|
Showing 1 - 25 of
321 matches in All Departments
The Law Student's Dictionary is an invaluable reference work for
all law students. The terms have been chosen with the specific
needs of the undergraduate student in mind, providing a full
insight into legal terminology and ensuring students are familiar
with terms they will encounter during their studies.
The dictionary includes substantial entries on core student topics
which outline the conceptual importance of key areas, to give
students an idea of how these terms have been shaped by, and in
turn shape, how lawyers think. Some older terms are also included -
-although they are not used to frame the current law, students will
come across these words of historical significance in the course of
their studies.
The text features cross-referencing of terms and definitions,
giving students the opportunity to expand and contextualize their
knowledge, and the material is presented in a new two-color page
design, which allows for quick and easy navigation.
|
We All Go Travelling By (Paperback)
Sheena Roberts; Illustrated by Siobhan Bell; Narrated by Fred Penner
|
R239
R195
Discovery Miles 1 950
Save R44 (18%)
|
Ships in 9 - 15 working days
|
This rhythmic I-spy journey to school through various landscapes is
the perfect introduction to colours, modes of transport, and of
course, music! The jaunty text, Siobhan Bell's colourful
hand-stitched illustrations and the accompanying music by popular
singer Fred Penner are sure to get children singing along happily.
The I-Spy theme encourages reader/listener interaction, while the
cumulative, repetitive text helps build sequencing skills. Ideal
for read-aloud and music and movement activities. A QR code on the
book provides access to video animation and audio.
The Tiny Truths Bible for Little Ones offers a delightful
introduction to the themes and characters of the Bible, from the
wonder of creation to the heroes of the Old Testament to the story
of Jesus's life, death, and resurrection. Full of fun and engaging
illustrations from the Tiny Truths Illustrated Bible, this board
book is a wonderful way for families to explore the Bible together,
right from the very beginning! The Tiny Truths Bible for Little
Ones: Is written and designed for children ages 0 to 4 Includes 12
Bible stories from both the Old and New Testaments Is written in
warm, simple language for the very young and is perfect for
year-round holiday gift giving, baptism gifts, and more Has a
comfortable padded cover The Tiny Truths Bible for Little Ones
helps your babies and toddlers discover: Who God is-the one who
made everything and everyone Who we are-his children, whom he loves
unconditionally What we were made for-to love God and everyone else
Hike through the rainforest, scale a mountain, swim across the
ocean, and still make it home for dinner. Rhyme and repetition make
learning fun in this terrain-traversing title that encourages
movement and reinforces animal sounds. A QR code on the book
provides access to video animation and audio.
|
Animal Boogie (Paperback)
Barefoot Books; Illustrated by Debbie Harter; Narrated by Fred Penner
|
R240
R196
Discovery Miles 1 960
Save R44 (18%)
|
Ships in 9 - 15 working days
|
Over 2 million copies sold worldwide! Dance on down to the jungles
of India, where 6 colourful creatures are jumping and jiving
beneath the canopy. In our bestselling singalong ever, inclusive
illustrations invite all children to join in the fun. Kids beg to
hear it again and again! A QR code on the book provides access to
video animation and audio singalong sung by acclaimed children's
performer Fred Penner.
Hans Penner takes a new look at the classic stories of the life of
the Buddha. In the first part of the book, he presents a full
account of these stories, drawn from various texts of Theravada
Buddhism, the Buddhism of South and Southeast Asia. Penner allots
one chapter to each of the major milestones in Buddha's life, with
titles such as: Birth and Early Life, Flight from the Palace,
Enlightenment and Liberation, Last Watch and Funeral. In the
process, he brings to the fore dimensions of the myth that have
been largely ignored by western scholarship. In Part II, Penner
offers his own original interpretations of the legends. He takes
issue with Max Weber's assertion that "Buddhism is an other-worldly
ascetic religion," a point of view that remains dominant in the
received tradition and in most contemporary studies of Buddhism.
His central thesis is that the "householder" is a necessary element
in Buddhism and that the giving of gifts, which creates merit and
presupposes the doctrine of karma, mediates the relation between
the householder and the monk. Penner argues that the omission of
the householder - in his view one-half of what constitutes Buddhism
as a religion - is fatal for any understanding of Buddha's life or
of the Buddhist tradition. This boldly revisionist and deeply
learned work will be of interest to a wide range of scholarly and
lay readers.
Property, or property rights, remains one of the most central
elements in moral, legal, and political thought. It figures
centrally in the work of figures as various as Grotius, Locke,
Hume, Smith, Hegel and Kant. This collection of essays brings fresh
perspective on property theory, from both legal and political
theoretical perspectives, and is essential reading for anyone
interested in the nature of property. Edited by two of the world's
leading theorists of property, James Penner and Michael Otsuka,
this volume brings together essays which consider, amongst other
topics, property and public law, the importance of legal forms in
property theory, whether use or exclusion are most essential to our
understanding of property, distributive justice, Lockean and
Grotian theories, the common ownership of the Earth, and Confucian
ideas of property.
