronted the rise of modern science
and forged new rules of modern toleration.Their writing reveals the
unprecedented spiritual authority assumed by women and helps
explain how emotion moved to the center of religious experience.
Religion in Enlightenment England captures the literary energy and
excitement unleashed by the Enlightenment itself: authorsengageone
another in spirited dialogue that pits reason against revelation,
religious conformity against dissent, innovation against tradition,
andFreethinking against natural religion. An indispensable asset
for any scholar's library, the anthology includes texts by William
Law, John Bunyan, Elizabeth Singer Rowe, John and Charles Wesley,
Richard Baxter, John Toland, Mary Astell, Daniel Defoe, John
Norris, Margaret Fell Fox, Isaac Watts, Thomas Traherne, John
Tillotson, William Penn, and Anne Conway.
A dynamic look at the vast creative production of contemporary
women artists from around the globe A celebration of the work of
women artists of color, this book explores the ways in which
struggles for freedom and equality are deeply intertwined with
shared feminist practices, art techniques and movements, and the
notion of diaspora through the extraordinary collection of social
activist and patron Eileen Harris Norton. Featuring work by Sonia
Boyce, Maya Lin, Julie Mehretu, Shirin Neshat, Adrian Piper, Faith
Ringgold, Kara Walker, Carrie Mae Weems, and many others, All These
Liberations draws out the intimate connections among artist,
collector, and the social worlds that surround them. For nearly
five decades, Harris Norton has championed both artists and
curators of color, helping to reshape museum practice and the
surrounding art market. Â Essays in this volume by art
historians and curators address vital political, social, and
personal issues, as well as topics such as spirituality, domestic
life, memory and historical trauma, the body, intimacy, power
dynamics, and violence toward women. The book also features an
interview with Harris Norton by Thelma Golden, director and chief
curator at the Studio Museum in Harlem; a foreword by artist Lorna
Simpson; and a roundtable conversation among leaders in the art
world discussing Harris Norton’s impact on their careers and on
the careers of contemporary women artists globally. Distributed for
Marquand Books Â
Lorenzo of Sarzana is set in Genoa, Italy, exploring life among
expatriot art students.
With Explanatory Notes, Accompanied By A Memoir, Embracing The
Period From The Close Of Personal Recollections To Her Death.
With Explanatory Notes, Accompanied By A Memoir, Embracing The
Period From The Close Of Personal Recollections To Her Death.
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R383
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Discovery Miles 3 100
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