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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Leading physicians and scientists from around the world critically
examine the pharmacological and molecular basis of the therapeutic
properties of marihuana and its active ingredient, THC. They detail
the broad array of marihuana's effects on brain function, the
immune system, male and female reproductive functions, and cardiac
and pulmonary functions, as well as evaluate its clinical
applications in psychiatry, glaucoma, pain management, cancer
chemotherapy, and AIDS treatment. Their studies indicate that
marihuana persistently impairs the brain and reproductive function,
and that marihuana smoke is more toxic and damaging to the lung
than tobacco smoke. Marihuana and Medicine's reports of the latest
findings on the pharmacological and molecular mechanisms of
marihuana and of its clinical manifestations will be essential
reading for physicians, psychiatrists, pharmacologists, health-care
professionals, policy makers, public health officials, and
attorneys.
Thomas Clayton Gurley loses his mother, father, and sister to a
tragic car accident when he is only fifteen. With no family to care
for him, he's forced to live with the dreaded "Bastard Boats," his
father's half brother. Boats seems to have a vendetta against young
T. C., and it goes back to T. C.'s parents, although T. C. isn't
sure why.
In a new town, at a new school, under a hostile roof, T. C. has
to fight to survive. He joins up with the high school football team
just to get out of the house. He makes friends and begins to
experience new things-notably drugs, music, and girls. All the
time, though, Boats is on his back. There's a light at the end of
the tunnel when T. C. is taken in by Buck and Rosie Hagan, a local
foreman and his wife.
Even so, T. C. is haunted by the loss of his family and the
oppressive Boats. Something criminal is going down in their tiny
Oklahoma town, and Boats is at the center of it. As T. C. grows
into a man, he begins to realize the danger Boats could bring upon
the Hagans and T. C.'s group of friends. Boats's involvement with a
corrupt business cartel could cost lives, and T. C.-once an
innocent-will have to stand strong to protect the people he has
come to love.
What does it mean to "be white"? Harvey asks this question in order
to consider how white U.S. Americans can fully participate in
racial justice-making. Exploring native, African, and white
relations at two moments of U.S. history, she illustrates how
"white" identities are embodiments of deeply problematic moral
realities. She argues that movements for reparations for people of
African descent and sovereignty for native peoples attempt to
redress such realities and thus are critical for both racial
justice and transformation of what it means to be white in the
United States.
A wide overview of court culture in the middle ages. The court
exercised an enormous amount of influence on the culture of the
middle ages, as the essays collected here demonstrate. They examine
a wide variety of different areas of medieval courtly culture, from
the history of the book through courtly music to the theory of
courtesy and courtly love. While some authors deal with the central
texts of courtly literature, such as Castiglione's Book of the
Courtier, Marie de France's Lais, the romances of Chretien de
Troyes, Wolfram von Eschenbach, Gottfried von Strassburg, and the
corpus of courtly lyric in various languages, others consider
less-studied works like Galeran de Bretagne, or the French version
of the Disciplina Clericalis. Several contributions take a
comparative approach to courtly texts outside the Western
tradition, while others point to the courtly nature of chronicle
literature and to courtly influences on religious-didactic works.
The volume as a whole thus presents an overview of medieval court
culture. Contributors: GLORIA ALLAIRE, LAURA D. BAREFIELD, ANNE
BERTHELOT, BERT BEYNEN, JEAN BLACKER, WALTER BLUE, MAUREEN BOULTON,
FRANKBRANDSMA, EMMA CAYLEY, MARCO CEROCCHI, CHRISTOPHER R. CLASON,
ALAIN CORBELLARI, IVY A. CORFIS, PAUL CREAMER, EVELYN DATTA, JUDITH
M. DAVIS, FIDEL FAJARDO-ACOSTA, YASMINA FOEHR-JANSSENS, STACY L.
HAHN, CAROL HARVEY, C. STEPHEN JAEGER, KATHY M. KRAUSE, JUNE HALL
MCCASH, MATTHIAS MEYER, EDWARD J. MILOWICKI, JEANNE A. NIGHTINGALE,
CHRISTOPHER PAGE, ANA PAIRET, WENDY PFEFFER, RUPERT T. PICKENS,
MARIA PREDELLI, SILVIA RANAWAKE, PAUL ROCKWELL, SAMUEL, N.
ROSENBERG, JUDITH RICE ROTHSCHILD, MARY ROUSE, RICHARD ROUSE,
MARIANNE SANDELS, SUSAN STAKEL, ALEXANDRA STERLING-HELLENBRAND,
JOSEPH M. SULLIVAN, YUKO TAGAYA, RICHARD TRACHSLER, ADRIAN TUDOR,
MARION UHLIG, LORI J. WALTERS, LOGAN E. WHALEN, VALERIE M. WILHITE,
MONICA L. WRIGHT.
