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All 18 episodes from the first two series of the BBC drama starring
Aidan Turner as Captain Ross Poldark. Upon returning to Cornwall
after fighting in the American War of Independence, Poldark must
rebuild his life following the death of his father with his estate
in ruins and his childhood sweetheart Elizabeth (Heida Reed)
engaged to his cousin Francis (Kyle Soller), after hearing
premature reports of his death. With the help of his new maid
Demelza (Eleanor Tomlinson), Ross attempts to navigate the hostile,
poverty-stricken locals and the region's wealthy and influential
businessmen to reopen his family's disused copper mine, Wheal
Leisure.
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In the Blood (DVD)
Kenny Doughty, Adam Nagaitis, Alison Steadman, Joe Cole, Brian McCardie, …
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R53
Discovery Miles 530
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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Joe Cole and Philip Davis star in this gritty British crime drama.
After the death of his grandfather (Davis), a group of violent
gangsters turn to young drug addict Johnny (Cole) to finish the job
his grandfather started and open a safe for them. Chosen as the
only one able to crack the safe and complete their heist, Johnny's
drug habit threatens to compromise his task as withdrawal symptoms
set in and he wrestles with the guilt of his grandfather's recent
passing...
"Shakespeare Now!" is a series of short books of truly vital
literary scholarship, each with its own distinctive form.
"Shakespeare Now!" recaptures the excitement of Shakespeare; it
doesn't assume we know him already, or that we know the best
methods for approaching his plays. "Shakespeare Now!" is a new
generation of critics, unafraid of risk, on a series of
intellectual adventures. Above all - it is a new Shakespeare,
freshly present in each volume. Shakespearean thinking is always
dynamic: thinking that happens in the living moment of its
performance, in quickly passing process. This book offers a model
of human mentality that can be shown through the dense immediacy of
dramatic thinking, as embodied above all in Shakespeare's working
method. "Shakespeare Thinking" discusses the positioning of
Shakespeare as the paradigm of fully human mental creativity from
the Romantics to the latest neurological experiments which show
that Shakespeare can reveal new understandings of the hard-wiring
of the human brain, and the sheer sudden electricity of its
synaptic development.
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Jeanne D'Arc (Hardcover)
Louis-Maurice Boutet de Monvel, Philip Davis, Putnam Davis
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R685
Discovery Miles 6 850
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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'His mind and hand went together' said Hemings and Condell of the
speed of Shakespeare. But the conceptual language of literary
criticism, be it moralistic or political, has long been too slow to
the properly responsive to Shakespeare's meaning. With the help of
both Renaissance philosophers and present-day actors, Sudden
Shakepeare seeks to locate the underlying secrets of Shakespeare's
dynamic power. It offers a technical language wihch, close to
Shakespeare's own, is capable of responding suddenly to the speed,
transforming shape, and power of Shakespeare's way of thinking as
it comes into meaning.
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The Big I Am (DVD)
Leo Gregory, Vincent Regan, Michael Madsen, Robert Fucilla, Steven Berkoff, …
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R18
Discovery Miles 180
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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British crime thriller. Mickey Skinner (Leo Gregory) is a
small-time crook saddled with mounting debts and a seemingly
endless run of bad luck. Mickey's break finally comes when he is
unexpectedy given the keys to the empire of gangland boss Don
Barber (Vincent Regan). But does he have what it takes to make it
in the big league?
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Fast Girls (Blu-ray disc)
Bradley James, Rupert Graves, Noel Clarke, Lenora Crichlow, Philip Davis, …
1
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R71
Discovery Miles 710
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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Regan Hall's directorial feature debut is a fast-paced sports drama
set in London. Sparks fly when Shania (Lenora Crichlow), a sprinter
from the city's back streets, comes head to head with Lisa (Lily
James), an equally ambitious young runner from a wealthy middle
class background. Their fierce rivalry soon reaches breaking point
as both girls strive to make it to the top. Bradley James, Rupert
Graves and Noel Clarke co-star.
The Barret Browning volume in the 21st Century Oxford Authors
series offers a comprehensive selection of the works of one of the
nineteenth-century's most famous poets. The revaluation of
Elizabeth Barrett Browning's work by feminist scholars has made her
an established (indeed standard) author in university syllabuses in
Britain and in America. Yet the emphasis upon her contribution to a
female tradition has tended to rigidify Barrett Browning's
contribution to English literary culture in the nineteenth century,
just as her popular image as
ringleted-invalid-turned-romantic-heroine served sentimentally to
eclipse her role as a literary pioneer. This edition complements or
corrects these emphases by being the first edition dedicated to
witnessing the progress and growth of the poet's creative direction
- from her juvenilia through to her major achievements and beyond.
