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The broad and developing scope of ergonomics - the application of
scientific knowledge to improve people's interaction with products,
systems and environments - has been illustrated for 27 years by the
books which make up the Contemporary Ergonomics series. This book
presents the proceedings of the international conference on
Contemporary Ergonomics and Human Factors 2013. In addition to
being the leading event in the UK that features ergonomics and
human factors across all sectors, this is also the annual
conference of the Institute of Ergonomics & Human Factors.
Individual papers provide insight into current practice, present
new research findings and form an invaluable reference source. The
volumes provide a fast track for the publication of suitable papers
from international contributors, with papers being subject to peer
review since 2009. A wide range of topics are covered in these
proceedings including human computer interaction, standards,
accessibility, work & wellbeing, design, transport, safety
culture, green ergonomics, healthcare, human cognition,
biomechanics, crowd behaviour and the systems approach. As well as
being of interest to mainstream ergonomists and human factors
specialists, Contemporary Ergonomics and Human Factors will appeal
to all those who are concerned with people's interactions with
their working and leisure environment including designers,
manufacturing and production engineers, health and safety
specialists, occupational, applied and industrial psychologists,
and applied physiologists.
The broad and developing scope of ergonomics - the application of
scientific knowledge to improve people's interaction with products,
systems and environments - has been illustrated for 25 years by the
books which make up the Contemporary Ergonomics series. This book
presents the proceedings of the international conference on
Ergonomics and Human Factors 2011. In addition to being the leading
event in the UK that features ergonomics and human factors across
all sectors, this is also the annual conference of the Institute of
Ergonomics and Human Factors.Individual papers provide insight into
current practice, present new research findings and form an
invaluable reference source. The volumes provide a fast track for
the publication of suitable papers from international contributors,
with papers being subject to peer review since 2009.A wide range of
topics are covered in these proceedings, including transport, user
centred design, safety culture, military, accidents, healthcare,
manufacturing, human factors integration, education, the 24-hour
society, sociotechnical systems and green ergonomics.As well as
being of interest to mainstream ergonomists and human factors
specialists, Contemporary Ergonomics and Human Factors will appeal
to all those who are concerned with people's interactions with
their working and leisure environment including designers,
manufacturing and production engineers, health and safety
specialists, occupational, applied and industrial psychologists,
and applied physiologists.
An avid sportsman, Martin Anderson first visited Kenya on a hunting
safari in 1960, three years before the country gained its
independence from English colonial administration. Anxious to
return and be a part of Kenya's new beginning and Jomo Kenyata's
encouragement of "harambee" (working together with European
settlers/farmers), he partnered with a Kenya settler and started to
raise cattle. Four years later and with one more partner, he
accepted the government's offer to develop a vast tract of raw
African bush for a game and cattle ranch. This book is a history of
that grand and remarkable journey.
"Galana" recounts the story of the creation, achievements, and
demise of the largest cattle ranch in Kenya and perhaps all of
Africa. Located on an arid 2,500-square-mile tract--1 percent of
all the land in Kenya--the Galana Ranch was founded in 1968. Galana
introduced cattle into a region with virulent insect-borne disease,
adapted the animals to the land, and bred resistant stock. It
conducted scientific research into the domestication of wildlife,
and aimed to manage Galana's vast natural population of elephants,
lions, rhino, lesser kudu, eland, oryx, and other game to help that
population attain a level the land could support. In the 1970s and
80s, however, an epidemic of poaching nearly wiped out Galana's
vast elephant herds, and the ranch shut down in 1989. This
engrossing memoir goes to the heart of Kenya's wildlife management
issues and political challenges through a personal tale of
adventure and enterprise in Africa.
A Country Without Names offers a conspectus of human activity from
its earliest imagined days and the formation of agrarian state
sedentism to our own day. Its tesserae, gathered from beyond the
boundaries of a single country or culture, constitute a mosaic in
which might be gleaned all the fury and fatuity of the pursuit of
that gilded phantasmagoria of a just and beneficent state. Whilst a
certain sombreness - from Flowering Midnight's dark elegy for the
English pastoral lyric, to the fate of Congo's Patrice Lumumba in
the contemporary, and near contemporary, political parallels
animating Under Jui-yi Shan - imbues the collection it should be
seen, however, as no more than the corollary of an unsentimental
probing of experience, in a collection which is both paean for the
natural world and indictment of those human qualities and
structures which threaten it. Ian Seed, reviewing Ice Stylus, the
last volume, after Interlocutors of Paradise and Obsequy for Lost
Things, in Anderson's Unsubdued Singing trilogy, noted "its highly
charged lyricism ... the language ... sparse, staccato, pared down
to a minimum." And pointed to "its timeless, archetypal quality" to
"the sense of an epic journey into the darkness of the western
psyche ... One is reminded above all, in the tension between the
aesthetic qualities of the writing and its political, historical
and philosophical subject matter, of the work of Ezra Pound ... In
the current political climate this is a book which may also be read
as ... a plea to begin anew with a narrative that acknowledges the
humility of our place within the universe and our responsibility to
it."
