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Status Quo: Hello Quo! (DVD)
Status Quo, Paul Weller, Brian May, Cliff Richard, Midge Ure, …
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Documentary that sets out to tell the story of Status Quo's 50 year
career as a band. Directed by Alan G. Parker, the documentary was
supported by the group and saw the film crew given unprecedented
access to the band. Indeed, the programme features the moment the
original line-up of Status Quo reunited at Shepperton Studios -
their first time together for 30 years. Brian May, Paul Weller,
Cliff Richard and Midge Ure are among the fellow artists to pay
tribute to the Quo and the extraordinary duration of their career.
As a leading movement in contemporary Turkey with a universal
educational and inter-faith agenda, the Gulen movement aims to
promote creative and positive relations between the West and the
Muslim world and to articulate a critically constructive position
on such issues as democracy, multi-culturalism, globalisation, and
interfaith dialogue in the context of secular modernity. Many
countries in the predominantly Muslim world are in a time of
transition and of opening to democratic development of which the
so-called "Arab Spring" has seen only the most recent and dramatic
developments. Particularly against that background, there has been
a developing interest in "the Turkish model" of transition from
authoritarianism to democracy. The Muslim World and Politics in
Transition includes chapters written by international scholars with
expertise in relation to the contexts that it addresses. It
discusses how the Gulen movement has positioned itself and has
sought to contribute within societies - including the movement's
home country of Turkey - in which Muslims are in the majority and
Islam forms a major part of the cultural, religious and historical
inheritance. The movement and initiatives inspired by the Turkish
Muslim scholar Fethullah Gulen began in Turkey, but can now be
found throughout the world, including in both Europe and in the
'Muslim world'. Bloomsbury has a companion volume edited by Paul
Weller and Ihsan Yilmaz on European Muslims, Civility and Public
Life: Perspectives on and From the Gulen Movement.
This is a fascinating new textbook providing an overview of the
religious diversity of the UK.At a time when issues of religious
diversity are ever present in the media and in public debate in the
UK, student and general interest in this topic is at a new
high.Paul Weller's new textbook provides an overview of the
religious diversity of the UK. Informed by examples from the
author's own research and professional practice, and referring to
other key sources, it takes a "critical incident" and "case-study"
based approach to some of the major debates arising from that
diversity. These include demographic, socio-economic and other
issues from the Census; places of worship; hatred, respect and
freedom of expression; governance and civil society; education; and
discrimination and equal opportunities.It facilitates engagement
with topics of recent and often heated debate, such as "The Satanic
Verses", "Jerry Springer the Opera", and Behzti controversies;
wearing the veil; religious representation in public life; faith
schools and student religious societies in higher education;
religious rights; gay rights; and the impact of 7/7 on
multi-culturalism in the UK.With helpful features for students -
such as study activities associated with the materials in each
chapter; tasks and questions for discussion; a timeline of key
events and developments; and bibliographical resources for further
learning - this new companion to this fascinating area will be
required reading.
Using the events surrounding "The Satanic Verses" controversy as a
starting point, Paul Weller offers an interesting examination of
the twenty-first century challenges posed by living with radical
difference, freedom of expression, and mutual respect.26th
September 2008 marks the twentieth anniversary of the beginning of
"The Satanic Verses" controversy - a controversy that in many ways
became paradigmatic for the following two decades.Taking as its
starting-point the opening two years of the controversy, Paul
Weller uses the events and arguments of those years as a lens
through which to view what later developed, both in relation to the
controversy itself, but also its wider entails, and the incidents
and issues through which aspects of the original controversy were
reprised. The anniversary of the controversy presents a good
opportunity to review the incidents, issues and debates of the time
in some historical perspective, while also connecting them with
subsequent incidents that have reprised some of the key themes,
such as the 'cartoons' controversy, the terror attacks of 9/11 and
7/7, and the killing of the Dutch filmmaker, Theo Van Gogh.The book
holds up a mirror for our times that will be of interest to
academics, politicians, students, and religious believers, as well
as to all who are engaged with the twenty-first century challenges
posed by living with radical difference, freedom of expression, and
mutual respect, with exploring the relationship between religion
and secularity, and with overcoming the threats posed by
religiously informed violence. Paul Weller is Professor of
Inter-Religious Relations at the University of Derby and Visiting
Fellow in the Oxford Centre for Christianity and Culture at
Regent's Park College, University of Oxford, UK. He is editor of
"Religions in the UK: Directory 2007-10", the 2001 edition of which
won the Shap Working Party on World Religions in Education prize
for 'an outstanding contribution to the teaching of world
religions'.