In keeping with the aims of the series, the selection honours the
original sequencing of the published works as the best means of
indicating the contours of Barrett Browning's poetic career. Thus,
following fairly limited selections from published juvenilia, The
Battle of Marathon (1820) and 'An Essay on Mind' and Other Poems
(1826) and from 'Prometheus Bound' and Miscellaneous Poems (1833),
there are more extensive selections from 'The Seraphim' and Other
Poems (1838), from Poems 1844 and from Poems 1850 including the
full text of Sonnets from the Portuguese. Substantial excerpts from
Casa Guidi Windows (1851) is followed by the full text of Aurora
Leigh (1857) and by selections from the posthumous Last Poems
(1862). These individual sections are supplemented by careful
selections (also chronologically ordered) from the correspondence,
including the courtship letters with Robert Browning, and, where
applicable, from poetry unpublished in the nineteenth century. The
edition comes with full scholarly apparatus (introduction,
chronology, explanatory notes), though it follows the series policy
of recording only significant variants between editions.
Poets, novelists and academics committed to creative thinking join
together in this collection of essays to say what serious reading
really means to them as individuals. The collection is divided into
four sections: George Steiner and George Craig on the act of
reading in general; Joseph Brodsky, Les Murray, Douglas Oliver and
Hester Jones on reading, poetry and vision; John Bayley, Philip
Davis and Gabriel Josipovici on reading and teaching in the
universities; Raymond Tallis, Michael Irwin, Josie Billington and
Doris Lessing on reading and the novel.
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Reading (Paperback)
Philip Davis, Fiona Magee
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R452
Discovery Miles 4 520
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Can reading literature really help our mental health? This book
shows how and why - not by instruction or prescription but by
emotion and exploration. Offering case histories of individual
readers and reading groups based on the work of The Reader, a
charity dedicated to bringing serious literature to neglected
communities, the authors showcase how a whole new demographic might
get into reading, and in doing so unlock the emotional intelligence
and benefits to health and wellbeing which come from our access to
written human stories and imagined situations.
For many years it has been recognized that the key to explaining
the production of the Bible lies in understanding the profession,
the practice and the mentality of scribes in the ancient Near East,
classical Greece and the Greco-Roman world. In many ways, however,
the production of the Jewish literary canon, while reflecting wider
practice, constitutes an exception because of its religious
function as the written "word of God", leading in turn to the
veneration of scrolls as sacred and even cultic objects in
themselves. "Writing the Bible" brings together the wide-ranging
study of all major aspects of ancient writing and writers. The
essays cover the dissemination of texts, book and canon formation,
and the social and political effects of writing and of textual
knowledge. Central issues discussed include the status of the
scribe, the nature of 'authorship', the relationship between
copying and redacting, and the relative status of oral and written
knowledge. The writers examined include Ilimilku of Ugarit, the
scribes of ancient Greece, Ben Sira, Galen, Origen and the author
of Pseudo-Clement.
This book explores the role of the biblical patriarch Abraham in
the formation and use of authoritative texts in the Persian and
Hellenistic periods. It reflects a conference session in 2009
focusing on Abraham as a figure of cultural memory in the
literature of these periods. Cultural memory is the shared
reproduction and recalling of what has been learned and retained.
It also involves transformation and innovation. As a figure of
memory, stories of Abraham served as guidelines for
identity-formation and authoritative illustration of behaviour for
the emerging Jewish communities.
Covers a crucial two decades in American history, when the links
between Hollywood and Washington DC were at their strongest.. The
period is 'book-ended' by the mighty political and cinematic
figures of Reagan and Clinton.. Covers a period in which movies
have become targets of political rhetoric of 'family values'..
Essays examine cinematic views of key American political
institutions - the presidency and electoral process, politically
significant places such as New York City and the American South,
the promotion of major issues like gender, family and race. This is
a subject which has gained new significance in the wake of recent
terrorist attacks in New York and Washington DC, which have changed
both the political climate, and the priorities of the movie
industry. -- .
This book gives a thorough account of the electoral process at all
levels and in all branches of American government. The book is
particularly effective in placing current issues in the American
political arena in context, illustrated with much needed and
otherwise difficult to find information. In addition to a thorough
coverage of recent elections the book gives substantial account to
other important related themes. An examination of the historical
development of political campaigning over 200 years leads into a
study of the genealogy and current status of America's political
parties.
"MI6 and the Machinery of Spying "traces the development of the
agency's internal structure from its inception until the end of the
Cold War. The analysis examines how its management structure has
been driven by its operational environment on the one hand and its
position within the machinery of British central government on the
other. Close attention is paid to the agency's institutional links
to its consumers in Whitehall and Downing Street, as well as to the
causes and consequences of its operational organization and
provisions for counter-espionage and security.
The book presents a detailed response to assertions that the SIS
was historically chronically mismanaged and badly organized, and to
claims that it is unaccountable to political and public oversight.
