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This landmark research volume provides the first detailed history
of entrepreneurship in Britain from the nineteenth century to the
present. Using a remarkable new database of more than nine million
entrepreneurs, it gives new understanding to the development of
Britain as the world's 'first industrial nation'. Based on the
first long-term whole-population analysis of British small
business, it uses novel methods to identify from the 10-yearly
population census the two to four million people per year who
operated businesses in the period 1851-1911. Using big data
analytics, it reveals how British businesses evolved over time,
supplementing the census-derived data on individuals with other
sources on companies and business histories. By comparing to modern
data, it reveals how the late-Victorian period was a 'golden age'
for smaller and medium-sized business, driven by family firms, the
accelerating participation of women and the increasing use of
incorporation as significant vehicles for development. A unique
resource and citation for future research on entrepreneurship, of
crucial significance to economic development policies for small
business around the world, and above all the key entry point for
researchers to the database which is deposited at the UK Data
Archive, this major publication will change our understanding of
the scale and economic significance of small businesses in the
nineteenth century.
The simple fact is that the utterance 'Brad Pitt' tends to prompt
strong reactions--either reflecting hype, excitement, or revulsion
concerning one or more of this actor's roles, or reflecting piqued
interest in the various issues (be they political, intellectual, or
social) that Pitt seems to stand for. In short, Brad Pitt is a
productively perplexing subject. "Deconstructing Brad Pitt" attends
to these strong reactions, exploring what issues are raised and
interrogated by the many manifestations of Brad Pitt. Several
chapters look at how Pitt's roles challenge or perpetuate key myths
prevalent throughout contemporary American culture; other chapters
read Pitt's performances as allegories for dramas that are playing
out in larger spheres, such as global capital, new media
aesthetics, and celebrity humanitarianism. Still other chapters
delineate the intersections of Pitt's celebrity status with his
on-screen performances, arguing for expressions of self-awareness
and meta-commentaries on celebrity culture and contemporary art
practices. Written in accessible prose and drawing from the
expertise of a range of scholars and writers in different fields,
Deconstructing Brad Pitt will unperplex the mysteries surrounding
the star status and numerous roles of Brad Pitt.
Situating post-WWII New York literature within the material context
of American urban history, this work analyzes how literary
movements such as the Beat Generation, the New York poets and Black
Arts Moment criticized the spatial restructuring of post-WWII New
York City.
This landmark research volume provides the first detailed history
of entrepreneurship in Britain from the nineteenth century to the
present. Using a remarkable new database of more than nine million
entrepreneurs, it gives new understanding to the development of
Britain as the world's 'first industrial nation'. Based on the
first long-term whole-population analysis of British small
business, it uses novel methods to identify from the 10-yearly
population census the two to four million people per year who
operated businesses in the period 1851-1911. Using big data
analytics, it reveals how British businesses evolved over time,
supplementing the census-derived data on individuals with other
sources on companies and business histories. By comparing to modern
data, it reveals how the late-Victorian period was a 'golden age'
for smaller and medium-sized business, driven by family firms, the
accelerating participation of women and the increasing use of
incorporation as significant vehicles for development. A unique
resource and citation for future research on entrepreneurship, of
crucial significance to economic development policies for small
business around the world, and above all the key entry point for
researchers to the database which is deposited at the UK Data
Archive, this major publication will change our understanding of
the scale and economic significance of small businesses in the
nineteenth century.
Situating post-WWII New York literature within the material context of American urban history, this work analyzes criticism the spatial restructuring of post-WWII New York City. Rejecting the dominant trends in post-WWII American urbanism-from International Style Modernist corporate architecture to suburban sprawl--as material expressions of corporate capitalism, these writers attempted to imagine alternative, more democratic and more multicultural, urban possibilities.
We are now experiencing a period of unprecedented change; what
amounts to a global revolution in our economy, society and
awareness of the human impact on the environment. Global Change and
Challenge examines some of the crucial issues facing society in the
1990s and how geography can contribute to their understanding and
management. Using the broad theme of how societies adapt to change,
the contributors seek to present a range of views on the `geography
of change' in an accessible form for both school and university
students. The general aim of the book is as much to encourage
students to understand where we are and where we have some from, as
to where we may be going. Robert Bennett and Robert Estall are both
Professors of Geography at the London School of Economics. The
contributors were all members of the Department of Geography at the
LSE at the time of writing.
Revolutionary changes to our world economy and its impact on the
environment are presenting large problems for human society.
"Global Change and Challenge" examines some of the crucial
challenges facing society in the 1990s and how geography can
contribute to their understanding and management. Using the theme
of how societies adapt to change, the contributors deal with some
of the issues confronting modern geography in three broad groups.
The early chapters examine the impact of human activity on the
environment in a global context - looking in particular at the
management of resources and of the natural environment. The book
then examines from a variety of perspectives how global economic
change offers both new constraints and new opportunities for
economic development at all levels: local, regional and global. The
shifting patterns of social and economic change are examined with
respect to the industrialized, newly industrialized, and Third
World countries at both national and regional levels. The final
chapter assesses how new technology can influence the geographer's
perspective and aid in the search for management solutions. This
book should be of interest to lecturers and fi
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Pill (Paperback)
Robert Bennett
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R342
R244
Discovery Miles 2 440
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Object Lessons is a series of short, beautifully designed books
about the hidden lives of ordinary things. "You are what you eat."
Never is this truer than when we use medications, from beta
blockers and aspirin to Viagra and epidurals-and especially
psychotropic pills that transform our minds as well as our bodies.
Meditating on how modern medicine increasingly measures out human
identity not in T. S. Eliot's proverbial coffee spoons but in 1mg-,
5mg-, or 300mg-doses, Pill traces the uncanny presence of
psychiatric pills through science, medicine, autobiography,
television, cinema, literature, and popular music. Robert Bennett
reveals modern psychopharmacology to be a brave new world in which
human identities- thoughts, emotions, personalities, and selves
themselves-are increasingly determined by the extraordinary powers
of seemingly ordinary pills. Object Lessons is published in
partnership with an essay series in The Atlantic.
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