This title includes an assessment of the influence and impact of
the Islamic scholar and activist Fethullah Gulen, and those who are
inspired by him, on contemporary Islam. This edited collection
deals with the challenges and opportunities faced by Muslims and
the wider society in Europe following the Madrid train bombings of
2003 and the London Transport attacks of 2007. The contributors
explore the challenges to the concept and practice of civility in
public life within a European context, and demonstrates the
contributions that can be made in this regard by the thought and
practice of the global movement associated with the Turkish Muslim
scholar Fethullah Gulen. The importance and distinctiveness of
teaching of Gulen and the practice of the movement is that it is
rooted in a confident Turkish Islamic heritage while being fully
engaged with modernity. It offers the possibility of a
contextualised renewal of Islam for Muslims in Europe while being
fully rooted in the teachings of the Qu'ran and the Sunnah of the
Prophet. This volume is an important contribution to the study of
the movement, which advocates the freedom of religion while making
an Islamic contribution to the wider society based on a commitment
to service of others.
'I can be scratching around at home on an acoustic guitar, or
singing a funny little idea into my phone, and all of a sudden, it
becomes a beautiful fully fledged song. And I'm asking myself, how
did we do that again? I still find that fascinating. It's magic.' -
PAUL WELLER In Magic: A Journal of Song, Paul Weller talks about
his life and music through a personally curated selection of over
100 songs spanning his entire musical career. As one of the most
innovative and remarkable songwriters of the last 50 years, Paul
Weller has proved to be the ultimate shapeshifter, moving from The
Jam's punk sensibilities to the genre-defying Style Council, and
later through a remarkable 30-year solo career. Alongside Lennon
and McCartney, Weller is one of few artists that has attained a UK
number one album over five consecutive decades, and has also
received career defining awards from the BRITs (Lifetime
Achievement Award), NME Awards (Godlike Genius Award) and a GQ
Award for Songwriter of the Year. Magic: A Journal of Song is the
definitive book of Weller's songwriting career from founding The
Jam in his teenage years, to creating The Style Council, through to
his years as a solo musician. Offering unprecedented insight into
Weller's creative process, his lyrics are accompanied by more than
450 photographs and items of memorabilia, and an illuminating
commentary of over 25,000 words. As told to journalist and author,
Dylan Jones, Magic is Paul Weller's most candid and intimate
account of his musical life to date. 'Paul Weller has proved that
he is not only beyond reproach, in some senses he is quite possibly
without equal.' - DYLAN JONES OBE 'The thing I have discovered is
that music in its truest sense is beyond any trend or movement or
category.' - PAUL WELLER
This is the first book of its kind about the Turkish Muslim
scholar, Fethullah Gulen, since the July 2016 events in Turkey, the
trauma experienced by Gulen, and the disruption to initiatives
inspired by his teaching, known as Hizmet. Drawing on primary
interviews with Gulen and Hizmet participants and a literature
review, this Open Access book locates the clear origins of Gulen's
teaching in the Qur'an and Sunnah in dynamic engagement with their
geographical, temporal and existential reception, translation, and
onward communication. It argues that as Hizmet cannot be understood
apart from Gulen and his teaching, Gulen and his teaching cannot be
understood apart from Hizmet, while exploring the heritage of both.
A more geographically focused case study is set out in author Paul
Weller's Hizmet in Transitions: European Developments of a Turkish
Muslim-Inspired Movement, also published by Palgrave Macmillan
(2022).
Some Asian political leaders and Western academics have recently
claimed that China is unlikely to produce an open political system.
