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Literature and the Telephone explores the ways that the telephone
taps into the operations of reading and writing, opening up our
understanding of how, where and why literary communication takes
place. Addressing the telephone’s complex, multiple and mutating
functions, and drawing on recent work by writers and thinkers
including Sara Ahmed, Stacy Alaimo, Judith Butler, Nicholas Royle
and Eyal Weizman, this open access book considers the linguistic,
technical and conceptual disruptions of the literary telephone as
well as the poetic and political possibilities of the exchange.
Focusing on the telephonic effects of post-war writing by authors
such as Mourid Barghouti, Caroline Bergvall, Tom Raworth, Muriel
Spark, Ali Smith and Rita Wong, Sarah Jackson proposes that the
uncanny logic of the telephone, and its capacity for ordering and
disordering the text, speaks to some of the most urgent concerns of
our era. Examining topics ranging from surveillance and migration
to warfare and electronic waste, Jackson argues that the literary
telephone offers new ways of conceiving ethical and creative
technological futures, as well as different modes of reading,
writing and listening across cultures. The ebook editions of this
book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on
bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by Nottingham
Trent University.
In 1914, the East London Federation of Suffragettes, led by Sylvia
Pankhurst, split from the WSPU. Sylvia's mother and sister,
Emmeline and Christabel, had encouraged her to give up her work
with the poor women of East London - but Sylvia refused. Besides
campaigning for women to have an equal right to vote from their
headquarters in Bow, the ELFS worked on a range of equality issues
which mattered to local women: they built a toy factory, providing
work and a living wage for local women; they opened a subsidized
canteen where women and children could get cheap, nutritious food;
and they launched a nursery school, a creche, and a mother-and-baby
clinic. The work of the Federation (and 'our Sylvia', as she was
fondly known by locals) deserves to be remembered, and this book,
filled with astonishing first-hand accounts, aims to bring this
amazing story to life.
The House that Love Built is the quintessential story of one
woman's questioning what it means to be an American - and a
Christian - in light of a broken immigration system. Through tender
stories of opening her heart and home to immigrants, Sarah Jackson
shines a holy light on loving our neighbor. Sarah Jackson once
thought immigration justice was administered through higher walls
and longer fences. Then she met an immigrant, and everything
changed. As Sarah began to know fractured families ravaged by
threats in their homeland and further traumatized in U.S.
detention, biblical justice took on a new meaning. As Sarah opened
her heart - and her home - to immigrants, she experienced a
surprising transformation and the gift of extraordinary community.
The work she began, Casa de Paz, joins a centuries-long faith that
shines a holy light on what it means to truly love our neighbor.
The dilemma of undocumented people continues to hover over America,
and it raises urgent questions for every Christian: What is our
role with the "stranger" in our midst? What does God's kingdom look
like in the global-political reality of immigration? What
difference can one person make? Sarah engages these questions
through profound and tender stories, placing readers in the shoes
of individuals on every side of the issue - asylum seekers torn
from their families and the guards who oversee them, ordinary
people with lapsed visas and the families left to survive on their
own, the unheralded advocates for immigrants' rights and the
government officials who decide the fates of others. Ultimately,
Sarah's journey illuminates our own as we witness how real hope can
be restored through simple yet radical acts of love.
Is modern living stressing you out and getting on top of you? Try
slowing things down a little by being more sloth. Living in the
21st century is exciting, but with everything moving so quickly it
can feel a touch overwhelming. It’s time that everybody relaxed
and took a moment to enjoy the simple pleasures, but we also
appreciate it’s easier said than done. That’s why we’ve
enlisted the help of an expert to guide you along the path to
peace. Meet your mentor: Brian the sloth. Brian's hilarious advice
is presented in this brilliant gift book that taps into 2018's
cutest animal trend: sloths.
Move over Pilates, take a hike Zumba, because there’s a new
health craze taking gyms and…er… farms everywhere by storm.
Goat yoga, or goga is the latest sensation to sweep the Internet.
It’s a yoga workout, but with the addition of goats, and all the
cool “kids†are lining up to practice their downward-facing
goat and happy baby poses. In this brilliant guide, goat-yoga
instructor Gus will tell you all you need to know about this
hilarious fitness phenomenon and show how you too can join in the
fun and flourish just like your farmyard friends. Namaste.
It is the first sustained study to explore the relationship between
touching and writing in contemporary literature. For centuries,
writers have explored the intimate links between the page and the
skin, between the hand and writing, and between language and the
caress. It is only in recent decades, however, that touch has
become the subject of scholarship. And yet despite the current
surge of interest in the surface of our bodies, the precise
relationship between touching and writing remains neglected.
