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Picked warm from a tree, a California apricot opens into halves as
easily as if it came with a dotted line down its center. The seed
infuses the core with a hint of almond; the fruit carries the scent
of citrus and jasmine; and it tastes, some say, like manna from
heaven. In these pages, Robin Chapman recalls the season when the
Santa Clara Valley was the largest apricot producer in the world
and recounts the stories of Silicon Valley's now lost orchards.
From the Spaniards in the eighteenth century who first planted
apricots in the Mission Santa Clara gardens to the post-World War
II families who built their homes among subdivided orchards, relive
the long summer days ripe with bumper crops of this
much-anticipated delicacy.
This volume contains nine survey articles based on the invited
lectures given at the 23rd British Combinatorial Conference, held
at Exeter in July 2011. This biennial conference is a
well-established international event, with speakers from all over
the world. By its nature, this volume provides an up-to-date
overview of current research activity in several areas of
combinatorics, including extremal graph theory, the cyclic sieving
phenomenon and transversals in Latin squares. Each article is
clearly written and assumes little prior knowledge on the part of
the reader. The authors are some of the world's foremost
researchers in their fields, and here they summarise existing
results and give a unique preview of the most recent developments.
The book provides a valuable survey of the present state of
knowledge in combinatorics. It will be useful to research workers
and advanced graduate students, primarily in mathematics but also
in computer science and statistics.
This book represents the longest single-volume work on modern Welsh
literature ever published, and proceeds from two broad
perspectives. First, avoiding the traditional intrinsic and
extrinsic approaches to literary history as the story of literary
forms, authors, other literatures, or events, it places readers,
where possible, at its centre. The definition of readers adopted
here is broad: fictional and non-fictional, derived from letters,
reviews, and criticism, as well as audiences addressed in prefaces,
those mediated through authors' consciousness, or implied, assumed,
postulated, created, idealized, chided, encouraged, and reviled,
and treated as experts or pupils, arbiters, or dupes. Welsh
literature is approached not as the sequential product of authors
writing under particular circumstances but as material interpreted
and reinterpreted, discovered, and rediscovered, by reading
communities across time. Second, it seeks to interpret Welsh
literature as shaped in turn by a series of concerns and
preconceptions that have governed production and reception through
most of the period covered in this book. These include, for
instance, the fact that Welsh literature has been read as a crisis
of cultural communicability between writers and readers; that
writers in a largely amateur literary culture have been regarded as
benefactors; that there is a lack of material to read; that, in a
bilingual milieu, there is an inescapable relationship between
Welsh and English literature; that a language with widely differing
spoken and written registers is preoccupied with notions of
correctness and appropriateness.
What does it mean to talk about law as theater, to speak about the
"performance" of transactions as mundane as the sale of a pig or as
agonizing as receiving compensation for a dead kinsman? In Dark
Speech, Robin Chapman Stacey explores such questions by examining
the interaction between performance and law in Ireland between the
seventh and ninth centuries. Exposing the inner workings of the
Irish legal system, Stacey examines the manner in which publicly
enacted words and silences were used to construct legal and
political relationships in a society where traditional hierarchies
were very much in flux. Law in early Ireland was a verbal art,
grounded as much in aesthetics as in the enforcement of communal
norms. In contrast with modern law, no sharp distinction existed
between art and politics. Visualizing legal events through the lens
of procedure, Stacey helps readers recognize the creative, fluid,
and inherently risky nature of these same events. While many
historians have long realized the mnemonic value of legal drama to
the small, principally nonliterate societies of the early Middle
Ages, Stacey argues that the appeal to social memory is but one
aspect of the role played by performance in early law. In fact,
legal performance (like other more easily recognized forms of
verbal art) created and transformed as much as it recorded.
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Ghost Stories: Volume 3 (DVD)
Simon Gipps-Kent, Joseph O'Connor, James Mellor, Edward Petherbridge, Preston Lockwood, …
1
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R395
R93
Discovery Miles 930
Save R302 (76%)
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Out of stock
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Lawrence Gordon Clark directs this triple bill of BBC adaptations
of the ghost stories by M.R. James. In 'Lost Hearts' (1973) young
orphan Stephen (Simon Gipps-Kent) goes to stay at the generous Mr.
Abney (Joseph O'Connor)'s estate where he is haunted by two
children who previously lived in the house. It turns out the
children have come to warn Stephen that Abney is not all that he
seems. In 'The Ash Tree' (1975) Sir Richard Fell (Edward
Petherbridge) inherits his uncle's manor and grounds. He moves in
and decides to cut down an ash tree that could prove harmful to the
property but before he gets the chance he begins to hear strange
sounds and sees supernatural figures coming from the tree... In
'The Treasure of Abbot Thomas' (1974) cynical Reverend Somerton
(Michael Bryant) is completely close-minded when it comes to
paranormal activity. His steadfast beliefs falter, however, when
his and Lord Peter Dattering (Paul Lavers)'s search for the
treasure of alchemist Abbot Thomas (John Herrington) unleashes a
terrifying spectre.
Examines the institution of personal suretyship through the
remarkable rich sources extant from medieval Ireland and Wales.
In Law and the Imagination in Medieval Wales, Robin Chapman Stacey
explores the idea of law as a form of political fiction: a body of
literature that blurs the lines generally drawn between the legal
and literary genres. She argues that for jurists of
thirteenth-century Wales, legal writing was an intensely
imaginative genre, one acutely responsive to nationalist concerns
and capable of reproducing them in sophisticated symbolic form. She
identifies narrative devices and tropes running throughout
successive revisions of legal texts that frame the body as an
analogy for unity and for the court, that equate maleness with
authority and just rule and femaleness with its opposite, and that
employ descriptions of internal and external landscapes as
metaphors for safety and peril, respectively. Historians disagree
about the context in which the lawbooks of medieval Wales should be
read and interpreted. Some accept the claim that they originated in
a council called by the tenth-century king Hywel Dda, while others
see them less as a repository of ancient custom than as the Welsh
response to the general resurgence in law taking place in western
Europe. Stacey builds on the latter approach to argue that whatever
their origins, the lawbooks functioned in the thirteenth century as
a critical venue for political commentary and debate on a wide
range of subjects, including the threat posed to native
independence and identity by the encroaching English; concerns
about violence and disunity among the native Welsh; abusive
behavior on the part of native officials; unwelcome changes in
native practice concerning marriage, divorce, and inheritance; and
fears about the increasing political and economic role of women.
When Ben Bowen died, aged twenty-five, in 1903, the Welsh literary
establishment predicted his immortality. This book looks at the
Bowen phenomenon as a product both of his own view of himself as a
great poet and a Wales that fed that assumption. It traces his
escape from a miner's life in the Rhondda, his stay in South Africa
during the Boer War, his talent for controversy and his growing
awareness of his early death. This is the first extended,
dispassionate account of the life, work and death of the
Treorci-born poet Ben Bowen (1878-1903). Published on the centenary
of his death, the work seeks to explain Bowen's short-lived fame
and subsequent obscurity. It considers his precocious sense of
himself as a poet, the literary, social and religious milieu in
which he operated, his desire to use poetry as an escape from
humble beginnings, and his awareness from his late teens of his
impending death. Through a consideration of the life of this
compelling character, Robin Chapman also enhances our understanding
of Welsh culture in late-Victorian and early-Edwardian Wales.
A collection of essays inspired by Professor Emeritus Gruffydd Aled
Williams' research, in recognition of his outstanding contribution
to Welsh academic life. -- Cyngor Llyfrau Cymru
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