This claim rests on the idea that ?Confucian culture? provides an
alternative to Western civil values, and that China lacked the
democratic traditions and even the horizontal institutions of trust
that could build a c
*** 'Eddie was there very early doors. His story is of the many.'
Paul Weller 'A total riot! Takes me right back to the 70s. A Superb
book' Mani, The Stone Roses 'What a wonderful book. Mod isn't about
what decade you lived in, it's about your attitude, and this book
has tons of it' Kenney Jones, The Small Faces WITH A FOREWORD BY
PAUL WELLER This is the memoir of a teenage mod from the East End
of London. A journey of discovery for a schoolboy dabbling with
punk, funk, record shops, discos and clothes, and then... WHAAAM!
An unstoppable wave of like-minded kids fall headlong in love with
60s mod culture, revived and reformatted for the 70s and 80s
generation. Eddie Piller was one such kid. His life was changed
forever. Written with humour, passion and attention to detail,
CLEAN LIVING UNDER DIFFICULT CIRCUMSTANCES is perhaps the ultimate
mod memoir, taking us from meeting the Small Faces as a toddler, to
the 1979 Mod revival, through the more purist 1980s mod scene and
eventually to Acid Jazz. A born storyteller, Eddie takes us
evocatively into a world of scooters, clothes, and music. We run
with the crowd to decaying seaside towns, East End backstreet
boozers and sweaty teenage gigs, all fizzing with an uncontainable
excitement and often exploding into violence. Once mod touched your
soul it changed the way you looked at life, unexpectedly broadening
your horizons. In Eddie it awakens a can-do attitude that sees him
setting up a fanzine, putting on club nights, hustling jobs in the
music industry, and eventually setting up a record label. It even
takes him to Ireland at the height of the troubles and to Australia
where the local mods take him on a military exercise... Visceral
and always entertaining, CLEAN LIVING UNDER DIFFICULT CIRCUMSTANCES
is a stand-out memoir that relives the thrill of the 70s and 80s,
and the movement that helped make mod the most enduring and
successful British youth culture of all time.
In recent years, controversial issues related to religion or
belief, discrimination, equality and human rights have come to the
fore, especially in the context of public debates around
multiculturalism following the 'social policy shock' created by the
impact of violent religious extremism. For example should there be
restrictions on what people can wear in the work place based on
their religious identity? Should religious organizations be exempt
from aspects of equalities legislation which are not in line with
their beliefs and values? How should non-religious identities be
recognized? In the context of increasing cultural and religion or
belief diversity, it is vitally important for the future to
understand the nature and extent of discrimination and unfair
treatment on the grounds of religion or belief, and to assess the
adequacy of policies, practices and laws designed to tackle this.
This includes the overlap of religion or belief identities with
other aspects of people's identity including characteristics such
as age, disability, race, sex and sexual orientation which can also
be legally protected. This volume is a benchmark publication on
religion, discrimination and equality. It includes data and
insights derived from the fieldwork, focus groups and questionnaire
survey of a recent national research project in Britain. Its
analysis presents a unique insight into continuity and change in
people's reported experience over a decade of equalities
legislation and political and social change of unfair treatment on
the basis of religion or belief. Grounded in empirical and
contextualized data, its findings are placed in the context of
European and international human rights law. Its findings will be
of special interest to both scholars and practitioners working in
the specific fields of education, employment, the media, criminal
justice and immigration, housing, health care, social services, and
funding, as well as in the broader fields of religion or belief,
the law and public policy.
Some Asian political leaders and Western academics have recently
claimed that China is unlikely to produce an open political system.
This claim rests on the idea that "Confucian culture" provides an
alternative to Western civil values, and that China lacked the
democratic traditions and even the horizontal institutions of trust
that could build a civil society. An opposed school of thought is
far more optimistic about democracy, because it sees market
economies of the kind China has begun to foster as pushing
inexorably against authoritarian political control and reproducing
Western patterns of change."Alternate Civilities" argues for a
different set of political possibilities. By comparing China with
Taiwan's new and vibrant democracy, it shows how democracy can grow
out of Chinese cultural roots and authoritarian institutions. The
business organizations, religious groups, environmental movements,
and women's networks it examines do not simply reproduce Western
values and institutions. These cases point to the possibility of an
alternate civility, neither the stubborn remnant of an ancient
authoritarian culture, nor a reflex of market economics. They are
instead the active creation of new solutions to the problems of
modern life.