It also argues that where SIS activities have resulted in public
disasters and scandals the reason has usually been less its lack of
accountability and control than the very high degree of control and
direction exercised by opportunistic politicians and the senior
Civil Servants.
"MI6 and the Machinery of Spying "traces the development of the
agency's internal structure from its inception until the end of the
Cold War. The analysis examines how its management structure has
been driven by its operational environment on the one hand and its
position within the machinery of British central government on the
other. Close attention is paid to the agency's institutional links
to its consumers in Whitehall and Downing Street, as well as to the
causes and consequences of its operational organization and
provisions for counter-espionage and security.
The book presents a detailed response to assertions that the SIS
was historically chronically mismanaged and badly organized, and to
claims that it is unaccountable to political and public oversight.
It also argues that where SIS activities have resulted in public
disasters and scandals the reason has usually been less its lack of
accountability and control than the very high degree of control and
direction exercised by opportunistic politicians and the senior
Civil Servants.
Reading for Life is an anthology of poems and of extracts from
prose fiction, related to a series of case-histories of individuals
carefully reading, discussing their reading lives, and thinking
about the relation of literature to their existence. It enables
readers to gain increased imaginative access to the works in
question through seeing how they have intensely affected equivalent
readers-a novelist, a poet, a doctor, a teacher, an anthologist,
but also non-specialists, ordinary people within shared reading
groups in many different settings, finding help from literary texts
in times of often painful personal need. It is the story of the
work done by Philip Davis' research unit, the Centre for Research
into Reading, Literature and Society (CRILS), at the University of
Liverpool, in a ten-year partnership with the outreach charity The
Reader, taking serious literature to often neglected communities
and struggling individuals through the shared reading-alive and
aloud-of literature from all ages. Reading for Life is a detailed
account of what reading literature can do for a wide variety of
individuals in relation to a wide variety of texts: it will be of
interest to serious readers in the wider world as much as to
scholars working within literary studies, and to all those involved
in thinking about the therapeutic interactions of literature and
life in psychology, medicine, and mental health support settings.
Going beyond the standard interpretation of Supreme Court opinions,
thisandnbsp;practical text delves into the legal reasoning behind
the written opinions - the modes of persuasion and justification
used by Supreme Court justices - to give readers a deeper
understanding of how to read and interpret the decisions of our
highest court. An indispensableandnbsp;supplement to any
constitutional law casebook, the sixth edition has been thoroughly
updated, incorporating new material throughout the book on recent
opinions issued by the Supreme Court.andnbsp; It also includes a
new Chapter 9, which discusses in greater depth the briefing of a
case - Seattle Schoolandnbsp;District No. 1;- and its analysis.
Discusses the life and work of William James, a founder of the
study of psychology. William James (1842-1910) was elder brother to
the novelist Henry James and a founder of the study of psychology.
But he was also a thinker who sought to work across conventional
boundaries, and did not believe in separate disciplines or
over-professionalized ways of thinking. James was above all
interested in those moments when thoughts suddenly come into being,
'hot' and 'alive'. William James is for anyone who has experienced
the personal need for such thinking and feels the excitement of
ideas. It concerns the personal experience of reading James,
involving extensive quotation from his work in relation to Philip
Davis' own inner life and the lives of other readers of James-a
thinker who is defiantly convinced of the fundamental validity of
the inner life in the making of the Real. This book is about
William James's life-writing, writing for the sake of existence,
that puts together a mix of literature, psychology, philosophy, and
biography in the search for purpose and human flourishing, in place
of formal religion. It includes James' interest in his brother's
novels and in Shakespearean drama, as well as Thomas Hardy's
pessimistic challenge to James. Davis is a reader of literature who
feels that readers of novels and poems also need the help of
psychology and philosophy, to get the thinking out, to make it into
a working part of a life. His book is for readers, especially
readers of literature, seeking to create, like William James, a
literary way of thinking outside the realm of literature.
For many years it has been recognized that the key to explaining
the production of the Bible lies in understanding the profession,
the practice and the mentality of scribes in the ancient Near East,
classical Greece and the Greco-Roman world. In many ways, however,
the production of the Jewish literary canon, while reflecting wider
practice, constitutes an exception because of its religious
function as the written "word of God", leading in turn to the
veneration of scrolls as sacred and even cultic objects in
themselves. "Writing the Bible" brings together the wide-ranging
study of all major aspects of ancient writing and writers. The
essays cover the dissemination of texts, book and canon formation,
and the social and political effects of writing and of textual
knowledge. Central issues discussed include the status of the
scribe, the nature of 'authorship', the relationship between
copying and redacting, and the relative status of oral and written
knowledge. The writers examined include Ilimilku of Ugarit, the
scribes of ancient Greece, Ben Sira, Galen, Origen and the author
of Pseudo-Clement.
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