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An overview of the place of modern languages in the primary school
in the 21st century. It is written for anyone with an active role
in teaching languages in schools today, either at primary or
secondary levels. It discusses the practical issues involved in
teaching MFL to primary students.
An overview of the place of modern languages in the primary school
in the 21st century. It is written for anyone with an active role
in teaching languages in schools today, either at primary or
secondary levels. It discusses the practical issues involved in
teaching MFL to primary students.
Sex in Cyberspace offers a bold and provocative, yet sensitively
written, account of an under-investigated area of sociological
enquiry. While there is a considerable amount of research
documenting the experiences of sex workers, very little data exists
on their male clientele. The first empirically-based volume on the
experiences of men who pay for sex, this work presents a
significant new source of data. The book is based upon an extensive
study of on-line forums in which both the purchasers of sexual
services and the workers themselves can exchange information and
views - information which is otherwise extremely difficult to
obtain. Sarah Earle and Keith Sharp argue that such sites represent
a significant change in the social organization of sex work and
those who seek and use the services of sex workers. Shedding new
light on men's sexual identity, Sex in Cyberspace makes a major
contribution to the study of sexuality.
The glory days of rock from the perspective of Canada’s original
music magazine. The story of Music Express is told through the
unique perspective of Keith Sharp, the magazine’s founder and
editor. During its seventeen-year existence, Music Express rose
from a small, Calgary-based regional magazine to an international
publication. The interviews, anecdotes, and stories cover the
golden era of Canadian music, with the rise to global status of
such icons as Bryan Adams, Loverboy, Rush, Celine Dion, and
Triumph. Their stories, as well as many more, are captured together
with an array of classic rock photography that provides a unique
time capsule. Â
      From Sharp’s Calgary
roots in 1976 to the heady heights of his publication’s growth,
he details foreign adventures covering the likes of David Bowie in
Australia, KISS in West Germany, and Iron Maiden in Poland, along
with other high-profile interviews including U2, Paul McCartney,
Iron Maiden, and Rod Stewart.
The place of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered people in the
Christian churches is a highly controversial issue. The stance of
all the mainline churches is that homosexuality is sinful and
incompatible with Christianity. In seeking to respond to attacks on
their lives, identities and relationships LGBT Christians have
moved over recent decades from a defensive position to a more
affirmative position which asserts that there is evidence in the
Bible and the Jesus tradition of validated homoerotic experience.
This book presents a systematic overview of both the defensive and
affirmative positions. In part one, The Defensive Testament, each
of the so-called 'biblical texts of terror' used to demonise LGBT
people is considered in turn and found wanting. None of them has
anything to say about consensual same sex love. In part two, The
Affirmative Testament, homoerotic elements in various Bible stories
including the healing of the centurion's servant, Jesus and the
beloved disciple, David and Jonathan, Ruth and Naomi are revealed
to make visible the place of LGBT lives in the Biblical tradition.
Taken together, these two testaments forcefully champion the
equality of LGBT people in the Kingdom of God and represent a
formidable challenge to ecclesiastical homophobia.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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