Drawing on new debates in deconstruction and psychoanalysis, this
book provides an original and timely intervention in the field,
investigating the different ways that literary texts make contact
with or 'touch' their readers. Examining touch in relation to a
range of contemporary works, the book poses four main questions: In
what ways is a text like a skin? How do literary texts play out
both the limits and possibilities of contact? What is the role of
the hand in writing? And how do advancements in digital and haptic
technologies change the way we think about writing and touching?
Proposes a new theory of 'tactile poetics' to conceptualise the
relationship between touching and writing; 8 chapters exploring
literary touch in the work of often neglected contemporary thinkers
and writers; introduces the work of psychoanalyst Didier Anzieu to
new audiences through its theorisation of the 'textual skin'; the
first full length monograph examining literature and touch since
the translation into English of seminal works on touch by thinkers
of deconstruction such as Jacques Derrida and Jean Luc Nancy.
Sessions with Peter is a ten-lesson study unit designed to provide
a compelling study of 1 and 2 Peter. Each session is followed by
exercises for spiritual reflection that allow for a deeper
experience of the scriptural passages. These exercises can be used
by seminar leaders during preparation and group discussion, as well
as in individual Bible study. Sarah Jackson Shelton takes readers
on a journey through Peter's letters to the churches in exile.
Through these sessions, Shelton connects today's readers of these
passages to the tangible encouragement that these letters offer.
Just like the example of Jesus, Peter reminds us that our call is
to be found faithful to God's grace in spite of persecution,
temptation, alienation, or social oppression. As it was to its
original audience, Peter's encouragement for us to stay true to our
Christian beliefs is a welcome drink of cold water in what can
often seem a spiritual desert.
Despite efforts by conscientious and gifted educational
institutions, ministers invariably discover in their first church
that they still have a great deal to learn. The question they face
is how they are to learn it. . . . -from the foreword by Fisher
Humphreys After realizing that much of daily pastoral work can only
be learned as ministers begin their first pastorate, Christopher M.
Hamlin and Sarah Jackson Shelton decided to ask more than eighty of
their colleagues what their churches had taught them. Their primary
question was this: Could it be that the church, its people, and the
life events experienced within the context of the faith community
become the educational experiences that mold and shape ministers
into pastors? Collected in The Teaching Church: Congregation as
Mentor are the stories of the pastors who shared how congregations
have shaped, nurtured, and, sometimes, broken their resolve to be
faithful servants of God.
Carrie is a 26 year old professional psychic with no psychic
abilities whatsoever. Luckily, she works for an online company that
has created 'Psychic-Help.Doc', a computer program that generates
random readings from keywords given by the client. So when
Hollywood heartthrob Ross Anderson calls and the computer crashes
what's a girl to do? Carrie gives Ross a fake reading and convinces
him to turn down a once in a lifetime roll over a "bad feeling."
Will her "feeling" pay off? Or will it cost him his career?
The 18th century was a wealth of knowledge, exploration and rapidly
growing technology and expanding record-keeping made possible by
advances in the printing press. In its determination to preserve
the century of revolution, Gale initiated a revolution of its own:
digitization of epic proportions to preserve these invaluable works
in the largest archive of its kind. Now for the first time these
high-quality digital copies of original 18th century manuscripts
are available in print, making them highly accessible to libraries,
undergraduate students, and independent scholars.Medical theory and
practice of the 1700s developed rapidly, as is evidenced by the
extensive collection, which includes descriptions of diseases,
their conditions, and treatments. Books on science and technology,
agriculture, military technology, natural philosophy, even
cookbooks, are all contained here.++++The below data was compiled
from various identification fields in the bibliographic record of
this title. This data is provided as an additional tool in helping
to insure edition identification: ++++British LibraryT001171London:
printed for J. Fuller, at his circulating-library, and S. Neale, at
Chatham, 1754. 2],112, 6]p.; 12
This full-color, exciting history of Texas is written and
illustrated for young readers and for all who enjoy a spicy trip
through the history of the "Friendship State." Beginning with
pre-historic Texans, the author describes Texans including the
Native American tribes, the years of Spanish exploration, Texas
under six flags, and covers the 19th and 20th centuries to the
exciting events leading to the year 2000. Scott is illustrator of
eight children's books and lives in Dallas with his wife Tammy and
two children. Sarah Jackson is an English Professor at Stephen F.
Austin University, Nacogdoches, where she lives with husband Jere,
a professor of history, and two daughters.
Etiquette can be a minefield, so let Brian the sloth guide you very
slowly through the mores of modern living. Whatever the social
situation, his sage advice will take you effortlessly if slowly
through life. Sloths, of course, play by their own set of
rules but this hilarious guide will be sure to help you whether you
are on a first date, starting work, going for a job interview or
managing your social accounts. It includes advice from how to take
a much-needed nap during the day without causing offence, to how to
greet colleagues (with a smile) and to politely say 'no' to all
those invitations so you leave yourself plenty of napping time.
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