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At night-time, when you climb into bed and drift off to sleep, does
everyone else go to sleep too? Who bakes the bread for the next
day, and who collects the rubbish? While you are sleeping, a lot of
people are waking up and going to work! Part of the Bug Club
reading series used in over 3500 schools Helps your child develop
reading fluency and confidence Suitable for children age 7-8 (Year
3)
Using a regular beat and clear rhyming pattern, the narrator
describes all the things that they imagine to be underground: lost
things, stored things, fossils, roots, animals, secret underground
rooms and vaults, useful underpasses and underground trains as well
as pipes, cables and wires. The activities look at the poetic
structure as well as visualising the exciting underground world.
Part of the Bug Club reading series used in over 3500 schools Helps
your child develop reading fluency and confidence Suitable for
children age 9-10 (Year 5)
Chemical modification of polymers by reactive modifiers is no
longer an academic curiosity but a commercial reality that has
delivered a diverse range of speciality materials for niche
markets: reactively grafted styrenic alloys, maleated polyolefins,
super-tough nylons, silane modified and moisture-cured polyolefins,
and thermoplastic elastomers, are but few exam ples of commercial
successes. Although the approach of reactive modification of
polymers has been largely achieved either in solution or in the
solid state (through in situ reactions in polymer melts), it is the
latter route that has attracted most attention in the last two
decades owing to its flexibility and cost-effective ness. This
route, referred to as reactive processing, focuses on the use of
suitable reactive modifier(s) and the adoption of conventional
polymer processing machinery, an extruder or a mixer, as a chemical
reactor, to perform in situ targeted reactions for chemical
modification of preformed polymers. This relatively simple, though
scientifically highly challenging, approach to reactive
modification offers unique opportunities in exploiting various
reactive modifiers for the purpose of altering and transforming in
a controlled manner the properties of preformed commercial polymers
into new/speciality materials with tailor-made properties and
custom-designed performance for target applications. Such an
economically attractive route constitutes a radical diversion away
from the traditional practices of manufacturing new polymers from
monomers which involves massive in vestments in sophisticated
technologies and chemical plants."
Renowned journalist Malaika Jabali debunks myths, centres forgotten
socialists of colour who have shaped our world, and shows us
socialism is not all Marx and Bernie Bros-it can be pretty sexy.
We've all dated someone who took control of the relationship-you
know, someone who makes you feel like you're unhappy because you're
just not putting in the work, or it's all in your head. But when
you think about trying to meet new people, it feels terrifying.
Like, have you looked at Tinder recently? It's rough out there!
Your tough-love new best friend, award-winning journalist, policy
attorney, and life-long socialist Malaika Jabali is here to say: we
are all in a generations-long toxic relationship with Capitalism,
and it is time to get the h*ll out of there and move ALONG. She
gives you everything you need to know about what a healthy
relationship could actually look like, issue by issue-from
healthcare and housing to the whole concept of American
democracy-with our new boo: Socialism. And no, Socialism isn't the
boring, grey, authoritarian, Cold-War-era monster that you've heard
about. With accessible explanations and illustrations, often
surprising graphs and stats, and some Drake memes, this book will
show you that we NEED to build a world that's safer, kinder,
cleaner, healthier, and more equal. And that this isn't a utopian
dream - it's within our grasp, if we collectively decide to call
out Capitalism for what it really is and wake up to a better
future. Fun, smart, and inspiring, It's Not You It's Capitalism is
the hottest new relationship in your life!
A celebration of strong, resilient, innovative, and inspiring women of colour. With a vibrant mixture of photography, illustration, biography, and storytelling, author Malaika Adero will spotlight well-known historical figures and women who are pushing boundaries today - from Rosa Parks, Shirley Chisholm, Althea Gibson, and Mae Jamison to Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Mo'Ne Davis, Simone Biles, and Ava DuVernay. Entries on each woman or group will highlight their accomplishments, their world-changing words, and the ways in which their lives and actions have made the world a better place.
