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Trusted for over 50 years, this accessible, comprehensive and practical commentary has been written with the needs of the practitioner, the trustee and the academic jurist in mind.
The sixth edition of Honoré’s South African Law of Trusts meticulously discusses the life of a trust from its formation to its dissolution and the problems that are typically encountered in the process.
Extensively updated with reference to the latest legislation, case law, and in terms of South Africa’s growing constitutional development, the book also includes a new chapter on collective investment schemes.
In the immediate aftermath of World War II, Paul Celan moved to
Bucharest, where he spent more than two years working as a
translator at Carta Rusa publishing house. During that time he was
introduced to poet and translator Petre Solomon and began a close
friendship that would endure many years, despite the distances that
separated them and the turbulent times in which they lived. In this
poignant memoir, Solomon recalls the experiences he shared with
Celan and captures the ways in which Bucharest profoundly
influenced Celan's evolution as a poet. He recounts the publication
of the famous ""Todesfuge"" for the first time in the Romanian
magazine Agora and his fertile connection with the Romanian
surrealist movement. Through Solomon's vivid recollection and
various letters Celan sent to friends, readers also get an intimate
glimpse of Celan's personality, one characterized by a joyful
appreciation of friendship and a subtle sense of humor. Translated
from the original, Tegla's edition makes this remarkable memoir
available to a much-deserved wider audience for the first time.
In the immediate aftermath of World War II, Paul Celan moved to
Bucharest, where he spent more than two years working as a
translator at Carta Rusa publishing house. During that time he was
introduced to poet and translator Petre Solomon and began a close
friendship that would endure many years, despite the distances that
separated them and the turbulent times in which they lived. In this
poignant memoir, Solomon recalls the experiences he shared with
Celan and captures the ways in which Bucharest profoundly
influenced Celan's evolution as a poet. He recounts the publication
of the famous ""Todesfuge"" for the first time in the Romanian
magazine Agora and his fertile connection with the Romanian
surrealist movement. Through Solomon's vivid recollection and
various letters Celan sent to friends, readers also get an intimate
glimpse of Celan's personality, one characterized by a joyful
appreciation of friendship and a subtle sense of humor. Translated
from the original, Tegla's edition makes this remarkable memoir
available to a much-deserved wider audience for the first time.
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