Compares those active resistance movements which burst into public
view in China and "cultural resistance", which instead lies
unspoken in everyday action. This book argues that certain areas of
life defuse attempts at cultural domination by resisting and
dissolving all unified interpretation.
In this open-access monograph, Paul Weller explores how the
movement known as Hizmet (meaning "service") is undergoing a period
of transitions in Europe. Inspired by the teaching and practice of
the Turkish Islamic scholar, Fethullah Gulen, Hizmet has been
active in Europe (and other continents) for several decades. It has
always been subject to some degree of contestation, which has
intensified following the July 2016 coup attempt in Turkey, for
which the current Turkish government holds Fethullah Gulen and
Hizmet as responsible - a claim they strongly deny. In Turkey,
thousands of people associated with Hizmet have been imprisoned. In
Europe, pressures have been brought to bear on the movement and its
activities. In charting a way forward, Hizmet finds itself in a
significant transitional period, the nature and possible future
trajectories of which are explored in this volume. The book is
informed by a comprehensive literature review and a recent research
project which includes primary research interviews with key Hizmet
figures in Europe and beyond. It contends that to properly
understand Hizmet in Europe, one has to situate it in its
interactive engagement both with its diverse European national
contexts and with Fethullah Gulen's teaching and practice.
This is the first book of its kind about the Turkish Muslim
scholar, Fethullah Gulen, since the July 2016 events in Turkey, the
trauma experienced by Gulen, and the disruption to initiatives
inspired by his teaching, known as Hizmet. Drawing on primary
interviews with Gulen and Hizmet participants and a literature
review, this Open Access book locates the clear origins of Gulen's
teaching in the Qur'an and Sunnah in dynamic engagement with their
geographical, temporal and existential reception, translation, and
onward communication. It argues that as Hizmet cannot be understood
apart from Gulen and his teaching, Gulen and his teaching cannot be
understood apart from Hizmet, while exploring the heritage of both.
A more geographically focused case study is set out in author Paul
Weller's Hizmet in Transitions: European Developments of a Turkish
Muslim-Inspired Movement, also published by Palgrave Macmillan
(2022).
In this open-access monograph, Paul Weller explores how the
movement known as Hizmet (meaning "service") is undergoing a period
of transitions in Europe. Inspired by the teaching and practice of
the Turkish Islamic scholar, Fethullah Gulen, Hizmet has been
active in Europe (and other continents) for several decades. It has
always been subject to some degree of contestation, which has
intensified following the July 2016 coup attempt in Turkey, for
which the current Turkish government holds Fethullah Gulen and
Hizmet as responsible - a claim they strongly deny. In Turkey,
thousands of people associated with Hizmet have been imprisoned. In
Europe, pressures have been brought to bear on the movement and its
activities. In charting a way forward, Hizmet finds itself in a
significant transitional period, the nature and possible future
trajectories of which are explored in this volume. The book is
informed by a comprehensive literature review and a recent research
project which includes primary research interviews with key Hizmet
figures in Europe and beyond. It contends that to properly
understand Hizmet in Europe, one has to situate it in its
interactive engagement both with its diverse European national
contexts and with Fethullah Gulen's teaching and practice.
In recent years, controversial issues related to religion or
belief, discrimination, equality and human rights have come to the
fore, especially in the context of public debates around
multiculturalism following the 'social policy shock' created by the
impact of violent religious extremism. For example should there be
restrictions on what people can wear in the work place based on
their religious identity? Should religious organizations be exempt
from aspects of equalities legislation which are not in line with
their beliefs and values? How should non-religious identities be
recognized? In the context of increasing cultural and religion or
belief diversity, it is vitally important for the future to
understand the nature and extent of discrimination and unfair
treatment on the grounds of religion or belief, and to assess the
adequacy of policies, practices and laws designed to tackle this.
This includes the overlap of religion or belief identities with
other aspects of people's identity including characteristics such
as age, disability, race, sex and sexual orientation which can also
be legally protected. This volume is a benchmark publication on
religion, discrimination and equality. It includes data and
insights derived from the fieldwork, focus groups and questionnaire
survey of a recent national research project in Britain. Its
analysis presents a unique insight into continuity and change in
people's reported experience over a decade of equalities
legislation and political and social change of unfair treatment on
the basis of religion or belief. Grounded in empirical and
contextualized data, its findings are placed in the context of
European and international human rights law. Its findings will be
of special interest to both scholars and practitioners working in
the specific fields of education, employment, the media, criminal
justice and immigration, housing, health care, social services, and
funding, as well as in the broader fields of religion or belief,
the law and public policy.