Through these poems set within a major south east Asian city
Anderson weaves, against the rotting entablatures of monumental
imperial ambition, slowly degraded aspirations of native and
non-native inhabitant.
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Ice Stylus (Paperback)
Martin Anderson
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R420
R367
Discovery Miles 3 670
Save R53 (13%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The sequences of meditations which comprise Anderson's last two
books Interlocutors of Paradise (Skylight Press) and Obsequy for
Lost Things (Shearsman Books) trace fault lines deeply inscribed
within the Judeo-Christian psyche of the West. Ice Stylus is the
final volume of Anderson's Unsubdued Singing trilogy. Many of the
sequences in Interlocutors of Paradise and Obsequy for Lost Things
begin in a geography which is both real and subliminal: the Essex
Thames-side salt marsh. This is also Isaiah's "parched wastes of
salt": here manifestation of wilderness, the condition of spiritual
inanition, which has so frequently been attributed by the West to
the non-West to legitimise aggression whilst masking its real
objective of the expropriation of other peoples' wealth, finds
objective representation. It is the aggressor himself, the
sequences suggest, not the victim, who suffers from inanition. From
the salt marshes his questing voyages take him in search of things
he covets and dreams of, only to confront him, finally, with the
reality of their non-existence. In this "dark land", perhaps
intimating archetypal adventure, his passage takes him through the
trials and ordeals of many wastes of water. What such a journey
eventually delivers to him, however, is not a sacred fire of
illumination or boon of wisdom to take back to his old world to
re-vivify it. Instead, he is vouchsafed the white isotope of
destruction, turning everything dark and possessing the potential
to annihilate the very products of time he has so violently sought
to wrest from others.
Obsequy For Lost Things consists of three prose-poetry sequences.
The first two share the setting of the Thames estuary. They all
share, however, like the author's previous collection of
prose-poetry sequences (from Skylight Press) Interlocutors of
Paradise, and his The Hoplite Journals, a concern with history and
the psychology of colonialism. As such they also confront, in "the
defeat of colonialism", what Martin Jacques called "the most
important event of the 20thC". An event, involving the attempt to
brutally resist it, which coming-of-age British poets in the 1960s
didn't confront, and which A. Alvarez in his essay in his
influential anthology The New Poetry (1962) didn't deem worthy of
inclusion alongside other manifestations of "Evil": nuclear war and
the Nazi holocaust. If British poets today, however, are to acquire
what he termed "a new seriousness, a willingness to face the full
range of [their] experience with [their] full intelligence" then
they need to avoid what Alvarez called "easy exits" and to redress
such an omission.
Interlocutors of Paradise is a collection of five short meditations
on colonialism and the Western mind. Written as a series of
provocative, symbolist-tinged prose-poems, each section situates
the reader in beautifully crafted spaces, hollows to be filled
either by spiritual purpose or wilful invasion. It begins by
evoking the historical formation and expression of national
identity - an identity predicated on past colonial and imperial
activities. This is followed by three meditations that are largely
situated within that region of the Thames estuary where Joseph
Conrad lived, set and conceived Heart of Darkness. The Thames, that
river in the book on which floated "The dreams of men, the seed of
commonwealths, the germs of empire," figures prominently also in
the book's opening meditation, where it is the setting of, amongst
other things, Edmund Spenser's poem Prothalamion and his friend Sir
Walter Raleigh's departure and voyage to Roanoke in the New World.
In the final meditation its presence fades, giving way instead to
the aspirant spaces of a settled New World. But a world not
'settled' enough to have eradicated restlessness.
The Lower Reaches is framed within precise geography, the Lower
Hope region of the Thames estuary where the author was born and
grew up beside a river on which "the dreams of men, the seed of
commonwealths, the germs of empire" floated. Anderson lived for
decades in the Far East. His meditation interrogates the formation
of national identity and freights with poignant significance the
old maxim that so much of British history happened overseas.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R383
R310
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