Chemical modification of polymers by reactive modifiers is no
longer an academic curiosity but a commercial reality that has
delivered a diverse range of speciality materials for niche
markets: reactively grafted styrenic alloys, maleated polyolefins,
super-tough nylons, silane modified and moisture-cured polyolefins,
and thermoplastic elastomers, are but few exam ples of commercial
successes. Although the approach of reactive modification of
polymers has been largely achieved either in solution or in the
solid state (through in situ reactions in polymer melts), it is the
latter route that has attracted most attention in the last two
decades owing to its flexibility and cost-effective ness. This
route, referred to as reactive processing, focuses on the use of
suitable reactive modifier(s) and the adoption of conventional
polymer processing machinery, an extruder or a mixer, as a chemical
reactor, to perform in situ targeted reactions for chemical
modification of preformed polymers. This relatively simple, though
scientifically highly challenging, approach to reactive
modification offers unique opportunities in exploiting various
reactive modifiers for the purpose of altering and transforming in
a controlled manner the properties of preformed commercial polymers
into new/speciality materials with tailor-made properties and
custom-designed performance for target applications. Such an
economically attractive route constitutes a radical diversion away
from the traditional practices of manufacturing new polymers from
monomers which involves massive in vestments in sophisticated
technologies and chemical plants."
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Requite (Paperback)
Malaika Kegode
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R297
R269
Discovery Miles 2 690
Save R28 (9%)
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Ships in 12 - 19 working days
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In her debut poetry collection 'Requite', Malaika Kegode's lens is
on people, the ones that speak to us through music and books, those
both real and imagined, as she shines a light on loneliness and the
sometimes unbearable burden of love and being loved. It is a love
letter to the testament of humanity and the patchwork of people
that make up our lives. Her gently crafted style is tender, astute
and unfalteringly humane as she blends the mundane, everyday
rituals of brewing tea and watching TV with the vast subjects of
love, loss, growth and rebirth.
"The sky was painfully big, but our worlds were small, our lives
little. So when we found each other in the muddle of it all, that
feeling of belonging was addictive." Mal, Ama, Lewis and Oskar have
grown up together; hedonistically charging through life - and any
house party going - in rural Devon. They're railing against the
stories that have been written for them as they stand at the
precipice of adulthood. But all the space can be suffocating, and
it's tough sometimes - feeling so low in a place so beautiful. The
powerful poetics of Malaika Kegode and soaring music of Bristol
band Jakabol combine in this autobiographical gig-theatre show
directed by Jenny Davies. Genre-defying and emotional, Outlier
explores the impact of isolation, addiction and friendship on young
people in the often-forgotten places.
On 19 October 1991, Malaika Lesego Samora Mahlatsi was born at the
Meadowlands community clinic, one year and eight months after
Mandela's release from prison. The Nationalist Party was still in
power, but everyone knew that its grip on political power would
draw to an inevitable end sooner rather than later. Memoirs of a
born free is a journey back through the life of Malaika Wa Azania
as she recounts the experience of growing up through the end of
apartheid and South Africa's transition into a democratic nation.
She was not born during the times of constitutionalised apartheid
but is still a product of an epoch of systematic individualised
apartheid. Her story is not a reflection of freedom; it is an
epitome of the ongoing struggle for liberation and emancipation
from mental slavery. The struggle of the generations before that of
the born frees was a struggle for political freedom and democracy
and was the foundation for revolution and reform but not the
ultimate goal. Malaika contests the notion of the born-free
generation when it is a generation that was born in the midst of a
struggle for economic freedom and the quest for the realisation of
the objectives of the African Renaissance. Now 22 years into a
democratic dispensation, Malaika describes her life as having been
a struggle to understand the "rainbow nation" and to salvage from
it something that renders her free. She did not find the pot of
gold at the end of the rainbow that she was told about as a child.
She has, however, through the Thabo Mbeki Foundation, found reason
to believe in the capacity of the people to escape the nervous
conditions that define Black life. She continues to serve the
African Youth Coalition with dedication as believes today, without
a shadow of doubt, that another Africa is possible. "Democracy is
impossible without political freedom, but political freedom is not
the ultimate objective of the revolutionary struggle. The ultimate
objective is economic freedom; the liberation of the masses of our
people from the clutches of economic bondage. But our people remain
in chains, so what about this generation which has the mission of
freeing them from those chains is "free"? What about us is
reflective of a "born-free generation", when our generation is born
during a time of the struggle for economic freedom and the quest
for the realisation of the objectives of the African Renaissance
agenda?" - Malaika Wa Azania.
THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER 'A fascinating exploration into the
lives of three women ignored by history ... Eye-opening,
engrossing' Brit Bennett, bestselling author of The Vanishing Half
In her groundbreaking debut, Anna Malaika Tubbs tells the
incredible storIES of three women who raised three world-changing
men. Much has been written about Berdis Baldwin's son James, about
Alberta King's son Martin Luther and Louise Little's son Malcolm.
But virtually nothing has been said about the extraordinary women
who raised them, each fighting their own battles, born into the
beginning of the twentieth century and a deadly landscape of racial
prejudice, Jim Crow, exploitation, unpoliced violence and open
police vitriol. It was a society that would deny their sons'
humanity from the beginning as it had denied theirs, but Berdis,
Alberta and Louise were extraordinary women who instilled
resilience, resistance and greatness in their sons. They would
become mothers not just to three world-famous men but to the civil
rights movement itself. These women represent a piece of history
left untold and a celebration of Black motherhood long overdue.
This is one of the first book-length English translations of Nazik
Al-Mala'ika's Arabic poetry. One of the most influential Iraqi
poets of the twentieth century, Nazik Al-Mala'ika pioneered the
modern Arabic verse movement when she broke away from the
formalistic classical modes of Arabic poetry that had prevailed for
more than fifteen centuries. Along with 'Abdulwahhab Al-Bayyati and
Badre Shakir Al-Sayyab, she paved the way for the birth of a new
modernist poetic movement in the Arab world. Until now, very little
of Al-Mala'ika's poetry has been translated into English. Listen to
the Mourners contains forty of her most significant poems selected
from six published volumes, including Life Tragedy and a Song for
Man, The Woman in Love with the Night, Sparks and Ashes, The Wave's
Nadir, The Moon Tree, and The Sea Alters Its Colours. These poems
show the beginning of her development from the late romantic
orientation in Arabic poetry toward a more psychological approach.
Her poetic form shows a significant liberation from the traditional
two-hemistich line in traditional Arabic poetry, which adheres to
the traditional Arabic measures of prosody and rhyme. 'Abdulwahid
Lu'lu'a's introduction functions as a critical analysis of the
liberated verse movement of the era and situates the poet among her
Arab and Western counterparts. This accessible, beautifully
rendered, and long overdue translation fills a gap in modern Arabic
poetry in translation and will interest students and scholars of
Iraqi literature, Middle East studies, women's studies, and
comparative literature.
Bug Club Comprehension is part of Pearson's Bug Club - the first
whole-school phonics-based reading programme that joins books with
an online reading world to teach today's children to read. Bug Club
Phonics gives you a fun, firm foundation in phonics! This pack
contains 12 copies of Under My Feet. Using a regular beat and clear
rhyming pattern, the narrator describes all the things that they
imagine to be underground: lost things, stored things, fossils,
roots, animals, secret underground rooms and vaults, useful
underpasses and underground trains as well as pipes, cables and
wires. The activities look at the poetic structure as well as
visualising the exciting underground world. Suitable for children
age 9-10 (Year 5)
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A Break From Hell
Malaika Johnson
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R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Iraqi poet Nazik al-Malaika was one of the most important Arab
poets of the twentieth century. A pioneer of free verse poetry,
over the course of a four-decade career, she would publish
prolifically and carved out a space for herself between old and
new, tradition and innovation, the time-honoured and the
iconoclastic. Revolt Against the Sun presents a selection of Nazik
al-Malaika's poetry in English translation for the first time.
Bringing together poems from each of her published collections, it
traces al-Malaika's transformation from a lyrical Romantic poet in
the 1940s to a fervently committed Arab nationalist in the 1970s
and 1980s. The translations offer both an overview of her life and
work, and an insight into the political and social realities in the
Arab world in the decades following the Second World War. Featuring
a comprehensive historical and critical introduction, this
bilingual reader reveals how one woman transformed the landscape of
modern Arabic literature and culture. It is a key resource for
students and teachers of Arabic and world literature, as well as
for readers interested in discovering an alternative narrative of
modern Iraqi culture.
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