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Counterterrorism laws and policies have become a normalized fixture
of security agendas across the globe. How do 'us/them' identity
constructions contribute to the legitimizing strategies surrounding
this development? The British case provides a historically-situated
illustration which is of ongoing significance for security and
insecurity today.
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Primers Volume One, 1 (Paperback)
Geraldine Clarkson, Maureen Cullen, Katie Griffiths, Lucy Ingrams; Edited by Kathryn Maris, …
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R294
R234
Discovery Miles 2 340
Save R60 (20%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Medieval Clothing and Textiles 8 (Hardcover)
Robin Netherton, Gale R. Owen-Crocker; Contributions by Brigitte Haas-Gebhard, Britt Nowak-Boeck, Chyrstel Brandenburgh, …
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R1,786
Discovery Miles 17 860
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Pan-European research on medieval clothing and textiles, drawing
from a range of disciplines. This volume continues the series'
tradition of bringing together work on clothing and textiles from
across Europe. It has a strong focus on gold: subjects include
sixth-century German burials containing sumptuous jewellery and
bands brocaded with gold; the textual evidence for recycling such
gold borders and bands in the later Anglo-Saxon period; and a
semantic classification of words relating to gold in multi-lingual
medieval Britain. It also rescues significant archaeological
textiles from obscurity: there is a discussion of early medieval
headdresses from The Netherlands, and an examination of a
fifteenth-century Italian cushion, an early example of piecework.
Finally, uses of dress and textiles in literature are explored in a
survey of the Welsh Mabinogion and Jean Renart's Roman de la Rose.
Robin Netherton is a professional editor and a researcher/lecturer
on the interpretationof medieval European dress; Gale R.
Owen-Crocker is Professor of Anglo-Saxon Culture at the University
of Manchester. Contributors: Brigitte Haas-Gebhard, Britt
Nowak-Boeck, Maren Clegg Hyer, Louise Sylvester,
ChrystelBrandenburgh, Lisa Evans, Patricia Williams, Katherine
Talarico.
It whispers, it sings, it rocks, and it howls. It expresses the
voice of the folk the open road, freedom, protest and rebellion,
youth and love. It is the acoustic guitar. And over the last five
decades it has become a quintessential American icon. Because this
musical instrument is significant to so many in ways that are
emotional, cultural, and economic guitar making has experienced a
renaissance in North America, both as a popular hobby and, for
some, a way of life.
"I never felt he left me or our marriage or the children. I felt he
was leaving the farm problems". These words are from a woman
reflecting on the farm crisis of the 1980s, the greatest economic
disaster to hit rural America since the Depression. During this
period, hundreds of thousands of farmers lost their farms and farm
communities were irrevocably altered. As Kathryn Dudley
demonstrates in this book, the crisis gave rise to a devastating
social trauma that continues to affect farmers today. Through
interviews with residents of an agricultural county in western
Minnesota, Dudley chronicles the experience of financial failure in
a culture that extols the virtues of independent business
management, competitive production and middle-class
self-sufficiency. Media images of the farm crisis fostered the
impression that a majority of farmers banded together to protest
the forced sales of neighbouring farms. Dudley counters this
misleading view with her perceptive analysis of the local "culture
of suspicion" that rejects political activism, discourages
solidarity among neighbours and regards deeply indebted farmers as
bad managers who deserve to lose their farms. Farming as a way of
life turns out to be not a cultural refuge from the impersonal
forces of capitalism, but emblematic of the very spirit of
enterprise that animates a market-oriented society. With its focus
on the moral dimension of economic loss and dislocation, this book
raises far-reaching social questions: What does it take to be
middle class in America? What kind of community is possible in a
capitalist society?
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Medieval Clothing and Textiles 11 (Hardcover)
Robin Netherton, Gale R. Owen-Crocker; Contributions by Brigitte Haas-Gebhard, Britt Nowak-Böck, Chyrstel Brandenburgh, …
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R1,796
Discovery Miles 17 960
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A wide-ranging and varied collection of essays which examine
surviving garments, methods of production and clothes in society.