REVISED, UPDATED AND WITH A NEW FOREWORD BY PAUL ABBOTT This
edition of Suburban 100 includes new lyrics from the critically
acclaimed albums, 22 Dreams and Wake Up the Nation, which has been
nominated for the Mercury Music Award. Paul Weller first burst onto
the national music scene with The Jam in 1977 and was quickly
marked apart from his contemporaries as a brilliant lyricist. In a
writing career that has now spanned three decades, his songs have
been acclaimed, imitated and loved by many. Suburban 100 - the
first selection of Paul Weller's lyrics - draws on songs written
for The Jam, The Style Council and solo releases that, together,
tell stories of life and love, rage and romance. The youthful
frustrations of small-town life that fuelled Weller's early writing
is palpable, as is the angry but poignant response to Thatcher's
Britain. His lyrics, rooted in English suburban culture, explore
the hopes, dreams and crashing disappointments of ordinary people.
They also revel in the mystical beauty of the English country
landscape and repeatedly revisit dreamlike childhood summers. For
the first time Paul Weller shares his reflections on his lyrics,
offering candid insights to his writing process and the inspiration
behind some of pop music's best loved songs. Suburban 100 reveals
aspects of a famously private man.
As a leading movement in contemporary Turkey with a universal
educational and inter-faith agenda, the Gulen movement aims to
promote creative and positive relations between the West and the
Muslim world and to articulate a critically constructive position
on such issues as democracy, multi-culturalism, globalisation, and
interfaith dialogue in the context of secular modernity. Many
countries in the predominantly Muslim world are in a time of
transition and of opening to democratic development of which the
so-called "Arab Spring" has seen only the most recent and dramatic
developments. Particularly against that background, there has been
a developing interest in "the Turkish model" of transition from
authoritarianism to democracy. "The Muslim World and Politics in
Transition" includes chapters written by international scholars
with expertise in relation to the contexts that it addresses. It
discusses how the Gulen movement has positioned itself and has
sought to contribute within societies - including the movement's
home country of Turkey - in which Muslims are in the majority and
Islam forms a major part of the cultural, religious and historical
inheritance.The movement and initiatives inspired by the Turkish
Muslim scholar Fethullah Gulen began in Turkey, but can now be
found throughout the world, including in both Europe and in the
'Muslim world'. Bloomsbury has a companion volume edited by Paul
Weller and Ihsan Yilmaz on "European Muslims, Civility and Public
Life: Perspectives on and From the Gulen Movement."
Using the events surrounding "The Satanic Verses" controversy as a
starting point, Paul Weller offers an interesting examination of
the twenty-first century challenges posed by living with radical
difference, freedom of expression, and mutual respect.26th
September 2008 marks the twentieth anniversary of the beginning of
"The Satanic Verses" controversy - a controversy that in many ways
became paradigmatic for the following two decades.Taking as its
starting-point the opening two years of the controversy, Paul
Weller uses the events and arguments of those years as a lens
through which to view what later developed, both in relation to the
controversy itself, but also its wider entails, and the incidents
and issues through which aspects of the original controversy were
reprised. The anniversary of the controversy presents a good
opportunity to review the incidents, issues and debates of the time
in some historical perspective, while also connecting them with
subsequent incidents that have reprised some of the key themes,
such as the 'cartoons' controversy, the terror attacks of 9/11 and
7/7, and the killing of the Dutch filmmaker, Theo Van Gogh.The book
holds up a mirror for our times that will be of interest to
academics, politicians, students, and religious believers, as well
as to all who are engaged with the twenty-first century challenges
posed by living with radical difference, freedom of expression, and
mutual respect, with exploring the relationship between religion
and secularity, and with overcoming the threats posed by
religiously informed violence. Paul Weller is Professor of
Inter-Religious Relations at the University of Derby and Visiting
Fellow in the Oxford Centre for Christianity and Culture at
Regent's Park College, University of Oxford, UK. He is editor of
"Religions in the UK: Directory 2007-10", the 2001 edition of which
won the Shap Working Party on World Religions in Education prize
for 'an outstanding contribution to the teaching of world
religions'.
