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In The Lyon Terence Giulia Torello-Hill and Andrew J. Turner take
an unprecedented interdisciplinary approach to map out the
influence of late-antique and medieval commentary and iconographic
traditions over this seminal edition of the plays of Terence,
published in Lyon in 1493, and examine its legacy. The work had a
profound impact on the way Terence's plays were read and understood
throughout the sixteenth century, but its influence has been poorly
recognised in modern scholarship. The authors establish the pivotal
role that this book, and its editor Badius, played in the
revitalisation of the theoretical understanding of classical comedy
and in the revival of the plays of Terence that foreshadowed the
establishment of early modern theatre in Italy and France.
This is a detailed, single volume analysis of Britain's changing
position in the world during the twentieth century. It places
British policy making in the appropriate domestic and international
contexts, offers an alternative to the more negative,
'decline'-obsessed assessments of Britain's role and influence in
global affairs. This book suggests that Britain's leaders did a
better job than some historians think. Michael Turner, in order to
understand why they took the options they did, investigates their
motives and aims within the international environment within which
they operated. >
The reasons why people arise to express dissatisfaction with their
present situation, and how they imagine and work towards an
alternative, have enduring relevance. The reform campaigns of
19th-century Britain are of interest not only in their own right,
but also because of what they reveal about processes of political
and social change. This book examines the personal, social,
political, ideological, and tactical components of radicalism in
Britain between the 1820s and 1860s, and casts new light on the
meaning, nature, and reception of reform during this period. The
main avenues of inquiry are provided by the career of Thomas
Perronet Thompson, a prominent MP, political economist, and writer
who helped to shape and articulate an "independent radicalism,"
which, with its distinctive commitments, outlook, and identity, has
not previously been defined or explained. By relating Thompson's
career to wider developments, and investigating the generation and
impact of "independent radicalism," this book deepens our
understanding of 19th-century British reformers and clarifies the
relationship between parliament and people and the extent to which
decisions taken at the top were made in response to--or in spite
of--pressure from below. Turner's findings will be of interest not
only to students of the past, but also to observers of current and
ongoing struggles between forces of conservatism and reform.
This volume in Oxford Medieval Text contains Eadmer's Lives of
Saints Oda, Dunstan, and Oswald, as well as the Miracles of Dunstan
and Oswald. These three English saints, together with AEthelwold of
Winchester, were key figures in the Benedictine revival of the
tenth century, which saw a flowering of Anglo-Saxon religious,
artistic, and literary culture. Eadmer of Canterbury
(c.1060-c.1130), the secretary, confidant, and biographer of Saint
Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury (1033-1109), was one of the most
important historians and biographers in the period after the Norman
Conquest. His works, written in Latin, look back constantly to the
Anglo-Saxon past, while at the same time they accurately reflect
the present-day realities of the wider European society into which
England had been forcibly integrated. Manuscripts of his Lives of
the Saints circulated widely in both in England and France, but
apart from his Life of Anselm they have been little studied, and
have remained largely untranslated. The works newly edited and
translated in this edition provide many insights into the wider
political history of the pre- and post-Conquest periods, as well as
important evidence for the cults of the saints in Canterbury and
Worcester.
Focusing on both spiritual and non-spiritual prayer, The Power of
Prayer presents a fresh and compelling examination of the
multiplicity of prayer. In this inspirational guide, author Syl J.
Turner provides guidance for unlocking the God-like power we all
possess and gives suggestions for improving the effectiveness of
traditional spiritual prayers.
The Power of Prayer examines the concept that we all pray in a
non-spiritual manner simply by thinking our everyday thoughts and
it explores the power of our thoughts and how they shape our
personality and influence our fate in life. Both a self-help book
and a spiritual growth guide, this book shows how our subconscious
is indeed our soul-the part of us that lives forever eternal-and
has access to universal knowledge and power.
By employing more than eighty suggestions for improving prayer
effectiveness, we can achieve greater success, an abundance of
happiness throughout our lives, and develop a closer relationship
with our Creator.
