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The only gluten-free slow cooker cookbook available, from acclaimed
author Ellen Brown, featuring 150 original recipes. Celiac disease
shouldn't hold you back from the diversity of cooking! Whether you
are strictly wheat-free, or just watching your diet, this book is
the first of its kind, specializing in gluten-free slow cooking.
Ellen Brown, the author of the highly acclaimed Complete Idiot's
Guide to Slow Cooker Cooking and Gluten Free Christmas Cookies, has
created more than 150 new and original recipes for the first book
to meet the needs of anyone suffering from gluten intolerance.
The Sausage Cookbook is the world's most definitive and authoritative sausage cookbook!
Sausage is a food that can be made with everything from the finest meats to a large assortment of vegetables and grains. It can be flavored to be both savory and sweet. Best of all, it is “comfort food” – an ingredient that delivers flavorful satisfaction. The Complete Sausage Cookbook contains over 300 recipes that span an amazing array of international culinary traditions. Learn how to make a stunning variety of sausage, including many vegetarian options, and use it for easy grilling, or in stews and casseroles, and so much more. If you’ve ever thought about making sausage, the definitive Complete Sausage Cookbook is for you.
Focuses on skill-building to facilitate positive social change With
straightforward content enriched by practical and applicable
learning experiences, this comprehensive text prepares social work
students for careers in community organizing and macro practice. It
focuses on building the social work skills required for organizing
communities, including cause-based coalitions,
geographically/identity-based communities, and health and human
service organizations, to achieve culturally relevant, equity- and
justice-driven social change. The second edition presents new
information that includes self-care for the community practitioner,
social work grand challenges, cultural humility, community
dialogue, trauma-informed and resiliency-focused community
development, environmental justice, and many other topics.
Emphasizing community practice through the application of macro,
mezzo, and micro social work skills, the book uses frameworks drawn
from generalist social work practice as well as core competencies
identified by CSWE's EPAS. Its focus on a broad range of community
practice models makes it accessible to all social workers. The text
also highlights the importance of technology as a tool for social
work macro practice with skill-building activities. Vivid case
vignettes, applied and experiential learning activities, and team
and individual-based assignments reinforce content and emphasize
skill-building, along with abundant resources for further learning.
Purchase includes digital access for use on most mobile devices or
computers. New to the Second Edition: Presents a framework for
self-care for the community practitioner Highlights the importance
of community practitioner readiness, competency, and leadership
Introduces a new trauma-informed and resiliency-focused approach
for community development Discusses strategic compatibility for
interorganizational collaboration Introduces youth-based
participatory research and empowerment evaluations Key Features:
Focuses on skill-building for community engagement and organizing,
facilitating community dialogue, and conducting assessments Covers
planning and implementing community change initiatives and
evaluating and disseminating knowledge from change activities
Provides case vignettes to reinforce content and abundant resources
for additional learning Offers a complete ancillary package that
includes chapter PowerPoints, Test Bank, and an Instructor's Manual
with suggested individual and group activities and more
This encyclopedia examines the profound influence of folklore on literature. The more than 350 alphabetically arranged entries fall into four categories: writers and literary works that use folklore as a resource or source; concepts that make it easier to look at folklore and literature together; themes and characters that originated in oral literature but are also found in written literature; and scholars who have studied and contributed to the field of folklore and literature. The work concentrates on European and Western themes, including classical Greek and Roman. The introduction discusses the interest and connections between folklore and literature and ends with a bibliography".--"Outstanding Reference Sources : the 1999 Selection of New Titles", American Libraries, May 1999. Comp. by the Reference Sources Committee, RUSA, ALA.
"""This is ballad scholarship at its best." -- Wilhelm F.
Nicolaisen William Motherwell (l797-l835), journalist, poet,
man-of-letters, wit, civil servant, and outspoken conservative,
published his anthology of ballads, Minstrelsy: Ancient and Modern,
in l827. His views on authenticity, editorial practice, the nature
of oral transmission, and the importance of sung
performance--acquired through field collecting--anticipate much
later scholarly discourse. Published after the death of Burns and
the publication of Scott's Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border,
ballads such as those Motherwell collected were one focus of a
loose-knit movement that might be designated, cultural nationalism.