Fourteen scholars who work on campus or in the theater address this
issue of what it means to play offstage. With their individual
definition of what "offstage" could mean, the results were,
predictably, varied. They employed a variety of critical approaches
to the question of what happens when the play moves into the
audience or beyond the physical playhouse itself? What are the
social, cultural, and political ramifications? Questions of "how"
and "why" actors play offstage admit the larger "role" their
production has for the world outside the theater, and hence this
collection's sub-title: "The Theater As a Presence or Factor in the
Real World." Among the various topics, the essays include: breaking
the "fourth wall" and thereby making the audience part of the
performance; the theater of political protest (one contributor
staged Waiting for Godot in Zuccotti Park as part of the Occupy
Wall Street protests); "landscape" or "town" theater using citizens
as actors or trekking theater where the production moves among
various locations in the community; the way principles of the
theater can inform corporate management; the genre of semi-scripted
comedy and quasi-impromptu spectacle (such as reality TV or flash
mobs); digitalized performances of Shakespeare; the role of Greek
Theater in the midst of the country's current economic and
political crisis; how the area outside the theater became part of
the performance inside Shakespeare's Globe; Timothy Leary's
Psychedelic Celebrations designed to reproduce the offstage
experience of LSD; WilliamVollmann's use of Noh theater to fashion
a personal model and process of life-transformation; liminal
theater which erases the line between onstage and off. The
collection thus complements through actual performance criticism
those studies that see the theater as a commentary on
issues-social, political, economic; and it reverses the Editor's
own earlier collection The Audience As Player, which examined
interactive theater where the spectator comes onstage.
When thinking about psalms and prayers in the Second Temple period,
the Masoretic Psalter and its reception is often given priority
because of modern academic or theological interests. This emphasis
tends to skew our understanding of the corpus we call psalms and
prayers and often dampens or mutes the lived context within which
these texts were composed and used. This volume is comprised of a
collection of articles that explore the diverse settings in which
psalms and prayers were used and circulated in the late Second
Temple period. The book includes essays by experts in the Hebrew
bible, the Dead Sea scrolls, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, and the
New Testament, in which a wide variety of topics, approaches, and
methods both old and new are utilized to explore the many functions
of psalms and prayers in the late Second Temple period. Included in
this volume are essays examining how psalms were read as prophecy,
as history, as liturgy, and as literature. A variety methodologies
are employed, and include the use of cognitive sciences and
poetics, linguistic theory, psychology, redaction criticism, and
literary theory.
Find out how four children from Mali, Europe, India and China go
through their morning routines. The catchy text encourages creative
movement and imagination, while teaching about different ways of
life. A QR code on the book provides access to video animation and
audio.
Since the publication of his first novel in 1974, J. M. Coetzee has
attained a reputation as one of the world's most respected
novelists. The demand for his works is related to the world's
interest in the politics, literature, culture, and society of South
Africa. However, Coetzee's fictions remain significant, according
to Penner, apart from their South African context, because of their
artistry and because they transform urgent societal concerns into
more enduring questions regarding colonialism and the relationships
of mastery and servitude between cultures and individuals. Penner
provides an in-depth, critical reading of Coetzee's five novels,
drawing upon primary and critical texts on Western and South
African literature and society. He argues that Coetzee's writings
subvert traditional novel forms and thus become self-reflexive
commentaries on the nature of fiction and fiction writing. Despite
the diversity of their forms, Coetzee's novels all deal with the
Cartesian division between the self and others that is at the base
of all colonial and master/slave relationships. Many of Coetzee's
protagonists who struggle to escape this Cartesian dichotomy and
the colonizing mentality it fosters also hold a privileged status
within their societies. As a result, they face a moral dilemma:
even if they are personally innocent of any acts of oppression,
they still share responsibility as members of the colonizing group.
If Coetzee does not provide solutions or a direct call to action to
resolve South Africa's enormous problems, Penner suggests, it is
because Coetzee is striking at a more fundamental problem: the
psychological, philosophical, and linguistic foundations of the
colonial dilemma. Penner also deals with the question of Coetzee's
identity as a South African writer, arguing that his tradition is
the broader Western literary tradition of which South Africa is a
part. This book should be read by anyone interested in Coetzee's
fiction, modern fiction, and Third World and South African
literature.
"Victorian Medicine and Social Reform" traces Florence
Nightingale's career as a reformer and Crimean war heroine. Her
fame as a social activist and her writings including "Notes on
Nursing" and "Notes on Matters Affecting the Health, ""Efficiency
and Hospital Administration of the British Army"""influenced
novelists such as Wilkie Collins, Elizabeth Gaskell, and George
Eliot. Their novels of social realism, in turn, influenced
Nightingale's later essays on poverty and Indian famine. This study
draws original conclusions on the relationship between
Nightingale's work and its historical context, gender politics, and
such twenty-first-century analogues as celebrity activists Angelina
Jolie, Al Gore, and Nicole Kidman.
"Overcoming Katrina" tells the stories of 27 New Orleanians as
they fought to survive Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath.""Their
oral histories offer first-hand experiences: three days on a roof
with Navy veteran Leonard Smith; at the convention center with
waitress Eleanor Thornton; and with Willie Pitford, an elevator
man, as he rescued 150 people in New Orleans East. "Overcoming"
approaches the question of why New Orleans matters, from
perspectives of the individuals who lived, loved, worked, and
celebrated life and death there prior to being scattered across the
country by Hurricane Katrina. This book's twenty-seven narrators
range from Mack Slan, a conservative businessman who disparages the
younger generation for not sharing his ability to make "good,
rational decisions," to Kalamu ya Salaam, who was followed by the
New Orleans Police Department for several years as a militant
defender of Black Power in the late 1960s and '70s. These
narratives are memorials to the corner stores, the Baptist
churches, the community health clinics, and those streets where the
aunties stood on the corner, and whose physical traces have now all
been washed away. They conclude with visions of a safer, equitably
rebuilt New Orleans. *Scroll down for more audio excerpts from
"Overcoming Katrina"*
|
|