Shakespeare's late plays are a 'mixed bag' with a common theme:
from the fiendishly jealous Leontes to the saintly Pericles; from
the ineffectual Cymbeline to the omnipotent Propspero; from the
'sprites and goblins' of The Tempest to the famous bear of The
Winter's Tale, the characters have excited wonder and contempt
while the range of incident is almost irresponsibly extravagant.
Was Shakespeare losing his grip, or his interest, or both? Was he
striking out in some bold new theatrical direction? This Guide
provides a critical survey of the major debates and issues
surrounding the late plays, from the earliest published accounts to
the present day. Nicholas Potter offers a clear guiding narrative
and an exploration of literary history, focusing on how criticism
of these remarkable works, and attempts to make sense of them, have
developed over the years.
The events of 9/11 prompted questions as to the origins, nature and
purpose of international jihadist organisations. In particular, why
had they chosen to target the US and the West in general? Turner's
book provides a unique, holistic insight into these debates, taking
into account historical perceptions and ideology as key factors.
The book indentifies and assesses the importance of a range of
influences on child language acquisition and development, paying
particular attention to situational influences. Key issues are
highlighted and recent research is presented. There are five
sections: the deployment of speech during early development;
linguistic interaction and family background - encoding the
situation; multidimentional aspects of language development; and
constraints on language development. There are twelve chapters on
these themes.
Trauma in Medieval Society is an edited collection of articles from
a variety of scholars on the history of trauma and the traumatised
in medieval Europe. Looking at trauma as a theoretical concept, as
part of the literary and historical lives of medieval individuals
and communities, this volume brings together scholars from the
fields of archaeology, anthropology, history, literature, religion,
and languages. The collection offers insights into the physical
impairments from and psychological responses to injury, shock, war,
or other violence-either corporeal or mental. From biographical to
socio-cultural analyses, these articles examine skeletal and
archival evidence as well as literary substantiation of trauma as
lived experience in the Middle Ages. Contributors are Carla L.
Burrell, Sara M. Canavan, Susan L. Einbinder, Michael M. Emery,
Bianca Frohne, Ronald J. Ganze, Helen Hickey, Sonja Kerth, Jenni
Kuuliala, Christina Lee, Kate McGrath, Charles-Louis Morand
Metivier, James C. Ohman, Walton O. Schalick, III, Sally Shockro,
Patricia Skinner, Donna Trembinski, Wendy J. Turner, Belle S.
Tuten, Anne Van Arsdall, and Marit van Cant.
This Reader's Guide provides a critical survey of the responses to
this popular play, from the earliest published accounts to the
present day. Leading the reader through the material in a
chronological fashion, the book draws on a rich range of critical
writings, including Dr. Johnson, Coleridge, Bradley, and Leavis.
Nicholas Potter carefully relates this material to more general
issues regarding Shakespearean criticism and scholarship, and the
development of literary history and theory.
How can you make necessary professional judgments without being
judgmental? Assessment and diagnostic skills are essential
professional tools for the social worker, but all too often they
are neglected or downplayed. Diagnosis in Social Work argues for
the reinstatement of social diagnosis to its former place as an
essential concept in social work. This courageous book demonstrates
the detrimental impact of the loss of diagnostic skills on the
quality of social work intervention. Combining meticulous history
with insightful analysis, Diagnosis in Social Work shows how the
concept of diagnosis in social work has been misunderstood. It
examines the negative, narrow definition of diagnosis offered in
commonly used texts. Diagnosis in Social Work includes the tools
you need to use the power of correct, careful diagnosis, including:
case examples of social work diagnoses a thorough profile of the
judgments constituting a social work diagnosis suggestions to
enhance diagnostic acumen an analysis of diagnosis as a process and
a fact ways to use computers in diagnosis an assessment of the
risks of diagnosis Diagnosis in Social Work includes everything
social work practitioners need to know about the process and
meaning of this sorely neglected part of the field. It is an ideal
textbook as well, and it offers suggestions for further research.
