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Death is a much avoided topic. Literature on mourning exists, but
it focuses chiefly upon the death of others. The inevitable psychic
impact of one's own mortality is not optimally covered either in
this literature on mourning or elsewhere in psychiatry and
psychoanalysis. The Wound of Mortality brings together
contributions from distinguished psychoanalysts to fill this gap by
addressing the issue of death in a comprehensive manner. Among
questions the contributors raise and seek to answer are: Do
children understand the idea of death? How is adolescent bravado
related to deeper anxieties about death? Is it normal and even
psychologically healthy to think about one's own death during
middle age? Does culture-at-large play a role in how individuals
conceptualize the role of death in human life? Is death "apart"
from or "a part" of life? Enhanced understanding of such matters
will help mental health clinicians treat patients struggling with
death-related concerns with greater empathy.
This thoughtful and original study throws important critical light
on the dominant orthodoxies about sustainable development, and
suggests a radically new direction. Foster argues compellingly that
present approaches embody floating standards and bad faith,
trapping societies into inaction. I suspect this is a seminal piece
of work. Professor Robin Grove-White, former Chair of Greenpeace UK
We all have a nagging concern that what international corporations
and governments term 'sustainable' is not sustainable at all. John
Foster s clear and beautifully written text shows the deep flaws in
current approaches and proposes a reassessment of what true
sustainability really implies. Chris Goodall, Chair of Dynmark
International and author of How to Live a Low-Carbon Life This
comprehensive and yet very readable book will go a long way towards
puncturing some of the glib environmentalisms of our moment, and
perhaps towards helping us imagine deeper and more thoroughgoing
alternatives that might actually work Bill McKibben, author of Deep
Economy and The End of Nature 'Brilliantly and ironically written,
this book shades a bright light on most foggy areas around the
concept of sustainability. Those fastidious obscure points do not
fit properly in the reassuring technical solutions to Climate
Change. Foster puts a name on those shapeless shadows that
inevitably induce the sensation of something being wrong.' Italian
Insider Sustainable development thinking got environmental issues
onto the agenda but it may now be stopping us from taking serious
action on climate change and other crucial planetary issues.
Sustainable development s attempted deal between present and future
will always collapse under the pressure of now because the needs of
the present always win out. Inevitably, this means movable targets
and action that will always fall short of what we need. Ultimately,
sustainable development is the pursuit of a mirage, the politics of
never getting there. To escape the illusion, we must break through
to a new way of understanding sustainability by focusing on the
deep needs of the present, not slippery obligations to the future.
Rising to the carbon challenge now, not trying to micro-manage the
longer term. Looking to the science for orders of magnitude and
direction, not a gameplan. Harnessing the short-term dynamics of
capitalism to the cause of learning our way forward. This book
outlines an alternative to the mainstream and offers the kind of
bold new thinking on energy usage, governance, education and the
role of enterprise that we need to win the coming war on climate
change.
Emphasizing the impact of air toxins and contaminants on human
health, this Second Edition examines the latest research from the
epidemiology to the cellular mechanisms underlying cardiopulmonary
responses to air pollution. This guide offers chapters that address
the basic biology, techniques, and clinical practices used to
monitor and assess acute and chronic pollutant responses; the
effects of specific air toxins and contaminants on various
populations chronically exposed to these compounds; and the complex
issues associated with translating science to public health policy.
This Second Edition offers a current and timely review of the
effects of ambient air pollution on the human cardiopulmonary
system provides new chapters on particulate matter (PM) air
pollution, including particulate dosimetry of the respiratory
system, genetic factors in the cardiopulmonary response to PM,
PM-induced airway remodeling, and combustion emissions and their
relation to cancer furnishes sections by chapter contributors with
in-depth expertise in various areas of indoor and outdoor air
pollution research maintains a balance between traditional topics
and the review of current information showcasing the growing
interest in the neuronal and cardiovascular effects that result
from the exposure of human populations to PM air pollution crosses
several scientific disciplines including epidemiology, toxicology,
physiology, and public health presents the evolution of federal
legislation and standards for air pollution emissions including the
scientific rationale for these regulations
This anthology introduces some of the most influential literature
shaping our understanding of the social and cultural foundations of
education today. Together the selections provide students a range
of approaches for interpreting and designing educational
experiences worthy of the multicultural societies of our present
and future. The reprinted selections are contextualized in new
interpretive essays written specifically for this volume.
