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Young Ivy can't catch a break. Though she has a few memories of her
past life, she was reborn into an RPG-like world in the weakest
class, and worse, as the weakest rank. As a no-star Tamer, even her
parents want nothing to do with her, and she soon realizes she must
survive on her own. She learns to live off the land and salvage
what she can from other people's leavings. But when Ivy manages to
tame Sora, a lowly slime, everything changes for both of them.
There's something special about this frail little monster, and
Ivy's care will bring out the best in both of them!
Youth Community Inquiry offers a detailed look at how young people
use new media to help their communities thrive. Chapters address
questions about learning, digital technology, and community
engagement through the theory of community inquiry. The settings
range from a small farming town, to a mostly immigrant community,
to inner-city Chicago, and include youth from ages eight to 20.
Going beyond works on social media in a narrow sense, the projects
in these settings involve the use of varied technologies, such as
GPS/GIS mapping tools, video production, use of archives and
databases, podcasts, and Internet radio. The development of
inquiry-based activities serves as a record of the diverse
experiences and a guide to future projects. The book concludes with
an overview of a curriculum that readers may adapt for their own
settings.
This edited book examines the relationship between the materiality
of artefacts and managerial techniques, combining the recent
scholarly interest on socio-materiality with a focus on management.
Exploring managerial techniques, the social and material tools used
by actors to guide or facilitate collective activities, topics
include their socio-materiality, performative dimension, role in
managerial control, relationship to organisational space and
relationship to organisational legitimacy. This volume particularly
explores the valuation and legitimation practices or processes
involving managerial techniques, their modalities, specificities
and involvement in collective activity within organisations. The
overall aim of the chapters is to explore in different ways and
instances the way in which material artefacts are able to inscribe
and enforce managerial action which affects daily work practices.
This edited book examines the relationship between the materiality
of artefacts and managerial techniques, combining the recent
scholarly interest on socio-materiality with a focus on management.
Exploring managerial techniques, the social and material tools used
by actors to guide or facilitate collective activities, topics
include their socio-materiality, performative dimension, role in
managerial control, relationship to organisational space and
relationship to organisational legitimacy. This volume particularly
explores the valuation and legitimation practices or processes
involving managerial techniques, their modalities, specificities
and involvement in collective activity within organisations. The
overall aim of the chapters is to explore in different ways and
instances the way in which material artefacts are able to inscribe
and enforce managerial action which affects daily work practices.
A heartwarming fantasy isekai tale about a girl who embarks on a
journey with her new friend--a humble slime. And don't miss the
light novels, also from Seven Seas! When Ivy learns she's
"starless," she knows her life is over. Without stars, she can't
use her Tamer skill to subdue even the smallest of animals. So she
flees into the forest, where she befriends a lowly slime named
Sora-the one creature she can tame. Together, this unlikely pair
begins salvaging other people's rubbish in an attempt to turn their
lives around!
Young Ivy can't catch a break. Though she has a few memories of her
past life, she was reborn into an RPG-like world in the weakest
class, and worse, as the weakest rank. As a no-star Tamer, even her
parents want nothing to do with her, and she soon realises she must
survive on her own. She learns to live off the land and salvage
what she can from other people's leavings. But when Ivy manages to
tame Sora, a lowly slime, everything changes for both of them.
There's something special about this frail little monster, and
Ivy's care will bring out the best in both of them!
Young Ivy can't catch a break. Though she has a few memories of her
past life, she was reborn into an RPG-like world in the weakest
class, and worse, as the weakest rank. As a no-star Tamer, even her
parents want nothing to do with her, and she soon realizes she must
survive on her own. She learns to live off the land and salvage
what she can from other people's leavings. But when Ivy manages to
tame Sora, a lowly slime, everything changes for both of them.
There's something special about this frail little monster, and
Ivy's care will bring out the best in both of them!
From the author of "Harp Strings and Heart Strings," an Orthodox
Rabbi comments on The Book of Ecclesiastes.
WOUNDS OF THE HEART When Ivy and Sora encounter a mortally wounded
man, Sora uses its unique powers to heal him...and splits in two?!
As Ivy and Druid bond over their unhappy pasts, Ivy learns that her
new friend was also abandoned by his family thanks to his "useless"
skill. But as Ivy knows, there's often more to people (and slimes)
than meets the eye. Can Ivy and Sora help their new companion find
the strength to forge ahead?
As Ivy and the Druid bond over their unhappy pasts, Ivy learns that
her new friend was also abandoned by his family thanks to his
“useless†skill. But as Ivy knows, there’s often more to
people (and slimes) than meets the eye. Can Ivy and Sora help their
new companion find the strength to forge ahead? Series Overview:
When Ivy learns she’s “starless,†she knows her life is over.
Without stars, she can’t use her Tamer skill to subdue even the
smallest of animals. So she flees into the forest, where she
befriends a lowly slime named Sora—the one creature she can tame.
Together, this unlikely pair begins salvaging other people’s
rubbish in an attempt to turn their lives around!
Winner, Ray & Pat Browne Award for Best Reference/Primary
Source Work in Popular and American Culture, Popular Culture
Association/American Culture Association, 2016 Known for their
violence and prolific profanity, including free use of the n-word,
the films of Quentin Tarantino, like the director himself,
chronically blurt out in polite company what is extremely
problematic even when deliberated in private. Consequently, there
is an uncomfortable and often awkward frankness associated with
virtually all of Tarantino's films, particularly when it comes to
race and blackness. Yet beyond the debate over whether Tarantino is
or is not racist is the fact that his films effectively articulate
racial anxieties circulating in American society as they engage
longstanding racial discourses and hint at emerging trends. This
radical racial politics-always present in Tarantino's films but
kept very much on the quiet-is the subject of Race on the QT.
Adilifu Nama concisely deconstructs and reassembles the racial
dynamics woven into Reservoir Dogs, True Romance, Pulp Fiction,
Jackie Brown, Kill Bill: Vol. 1, Kill Bill: Vol. 2, Death Proof,
Inglourious Basterds, and Django Unchained, as they relate to
historical and current racial issues in America. Nama's eclectic
fusion of cultural criticism and film analysis looks beyond the
director's personal racial attitudes and focuses on what
Tarantino's filmic body of work has said and is saying about race
in America symbolically, metaphorically, literally, impolitely,
cynically, sarcastically, crudely, controversially, and
brilliantly.
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