This book examines six plays by Shakespeare ("Love's Labour's
Lost", "Hamlet", "As You Like It", "Twelfth Night", "The Winter's
Tale" and "The Tempest") as dramatizations of the Renaissance Court
in its developing history - a history searched by Shakespeare to
disclose its most characteristic gains and losses. For these plays
do not simply celebrate Tudor and Stuart rule: they scrutinize it
too, in the centre of its institutional theatre of power, the
Court. This book shows how, if the plays came into Court, the Court
also came into the plays, with its most salient features - its
competitiveness, its inner tensions and its contradictions, its
language, its cultural life and its entertainments - exposed to the
scrutiny of an art-form that proved itself to be a new mode of
historical understanding.
The Church of England and Victorian Oxford: The History of the
Oxford Churchmen's Union, 1860–1890 explores questions of how the
Victorian Church responded to challenges, what was the role of
Tractarian clergy and laity, and did the Church’s effort to prove
its continuing relevance and usefulness involve compromise? The
author uses the Oxford Churchmen’s Union to investigate these
matters in a new and integrated way. The OCU participated in Church
defense and developed outreach programs. Men were to be brought
into the Church through lectures and classes, concerts, sporting
events, Christmas parties, and summer excursions, but for many OCU
members, the social and recreational became more important than the
religious side of the enterprise. Moreover, the Union was born in
controversy, because its founders included Tractarians and others
looked upon it with suspicion. Controversy also surrounded the
OCU’s non-religious activities. There was a sense that leisure
and amusement, if they prompted a departure from a strict focus on
self-improvement, ought to be shunned, yet this was an age in which
pleasure was to some degree divested of its traditional association
with sin. This book is an academic study of the Union and Church
history that uses the Union to elucidate the religious, social, and
political conditions within which the Church and its supporters had
to operate.
This pioneering study shows what brought Yiddish-speaking Jewish
intelligentsia to the Communist movement in the interwar years.
They believed that Communism is not only a way to solve the Jewish
problem but also to save the Yiddish culture. Biography of the
central protagonist of the book, a Yiddish writer Dovid (David)
Sfard, is just a pretext to show a full range of Jewish Communist
activists (such as Hersh Smolar, Bernard Mark, Szymon Zachariasz,
etc.) and their life choices. This relatively small milieu
influenced and controlled the Jewish life in post-war Poland until
the anti-Semitic campaign of 1968. Their lives, reconstructed
thanks to sources in several languages, make up a panorama of
Jewish Communist experience in 20th-century Eastern Europe.
There is a long history of inventing illness, such as pretending to
be sick for attention, or accusing others of being ill. This volume
explores the art of illness, and the deceptions and truths around
health and bodies, from a multiplicity of angles from antiquity to
the present. The chapters, which are based on primary-source
evidence ranging from antiquity to the late twentieth century, are
divided into three sections. The first part explores how the idea
of faking illness was understood and conceptualized across multiple
fields, locations, and time periods. The second part uses case
studies to emphasize the human element of those at the center of
these narratives and how their behavior was shaped by societal
attitudes. The third part investigates the development of
regulations and laws governing malingering and malingerers. All
together, they paint a picture of humans doing human
actions—cheating, lying, stealing, but also hiding, surviving,
working. This book’s careful, accessible scholarship is a
valuable resource for academics, scientists, and the sophisticated
undergraduate audience interested in malingering narratives
throughout history.