This groundbreaking book presents conceptual, theoretical and
applied research on women's life histories. The authors fulfill two
needs: they provide a collection of essays that grapple with
controversial issues in the study of life history, and they present
many narratives from women of color, the majority collected and
interpreted by women of color. The individual chapters offer a
variety of voices linked by a philosophical and political
orientation that places women of color at the center of scholarly
inquiry rather than at the periphery. Ultimately, readers find in
this text innovative ways of reconceptualizing the complexities of
women's lives.
In 1915, an outbreak of meningitis affected the Eastern Command in
the British Army. Foster and Gaskell, both Captains in the Royal
Army Medical Corps in the Territorial Army, were on hand to witness
the effect of the disease, and the following year they published
this study of the disease's symptoms and treatment as they observed
it. The text is accompanied by plates illustrating meningitis'
effects on the skin and brain. This book will be of value to anyone
with an interest in the history of epidemiology and the treatment
of meningitis.
The first edition of The Law of Refugee Status (published in 1991)
is generally regarded as the seminal text on interpreting the
refugee definition set by the UN's 1951 Refugee Convention. Its
groundbreaking analysis served as the bedrock for not only much
judicial reasoning, but also for a burgeoning academic literature
in law and related fields. This second edition builds on the strong
critical focus and human rights orientation of the first edition,
but undertakes an entirely original analysis of the jurisprudence
of leading common law and select civil law states. The authors
provide robust responses to the most difficult questions of refugee
status in a clear and direct way. The result is a comprehensive and
truly global analysis of the central question in asylum law: who is
a refugee?
First published in 1901, this volume contains ten lectures
originally delivered as the 'Lane Lectures' by Sir Michael Foster
at the Cooper Medical College in San Francisco. Examining the
history of physiology from about the sixteenth to the end of the
eighteenth century, the lectures consider the work and influence of
key figures such as Vesalius, Harvey and Borelli, and chart the
progress of scientific thought on matters such as digestion,
respiration and the nervous system.
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A Set of Six (Hardcover)
Joseph Conrad; Edited by Allan H. Simmons, Michael Foster; As told to Owen Knowles
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R2,966
Discovery Miles 29 660
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A Set of Six (1908) is one of Conrad's most versatile and varied
compositions, embracing diverse interests and settings, multiple
tonal qualities and a medley of short-story forms (ranging from the
novella in 'The Duel' to the anecdotal tale in 'The Informer'). The
volume's wide-ranging introduction offers a careful evaluation of
the origins and sources of the individual stories, while also
measuring their early reception as a published collection.
Explanatory notes clarify literary and historical references,
identify real-life places and people, and indicate borrowings and
Gallicisms. The lengthy textual essay and its accompanying
apparatus lay out the history of composition and publication,
detailing interventions made by Conrad's typists, compositors and
editors. Also included are appendices, allowing the reader
first-hand access to Conrad's source material; glossaries of
nautical and foreign terms; and illustrations in the form of maps
and reproductions of early drafts. By returning to (and respecting)
Conrad's own early manuscript and typescript forms, this edition
presents the collection and its preface in a form more
authoritative than any so far printed.
The first edition of The Law of Refugee Status (published in 1991)
is generally regarded as the seminal text on interpreting the
refugee definition set by the UN's 1951 Refugee Convention. Its
groundbreaking analysis served as the bedrock for not only much
judicial reasoning, but also for a burgeoning academic literature
in law and related fields. This second edition builds on the strong
critical focus and human rights orientation of the first edition,
but undertakes an entirely original analysis of the jurisprudence
of leading common law and select civil law states. The authors
provide robust responses to the most difficult questions of refugee
status in a clear and direct way. The result is a comprehensive and
truly global analysis of the central question in asylum law: who is
a refugee?
Methods of representing individual voices were a primary concern
for Geoffrey Chaucer. While many studies have focused on how he
expresses the voices of his characters, especially in The
Canterbury Tales, a sustained analysis of how he represents his own
voice is still wanting. This book explores how Chaucer's
first-person narrators are devices of self-representation that
serve to influence representations of the poet. Drawing from recent
developments in narratology, the history of reading, and theories
of orality, this book considers how Chaucer adapts various
rhetorical strategies throughout his poetry and prose to define
himself and his audience in relation to past literary traditions
and contemporary culture. The result is an understanding of how
Chaucer anticipates, addresses, and influences his audience's
perceptions of himself that broadens our appreciation of Chaucer as
a master rhetorician.
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