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Showing 1 - 25 of
34 matches in All Departments
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Julius Caesar (Paperback)
Joseph Pearce, William Shakespeare
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R211
R180
Discovery Miles 1 800
Save R31 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Though a staple in high school English classes, Julius Caesar is
not a simple play. Seemingly irreconcilable forces are at work:
fate and free will, the changeableness and stubbornness of
ambitious men, the demands of public service and the desire for
private gain. Drawn from history as recorded by Plutarch, the major
characters-Caesar, Brutus, Cassius, and Mark Antony-are complex, as
are the twists and turns of their fortunes. What kind of man rises
to power? What price does he pay when he becomes a politician?
These questions raised by Shakespeare are relevant in every age,
whether ancient Rome, Elizabethan England, or even in our own day.
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Macbeth (Paperback)
Joseph Pearce, William Shakespeare
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R209
R179
Discovery Miles 1 790
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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By What Authority (Hardcover)
Robert Hugh Benson; Foreword by Joseph Pearce; Illustrated by Jerzy Ozga
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R939
Discovery Miles 9 390
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Articles on religion and the religious during the Victorian period,
showing its unity and disunity. The major themes of Catholic
historiography and the history of education during the Victorian
era unite the essays collected here, as is fitting for a volume
honouring the work in these fields of Professor Vincent Alan
McClelland.There is a particular emphasis upon the life and work of
Cardinal Manning; other figures and topics considered include
Father Randal Lythgoe, Cardinal Newman, the English Benedictine
contribution to the British Empire, modern Scottish Catholic
history, and Victorian Christianity in its various forms, as in the
essays on Methodism and the Church of Ireland.
The Merchant of Venice is probably the most controversial of all
Shakespeare's plays. It is also one of the least understood. Is it
a comedy or a tragedy? What is the meaning behind the test of the
caskets? Who is the real villain of the trial scene? Is Shylock
simply vicious and venomous, or is he more sinned against than
sinning? Can the play be described as anti-semitic? What exactly is
the quality of mercy? Is Portia one of the great Christian heroines
of western literature? And what of the comedy of the rings with
which Shakespeare ends the play? These questions and many others
are answered in this critical edition of one of the Bard's
liveliest plays.
Beauteous Truth explores the inextricable connection between the
Good, the True and the Beautiful. It is a book that makes the
necessary connections between faith and reason and between
theology, philosophy, history and literature. It presents a
panoramic overview of Western Civilization, from Homer to Tolkien,
and highlights the importance of the great figures of the Catholic
cultural revival, including Newman, Wilde, Chesterton, Belloc, and
C.S. Lewis. Ranging from Shakespeare to Solzhenitsyn, Beauteous
Truth celebrates the marriage of sanity and sanctity, which is the
fruit of the indissoluble union of fides et ratio. Early
ReviewsWhat we have here is a glorious and compendious portmanteau
of - well - of Everything, as it were. We have all long since
discovered that Joseph Pearce is a polymath. But he has outdone
himself with this volume. The subtitle is the cue: "Faith, Reason,
Literature, and Culture." And the text fulfills that promise.
Readers are in for a bracing itinerary that will take them from
Greek classicism through the Middle Ages, the Counter-Reformation,
the Romantic Movement, and into modernity. The presiding factor in
the whole thing is a robust Catholic orthodoxy. The author/guide
speaks with both authority and brio. This book qualifies for the
"Highly recommended" slot. - Thomas Howard (St. John's Seminary,
Boston, emer.) Joseph Pearce has not only written much on Catholic
letters but on the whole tradition of letters in our culture. In
this collection, he brings together his wide, amazingly wide
reflections and considerations on literature and what it really
stands for. While many paths to the highest things might be taken,
the literary path is perhaps the most pleasant and the most
engaging. Pearce not only draws us out, alerts us to authors who
speak to us, but he also opens doors to writers and themes in
Catholic and western literature that would be otherwise closed to
us without his sensitive guidance and insight. We have here the
whole of Pearce where he tells us everything about which he has
been thinking. It is a great contribution to our understanding of
reality, to the things that are." - James V. Schall, s.j.,
Georgetown University This interdisciplinary collection of essays
previously published in such journals as St. Austin Review, First
Things, and Chesterton Review provides rich food for thought on an
array of topics dealing with the intersection between beauty,
truth, culture, and Catholicism. Brief yet pithy, each essay can
stand alone, inviting wide ranging meditation on the modern
situation in light of history, literature, science, and religion.
Taken together, the essays offer an epic sweep of a culture at
crossroads urgently needing to reclaim the illumination of Christ.
This is a book to savor and return to, time and again. - Dr. Mary
Reichardt, Professor of Catholic Studies and Literature, The
University of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minn.
It's time for the way we think about our families, our schools, and our lives to evolve.This passionate and provocative critique of the way we raise our children and undermine our society's future delineates the ways in which we thart our creative progess, and reveals a new landscape of possibilities for the next step in human evolution. Brilliantly synthesizing twenty years of research into human intelligence, Joseph Chilton Pearce -- author of the bestsellers The Crack in the Cosmic Egg and Magical Child -- show how: • contemporary childbirth and daycare create a dangerous sense of alienation from the surrounding world • TV impedes vital neurological development • synthetic hormones in our foods foster premature sexual development, increasing the likelihood of pregnancy and rape • premature schooling contributes to potentially explosive frustration and rebellionThese everyday aspects of modern life have a cumulative effect, contributing to violence, child suicide, and deteriorating family and social structures. Proposing crucial yet simple solutions, Pearce persuasively argues that we have the power to get out of our own way and unleash, instead, our "unlimited", awesome, and unknown" human potential as the culmination of three billion years of evolution.
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