![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 11 of 11 matches in All Departments
First Published in 2000. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
This highly acclaimed book has been fully revised and updated for a fourth edition, and is written for all those teaching in higher education seeking to develop their skills or considering accreditation. It provides direct, accessible and authoritative guidance on all aspects of teaching in higher education, planning courses and modules, preparing and delivering teaching materials, assessment, use of information technology, teaching techniques and career development strategies.Covering the subject in a clear, down-to-earth and entertaining manner, A Handbook for Teachers in Universities and Colleges is filled with practical advice and guidance. With detailed use of example material and extensive use of illustration, the book, organized in an attractive, easy to use handbook format, makes information easily accessible for busy teachers.
What is opera and how does it work? How has this dramatic form developed and what is its relevance in the modern world? Perfect for music students and opera-goers, this introductory guide addresses these questions and many more, exploring opera as a complete theatrical experience. Organised chronologically and avoiding technical musical terminology, the book clearly demonstrates how opera reflected and reacted to changes in the world around it. A special feature of the volume is the inclusion of illustrative tables throughout. These provide detailed, easy to follow analysis of arias, scenes and acts; visual guides to historical movements; and chronologies relating to genres and individual composers' works. Overall, the book fosters an understanding of opera as a living form as it encounters and uses material from an ever expanding repertoire in time, place and culture.
What is opera and how does it work? How has this dramatic form developed and what is its relevance in the modern world? Perfect for music students and opera-goers, this introductory guide addresses these questions and many more, exploring opera as a complete theatrical experience. Organised chronologically and avoiding technical musical terminology, the book clearly demonstrates how opera reflected and reacted to changes in the world around it. A special feature of the volume is the inclusion of illustrative tables throughout. These provide detailed, easy to follow analysis of arias, scenes and acts; visual guides to historical movements; and chronologies relating to genres and individual composers' works. Overall, the book fosters an understanding of opera as a living form as it encounters and uses material from an ever expanding repertoire in time, place and culture.
This book is a true story of what has happen to me in my life. And the miracles performed by God in my life while I was on my Journey seeking his Kingdom and his Righteousness
The 121 letters published here for the first time comprise the
existing prenuptial correspondence of Vance and his first wife.
Primarily love letters, they reveal the salient traits of two
high-minded beings and also offer fascinating glimpses into the
society of antebellum North Carolina.
Published in the new Methuen Classical Dramatists series Written at the height of the Peloponnesian War, the three plays in this volume highlight the trivial causes and dire consequences of war and the fate of the innocent. In Andromache, Hektor's widow struggles to survive as the concubine of her husband's killer. Herakles' Children and Herakles show his two young families, without his powerful protection at the mercy of his enemies. Full of humanity and subtle characterisation, these new translations by Robert Cannon and Kenneth McLeish which are intended both for performer and student, Euripides is reaffirmed as a fresh and compelling dramatist.
Sophocles' greatest plays reissued in the new Classical Greek Dramatists series. Introduced by series editor J Michael Walton Includes the surviving complete plays: Ajax which plots the downfall of Odysseus's greatest Trojan enemy - who slaughters a whole herd of cattle before killing himself; Women of Trachis in which the seemingly docile Deianira prepares a lethal homecoming for her womanising husband Heracles; in Electra the son and daughter of the ill-starred Agamemnon plan their revenge on their usurping stepfather and mother and finally Philoctetes in which Sophocles brilliantly explores the themes of pain, love and the betrayal of trust.
|
![]() ![]() You may like...
Parkinson's Disease and Nonmotor…
Ronald F. Pfeiffer, Ivan Bodis-Wollner
Hardcover
R5,703
Discovery Miles 57 030
Research Anthology on Emerging…
Information Resources Management Association
Hardcover
R14,644
Discovery Miles 146 440
Real Sadhus Sing to God - Gender…
Antoinette Elizabeth DeNapoli
Hardcover
R4,097
Discovery Miles 40 970
|