The unifying theme of this broad-reaching volume is that
responsible, ethical, and effective social work practice rests on
the diagnostic skills of the practitioner. Social work diagnosis
refers to the conscious formulation of an ongoing set of decisions
about the client and his or her situation, which serve as the basis
for intervention-decisions for which the practitioner must be
prepared to take responsibility. Diagnostic skill development is an
ongoing process principally enhanced by a continuous commitment to
remain at the cutting edge of the profession's body of knowledge,
but one of the challenges for today's practitioner is keeping
abreast of the rapidly expanding body of knowledge contained in
some 200 important social work periodicals in circulation. Francis
J. Turner, a preeminent clinical scholar, brings together in one
volume some of the best work published since 2000, each reflecting
new insights into understanding psychosocial situations and
innovative methods of applying knowledge and skills in an
increasingly effective manner. Each of the 78 articles in this
volume highlights some of the critical dimensions of contemporary
social work practice, guiding clinicians to address four key
aspects in order to craft an accurate diagnosis. The first section
presents articles covering the developmental spectrum, each of
which fully explains various ages and stages of development. The
second section focuses on a range of specific situations, helping
practitioners and students enrich their understanding of different
types of problems they meet in contemporary practice, whether they
are based in mental illness, psychosocial issues, or physical
ailments. The third section addressesthe crucial component of
diversity, demonstrating the complexity and critical importance of
truly understanding clients and their lives. The last section of
the book discusses innovative approaches to practice, selected to
offer practitioners easy access to the latest interventions for a
host of contemporary challenges facing clients and their
therapists. Broad in scope and tightly focused on the goal of
providing the most up-to-date information necessary for accuracy in
the diagnostic process, this volume represents some of the best
research available to today's social workers.
The UK Catalysis Hub is a consortium of universities working
together on fundamental and applied research to find out how
catalysts work and to improve their effectiveness. The contribution
of catalysis to manufacturing contributes to almost 40% of global
GDP, making development and innovation within the field integral to
industry.Modern Developments in Catalysis, Volume 2 provides a
review and update of current research and practice on catalysis.
Topics range from the treatment of water using novel techniques for
carbon neutrality, cutting-edge techniques using intense radiation
including Operando Synchrotron Infrared Microspectroscopy to
innovation in homogeneous catalysis, heterogeneous catalysis and
biocatalysis. Edited by leaders of the UK Hub, this book provides
insight into one of the most important areas of modern chemistry -
it represents a unique learning opportunity for students and
professionals studying and working towards speeding up, improving
and increasing the rate of catalytic reactions in science and
industry.
This book presents a framework for the linguistic analysis of
speech and a computer program to process the results of this
analysis. The model of description for the linguistic analysis is
that known as 'scale-and-category' grammar. It is particularly
suited for a study of how people use their language, and especially
for a sociologically-oriented study of linguistic behaviour. By
incorporating a concept of 'delicacy', it enables the investigator
to vary, according to his particular interests, the amount of
detail he enters into at various points in the description. The
present authors have made use of this facility and discuss the
special interests, sociological and psychological, that influenced
their choice of detail. The computer program analyzes the
grammatical structures written in a linear notation. A second
version has been written which allows easy modification to handle a
variety of grammatical schemes, and the program has application to
the processing of the analysis of sequential behaviour in general,
especially where there are complex relations between the units
analyzed.
This book draws on world-wide experiences and valuable lessons to
highlight community-ecosystem interactions and the role of
traditional knowledge in sustaining biocultural resources through
community-based adaptations. The book targets different audiences
including researchers working on human-environment interactions and
climate adaptation practices, biodiversity conservators,
non-government organizations and policy makers involved in
revitalizing traditional foods and community-based conservation and
adaptation in diverse ecosystems. This volume is also a source book
for educators advocating for and collaborating with indigenous and
local peoples to promote location-specific adaptations to overcome
the impacts of multiple biotic and abiotic stresses. Note: T&F
does not sell or distribute the hardback in India, Pakistan, Nepal,
Bhutan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. This title is co-published with
NIPA.
This book is a comprehensive survey of the climatology and
meteorology of Antarctica. The first section of the book reviews
the methods by which we can observe the Antarctic atmosphere and
presents a synthesis of climatological measurements. In the second
section, the authors consider the processes that maintain the
observed climate, from large-scale atmospheric circulation to
small-scale processes. The final section reviews our current
knowledge of the variability of Antarctic climate and the possible
effects of "greenhouse" warming. The authors stress links among the
Antarctic atmosphere, other elements of the Antarctic climate
system (oceans, sea ice and ice sheets), and the global climate
system. This volume will be of greatest interest to meteorologists
and climatologists with a specialized interest in Antarctica, but
it will also appeal to researchers in Antarctic glaciology,
oceanography and biology. Graduates and undergraduates studying
physical geography, and the earth, atmospheric and environmental
sciences will find much useful background material in the book.
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