This is a fascinating new textbook providing an overview of the
religious diversity of the UK.At a time when issues of religious
diversity are ever present in the media and in public debate in the
UK, student and general interest in this topic is at a new
high.Paul Weller's new textbook provides an overview of the
religious diversity of the UK. Informed by examples from the
author's own research and professional practice, and referring to
other key sources, it takes a "critical incident" and "case-study"
based approach to some of the major debates arising from that
diversity. These include demographic, socio-economic and other
issues from the Census; places of worship; hatred, respect and
freedom of expression; governance and civil society; education; and
discrimination and equal opportunities.It facilitates engagement
with topics of recent and often heated debate, such as "The Satanic
Verses", "Jerry Springer the Opera", and "Behzti" controversies;
wearing the veil; religious representation in public life;faith
schools and student religious societies in higher education;
religious rights; gay rights; and the impact of 7/7 on
multi-culturalism in the UK.With helpful features for students -
such as study activities associated with the materials in each
chapter; tasks and questions for discussion; a timeline of key
events and developments; and bibliographical resources for further
learning - this new companion to this fascinating area will be
required reading.
Paul Weller was a one-club player. He moved from sunny Brighton
aged just 16 to dreary Burnley, with its grey skies, run-down
terraced streets and mill chimneys, where riots were among the
first things he saw. A more timid person might have caught the
first train home. But he went on to play 252 games for the Clarets
between 1993 and 2005. He would have played many more but for
suffering the debilitating effects of colitis. It took a huge chunk
out of his career, forcing him out of the first team. Other players
might have capitulated, but he faced the problem head on, battled
it and beat it and got back into the first team, with a promotion
to the Championship. Remarkably, he was 'player of the season' the
very next year. This is a real-life story of how to overcome
obstacles and fight illness using courage, grit and determination.
But it is also a story of the bullying, pitfalls and perils that
await any aspiring footballer, the impact of managers and the
inhuman cruelty with which players can be so casually released.
This is an assessment of the influence and impact of the Islamic
scholar and activist Fethullah Gulen, and those who are inspired by
him, on contemporary Islam. This edited collection deals with the
challenges and opportunities faced by Muslims and the wider society
in Europe following the Madrid train bombings of 2003 and the
London Transport attacks of 2007. The contributors explore the
challenges to the concept and practice of civility in public life
within a European context, and demonstrates the contributions that
can be made in this regard by the thought and practice of the
global movement associated with the Turkish Muslim scholar
Fethullah Gulen. The importance and distinctiveness of teaching of
Gulen and the practice of the movement is that it is rooted in a
confident Turkish Islamic heritage while being fully engaged with
modernity. It offers the possibility of a contextualised renewal of
Islam for Muslims in Europe while being fully rooted in the
teachings of the Qu'ran and the Sunnah of the Prophet. This volume
is an important contribution to the study of the movement, which
advocates the freedom of religion while making an Islamic
contribution to the wider society based on a commitment to service
of others.
Paul Weller argues that continuation of the Church of England as an
establishment is theologically and politically inadequate to the
religious, social and political landscape of the twenty-first
century. Within an outline of the contemporary religious landscape
and the empirical results of research into the nature and extent of
religious discrimination, Time for a Change traces the historical
and contemporary contours and implications of establishment. A
range of alternative social, legal historical, theological and
ecclesiological approaches and models are examined and aspects of
'negotiation theory' are used to explore the conditions and
dynamics necessary for transition and change. Finally, Weller
argues that often-neglected perspectives of Baptist Christian
tradition - in particular its theologically founded commitment to
religious freedom and voluntaryist ecclesiology - offer more
adequate resources for shaping the Christian future in a
religiously plural and secular society than perspectives
historically associated with establishment. Time for a Change shows
that, through the conjunction of social, political, demographic,
theological and ecclesiological developments, a 'kairos' or
decision time has arrived for establishment. It aims to stimulate a
social and religious dialogue leading to the evolution of a new
'socio-religious contract'.
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Discovery Miles 3 100
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