This interest in preserving relics that suggested a distinctly
Scottish culture and nation was one response to the union of the
Scottish and English Parliaments in l707. Mary Ellen Brown's study
provides a model for historical ethnography, focusing on an
individual and illustrating the multiple ways he was richly
embedded in his time and place.
Description: In this second volume of Master Kierkegaard, the
fictional German maidservant Magda continues to record her
relationship with Scripture, literature, and her elusive yet
compelling master. Three journals set in the fall, winter, and
""peoples"" spring of 1847 and 1848 reflect the precariousness of
Magda's position in the household and the rapidly changing social
landscape, at the same time as Kierkegaard began, revised, or
completed several of his most existential and prophetic works.
Endorsements: ""Through the changing of the seasons in a year of
revolutions, a maidservant reflects on the Bible . . . and the
anguish and hope of her master, the Danish philosopher Soren
Kierkegaard. Ellen Brown has crafted an understated, heartfelt, and
moving meditation on the enigmatic man, religion, the position of
women in society, and a life of exile and liberation."" --Marshall
Brown, Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of
Washington, editor of Modern Language Quarterly, and author of The
Shape of German Romanticism ""Readers of Magda's diary from the
summer of 1847 will be delighted with these journals, which
continue her life story alongside her continuing reflections on
Scripture, literature, and life. Like the first volume, this
collection is filled with spiritual insight and wisdom. The life
story takes a surprising turn, or was it to be expected? Magda's
characterization of Kierkegaard is poetic and convincing."" --Adela
Yarbro Collins, Buckingham Professor of New Testament Criticism and
Interpretation at Yale Divinity School About the Contributor(s):
Ellen Brown lives in Connecticut. Her publications prior to Master
Kierkegaard include essays on Percy Shelley's Prometheus Unbound
and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein."
Description: In this serial work of religious historical fiction,
Magda, a "fallen woman" from Berlin turned maidservant in the house
of Soren Kierkegaard, seeks the full life that has thus far eluded
her. Two journals set in the summer of 1847 record Magda's
responses to the Luther Bible, Goethe's Faust, and her elusive yet
compelling master, who is simultaneously crafting his Works of
Love. Three journals set in the fall, winter, and "people's spring"
of 1847 and 1848 reflect Magda's ongoing engagement with secular
and sacred writings, her sporadic yet intimate interactions with
her master, the precariousness of her position in his household,
and the rapidly changing social landscape, at the same time as
Kierkegaard begins, revises, or completes several of his most
existential and prophetic works. A sixth journal set in the summer
of 1848 reveals Magda's final disposition. Is she judged, or is she
saved? Endorsements: "Through the changing of the seasons in a year
of revolutions, a maidservant reflects on the Bible . . . and the
anguish and hope of her master, the Danish philosopher Soren
Kierkegaard. Ellen Brown has crafted an understated, heartfelt, and
moving meditation on the enigmatic man, religion, the position of
women in society, and a life of exile and liberation." --Marshall
Brown, Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of
Washington, editor of Modern Language Quarterly, and author of The
Shape of German Romanticism "Readers of Magda's diary from the
summer of 1847 will be delighted with these journals, which
continue her life story alongside her continuing reflections on
Scripture, literature, and life. Like the first volume, this
collection is filled with spiritual insight and wisdom. The life
story takes a surprising turn, or was it to be expected? Magda's
characterization of Kierkegaard is poetic and convincing." --Adela
Yarbro Collins, Buckingham Professor of New Testament Criticism and
Interpretation at Yale Divinity School About the Contributor(s):
Ellen Brown lives in Connecticut. Her publications prior to Master
Kierkegaard include essays on Percy Shelley's Prometheus Unbound
and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein.
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