Studies of women's roles in the secular literary world, as patrons,
authors, readers, and characters in secular literature. This second
volume of proceedings from the `Women and the Book' conference,
held at St Hilda's College, Oxford in 1993, brings together fifteen
papers dealing with women's experience in the secular literary
world. It covers the whole variety of roles women might take, as
patrons, authors, readers, and characters in secular literature;
encompassed in its range are well-known characters, real and
fictional, such as Christine de Pisan and the Wife of Bath, and the
more obscure but no less fascinating topic of women in Chinese
medieval court poetry. Like its predecessor Women, the Book, and
the Godly(Brewer, 1995), this volume illuminates the world of
medieval women with carefulscholarship and attention to sources,
producing new readings and new materials which shed fresh light on
an increasingly important field of study. Contributors: PATRICIA
SKINNER, PHILIP E. BENNETT, JENNIFER GOODMAN, CHARITY
CANNON-WILLARD, BENJAMIN SEMPLE, ANNE BIRRELL, JEANETTE BEER, MARK
BALFOUR, CAROL HARVEY, HEATHER ARDEN, KAREN JAMBECK, JULIA BOFFEY,
JENNIFER SUMMIT, MARGARITA STOCKER
In the early days of television, "comedy" often meant stale
vaudeville routines and stand-up. Then, in 1950, a new
comedy-variety show debuted on NBC--Your Show of Shows. Its gifted
and mercurial star, Sid Caesar, talented ensemble cast and superb
writing staff--including Mel Brooks, Neil Simon, Lucille Kallen and
Mel Tolkin--would create comedy designed for the new medium and
provide a template for successful shows that followed. With rare
illustrations and the most complete sketch guide yet compiled, this
book highlights Caesar's reputation as a brilliant comic actor and
describes the writing and production of the weekly live broadcast
that kept 60 million TV viewers home on Saturday nights.
This book discusses how civilized oppression (the oppression that
involves neither violence nor the law) can be overcome by
re-examining our participation in it. Moral community, solidarity
and education are offered as vibrant strategies to overcome the
hurt and marginalization that stem from civilized oppression.
This collection of original essays by prominent scholars of
political theory contends that contemporary ideas of feminism have
reached a theoretical impasse because they are unable to reconcile
tensions between principles such as equality and difference.
Finding A New Feminism places modern concepts of feminism within
the historical context of political thought and uses feminism as a
lens through which to examine the strengths and weaknesses of
liberal democracy, both in practice and in theory. By reconsidering
classic works of literature, philosophy, and political theory, the
authors identify certain deficiencies of liberal democracy but do
not call for its complete abandonment. Instead, they present a new
theory of feminism that fosters the reconciliation of conflicting
and competing principles, as well as the private and public realms
of women's lives. This is compulsory reading for students and
scholars of political and feminist theory.
The expression of cultural differences in medieval courtly
literature explored. Cultural differences in medieval European
literary practice are reflected in many different ways, as this
volume illustrates. The essays cover a whole range of courtly
topics, in particular questions of context, genre and poetic voice.
The five sections explore contexts for courtliness, especially the
position of the vernacular poet at or near the court; the ways in
which courtly values and political aspirations are reflected in the
work of medieval chronicle and romance writers; questions of
register, convention, gender, and narrative technique; problems of
literary production and reception, particularly the transmission of
courtly and quasi-courtly texts among widely differing medieval
audiences; and broader issues such as the clues to the courtly
mentality provided by peripheral narrative details, the blurring of
conventional courtly boundaries, and the perennial fascination of
tales with strong folklore or fabliau elements. Dr EVELYN MULLALLY
and Dr JOHN THOMPSON are Senior Lecturers at the Queen's University
of Belfast. Contributors: GEAROID MAC EOIN, NOLLAIG O MURA-LE,
RUPERT T. PICKENS, FRANCOISE LE SAUX, CATHERINE LEGLU, BARBARA N.
SARGENT-BAUR, AD PUTTER, MICHEL ZINK, DONALD MADDOX, JEANBLACKER,
SARA STURM-MADDOX, MICHELLE SZKIILNIK, THEA SUMMERFIELD, HELEN
COOPER JOHN SCATTERGOOD, JUNE HALL MCCASH, JOAN BRUMLIK, LESLIE C.
BROOKMAUREEN BOULTON, JESSICA COOKE, DIANE M. WRIGHT, G. KOOLEMANS
BEYNEN, LORI J. WALTERS, SYLVIA WRIGHT, FRANK BRANDSMA, CARTER
REVARD, A S G EDWARDS, HEATHER COLLIER, TERENCE SCULLY, CHRISTOPHER
KLEINHENZ, SARA I. JAMES, WILLIAM MACBAIN, SARA I. JAMES, MARY B.
SPEER, YASMINA FOEHR-JANSSENS, CAROL J. HARVEY, BART BESAMUSCA,
KEITH BUSBY
Based on research of his family history and 600 pages of HBC
Archived logbooks, Robert Harvey shows, rather than tells, the tale
of historical HBC Captain James Gaudin and his voyages between
London and the New World in the latter half of the 19th century.
This eloquently written, wonderfully detailed and historically
accurate fictional account of the early days of the HBC is
mesmerising and enlightening.
A story about a father who likes to sing. He sings a low b note but
he bullfrog in the garden sings even lower. He has his children
remove the bullfrog from the garden and then the fun begins.
This book discusses how civilized oppression (the oppression that
involves neither violence nor the law) can be overcome by
re-examining our participation in it. Moral community, solidarity
and education are offered as vibrant strategies to overcome the
hurt and marginalization that stem from civilized oppression.
Leading physicians and scientists from around the world critically
examine the pharmacological and molecular basis of the therapeutic
properties of marihuana and its active ingredient, THC. They detail
the broad array of marihuana's effects on brain function, the
immune system, male and female reproductive functions, and cardiac
and pulmonary functions, as well as evaluate its clinical
applications in psychiatry, glaucoma, pain management, cancer
chemotherapy, and AIDS treatment. Their studies indicate that
marihuana persistently impairs the brain and reproductive function,
and that marihuana smoke is more toxic and damaging to the lung
than tobacco smoke. Marihuana and Medicine's reports of the latest
findings on the pharmacological and molecular mechanisms of
marihuana and of its clinical manifestations will be essential
reading for physicians, psychiatrists, pharmacologists, health-care
professionals, policy makers, public health officials, and
attorneys.
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