The second decade of this acclaimed and popular series begins with
a volume that will be essential reading for historians and
re-enactors alike. Two papers consider cloth manufacture in the
early medieval period: Ingvild Øye examines the graves of
prosperous Viking Age women from Western Norway which contained
both textile-making tools and the remains of cloth, considering the
relationship between the two. Karen Nicholson compliments this with
practical experiments in spinning. This is followed by Tina
Anderlini's close examination of the details of cut and
construction of a thirteenth-century chemise attributed to King
Louis IX of France (St Louis), out of its shrine for the firsttime
since 1970. Three papers consider fashionable clothing and
morality: Sarah-Grace Heller discusses sumptuary legislation from
Angevin Sicily in the 1290s which sought to restrict men's dress at
a time when preparation for war was more important than showy
clothes; Cordelia Warr examines the dire consequences of a woman
dressing extravagantly as portrayed in a fourteenth-century Italian
fresco; and Emily Rozier discusses the extremes of dress attributed
by moral and satirical writers to the men known as "galaunts". Two
textual studies then show the importance of textiles in daily life.
Susan Powell reveals the austere but magnificent purchases made on
behalf of Lady Margaret Beaufort, mother of King Henry VII, in the
last ten years of her life (1498-1509); Anna Riehl Bertolet
discusses in detail the passage in Shakespeare's A Midsummer
Night's Dream where Helena passionately recalls sewinga sampler
with Hermia when they were young and still bosom friends.
Spirits for the Mind and Body contains 2101 Cocktail and Alcoholic
Beverages in such categories as Beer Mug, Brandy Snifter,
Champagne, Cocktail, Collins, Coupette, Highball, Irish Mug,
Old-Fashioned, Pousse-Cafe, Punch Bowl, Red Wine, Shot Glass,
Whiskey Sour, and White Wine.
A collection of 72 great tasting recipes for the chili lover in all
of us.
A neurotically funny collection that looks under the hood of adult
life As in life, she was a pain in the arse in death. He could hear
her roaring all the way from the fifth circle, 'Why the hell do you
get to be in a better circle than me, I'm wrathful because of your
lust -' Deploying a chorus of voices both ancient and modern to
explore a world of sexual politics and singles cruises,
dysfunctional families and psychoanalysis, awkward cohabitations
and self-help guides for the would-be Dream Girl, this is the third
collection from a unique poetic talent: observant, obsessive and
wickedly witty. 'The funniest book I've read in years. Maris flexes
her wit and wisdom to create a litany of nervous characters in a
style that's mordant, sarcastic, satiric yet often compassionate .
. . a poet of risk, she is dark, deep and often laugh out loud'
DALJIT NAGRA 'Her dry, droll, clinically deadpan manner is all her
own; but her themes - obscure hurts, implacable dissatisfactions,
hardwired propensity for victimhood and suffering - reflect the
experience of humanity at large' CHRISTOPHER REID
An evocative and powerful portrait of America in transition, The
End of the Line tells the story of what the 1988 closing of the
Chrysler assembly plant in Kenosha, Wisconsin, meant to the people
who lived in that company town. Since the early days of the
twentieth century, Kenosha had forged its identity and politics
around the interests of the auto industry. When nearly six thousand
workers lost their jobs in the shutdown, the community faced not
only a serious economic crisis but also a profound moral one. In
this innovative study, Dudley describes the painful, often
confusing process of change that residents of Kenosha, like the
increasing number of Americans who are caught in the crossfire of
deindustrialization, were forced to undergo. Through interviews
with displaced autoworkers and Kenosha's community leaders,
high-school counselors, and a rising class of upwardly mobile
professionals, Dudley dramatizes the lessons Kenoshans drew from
the plant shutdown. When economic forces intrude on our lives, the
resulting changes in earning power, status, and access to
opportunity affect our sense of who we are, what we are worth, the
nature of the world we live in, and in particular, what it takes to
succeed. Dudley examines how ideas about self-worth - especially
those based on market ideologies of competition and the Darwinian
notion that only the fittest survive - become the subject of
intense cultural conflict. Dudley describes a community in conflict
with itself: while Kenosha's autoworkers struggle to regain an
economic foothold and make sense of their suddenly devalued place
in society, white-collar workers, professionals, and a new wave of
politicians see themselves at thevanguard of a new moral order that
redefines community as a "culture of mind" instead of the
traditional "culture of hands" long associated with the work of the
assembly line. This honest, moving portrait of one town's radical
shift from a manufacturing to a postindustrial economy will
redefine the way Americans across class lines think about our
families, communities, and future.
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