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A Raisin In The Sun (Paperback)
Deirdre Osborne; Lorraine Hansberry; Volume editing by Deirdre Osborne
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R220
R208
Discovery Miles 2 080
Save R12 (5%)
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Ships in 11 - 16 working days
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A Raisin in the Sun is a classic American play: a groundbreaking
1950s civil rights drama and has a strong claim to be the greatest
play of the black American experience. Deeply committed to the
black struggle for equality and human rights, Lorraine Hansberry's
brilliant career as a writer was cut short by her death when she
was only 34. A Raisin in the Sun was the first play written by a
black woman to be produced on Broadway and won the New York Drama
Critics Circle Award. Hansberry was the youngest and the first
black writer to receive this award. She was also the first person
to be called 'young, gifted and black'. The play is set in south
side Chicago, where Walter Lee, a black chauffeur, dreams of a
better life, and hopes to use his father's life insurance money to
open a liquor store. Humane and heart-rending, the play depicts
characters and a whole society with complexity and reality. This
Student Edition features expert and helpful annotation, including a
scene-by-scene summary, a detailed commentary on the dramatic,
social and political context, and on the themes, characters,
language and structure of the play, as well as a list of suggested
reading and questions for further study and a review of performance
history.
The Best in Show series is an outstanding global success. Sally
Muir and Joanna Osborne are back - this time with designs for 25
wild animals. There is something here for everyone, with
instructions for knitting spots, stripes, fur, scales, trunks,
wings and beaks! The animals are surprisingly easy to make. It will
only take a few evenings to create yourself an exotic pet or
reproduce your favourite species. These knitted animals in
miniature are much easier to look after than the real things - they
don't need feeding, they won't make a mess and they take up hardly
any room. This book is a real zoological tour of the globe with
animals from all over the world. Patterns include tiger, crocodile,
penguin, cheetah, anteater, ring-tailed lemur, camel, giraffe,
panda and kangaroo. Idiosyncratic descriptions of the various
species accompany beautiful photography, making this book
irresistible for both keen knitters and wildlife enthusiasts.
Veteran instructional coaches A. Keith Young and Tamarra Osborne
provide practical advice for trainers seeking high-leverage
strategies for successful professional trainings.How do you see
yourself as a trainer? Are you occasionally extraordinary, or do
you flail about a bit? Are you connected to a helpful community of
other trainers, or are you just starting out and feeling isolated
and alone in your job? Do your workshops end with thunderous
applause, or do you have nightmares about participants gazing into
the middle distance and leaving with little more than they started
with? Odds are, you've experienced multiple successes and
failures—and that's OK! Regardless of your starting point or
previous experiences, Training Design, Delivery, and Diplomacy
outlines the essential components you need to build a powerful
training program. Young and Osborne (coauthors of The Instructional
Coaching Handbook) present dozens of strategies to help both novice
and expert trainers avoid common (and not-so-common) training
pitfalls, enabling the design and delivery of powerful sessions
where folks walk away energized with new skills and understanding.
They also introduce valuable tips for engaging participants and
managing challenging behavior with diplomacy. Finally, they offer
guidance on building and maintaining an effective train-the-trainer
program and suggestions for conducting virtual activities in an
online setting. If you feel a bit lost in your own workshop
planning, this is exactly the little presentation skills book
you've been looking for!
Gloucestershire's strategic location straddling the Severn is
reinforced by Bristol's importance as a port. The Forest of Dean
and the Cotswolds are densely populated by prehistoric hillforts
and Gloucester, Cirencester and Winchcombe were important
throughout the Roman and Anglo-Saxon periods. The Normans built
substantial castles at Bristol, Gloucester and Berkeley, scene of
Edward II's murder, with many more of earth and timber. Many
figured in the conflicts between rival factions culminating in the
Battle of Tewkesbury. In the Civil War, Bristol underwent two
sieges and Gloucester another and one of the last battles, at Stow,
followed continuous skirmishing. The next centuries saw volunteer
forces established, formalised by the State by the end of
Victoria's reign, to counter threats external and internal. A
nascent aircraft industry would develop into aircraft factories and
airfields in the First World War with further development of
training and aircraft storage facilities for the newly formed RAF
during the inter-War period. Anti-invasion defences were
constructed in the Second World War, but the primary effort was in
logistics: bases for arriving US troops; RAF and USAAF training
airfields and depots; and communications facilities. This last
aspect, along with intelligence gathering, continued into the Cold
War and beyond.
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Taken 1 & 2 (DVD)
Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace, Famke Janssen, Xander Berkeley, Katie Cassidy, …
1
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R74
R23
Discovery Miles 230
Save R51 (69%)
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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A double bill of fast-paced action thrillers.
Taken (2008)
Liam Neeson stars as Bryan Mills, a former CIA secret agent living in the US, who is obliged to resurrect the skills he learned in his old job after his estranged 17-year-old daughter Kim (Maggie Grace) is kidnapped by sex slave traffickers while travelling with a friend in Europe.
Taken 2 (2012)
Murad (Rade Serbedzija), the father of a kidnapper killed by Mills (Neeson) in the first film, makes a bid for retribution by taking Mills and his wife (Famke Janssen) hostage in Istanbul. Now their daughter, Kim (Grace), must swing into action and act swiftly to save her parents.
Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given
area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject
in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of
travel. They are relevant but also visionary. Over the past decade,
digital geographies has emerged as a dynamic area of scholarly
enquiry, critically examining how the digital has reshaped the
geography of our world. Bringing together authors working at the
cutting-edge of the field, and grounding abstract ideas in case
studies, this Research Agenda looks at the ways in which technology
has altered all aspects of society, culture and the environment.
Chapters explore four key themes: the role of technology
infrastructures; the ways that winners and losers are created at
the digital margins; the power of the digital to create new spaces;
and the ways that the digital is changing research methods.
Critically outlining the state of play around these topics, each
chapter unpacks a case study related to pioneering research,
suggesting possible avenues for research that digital geographers
might pursue. The Research Agenda concludes with an identification
of three priority areas for future work: the intimate nature of our
relations with technology; approaches to resisting the power of
technology companies; and finally, the need for more
interdisciplinary approaches to examining digital geographies.
Rooted in the subject areas of technology, geography, sociology and
political science, A Research Agenda for Digital Geographies will
be greatly valuable to human and socio-cultural geographers, and
digital social scientists with an interest in how the digital
affects society and space.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R205
R164
Discovery Miles 1 640
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