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Showing 1 - 25 of
31 matches in All Departments
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Toy Story of Terror (DVD)
Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Joan Cusack, Wallace Shawn, Don Rickles, …
1
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R43
Discovery Miles 430
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In Stock
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Children's animated short following the gang from Pixar's 'Toy
Story' film series as they go on a new adventure. Woody (voice of
Tom Hanks), Buzz (Tim Allen), Jessie (Joan Cusack), Rex (Wallace
Shawn) and Mr. Potato Head (Don Rickles), along with new friends
Mr. Pricklepants (Timothy Dalton) and Trixie (Kristen Schaal), find
themselves at a mysterious motel overnight after their owner Bonnie
(Emily Hahn) and her mother experience car trouble. When Mr. Potato
Head goes missing the rest of the toys go on a mission to find him
but will they all make it safely back to Bonnie by morning?
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Toy Story 3 (DVD)
Tom Hanks, Michael Keaton, Joan Cusack, Tim Allen, Whoopi Goldberg, …
1
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R53
Discovery Miles 530
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In Stock
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Third instalment in the Pixar/Disney CGI-animated series, filmed
for theatrical release using Disney Digital 3D. When their owner,
Andy (voiced by John Morris), clears out his bedroom in preparation
for starting college, Woody (Tom Hanks), Buzz (Tim Allen) and the
rest of the toy-box gang are dumped in the donations box at a local
nursery school and find themselves at the mercy of a horde of wild,
sticky-fingered toddlers. As they struggle to stay together while
coping with the chaos, the gang meet a new bunch of toys led by
pink teddy bear Lotso (Ned Beatty), while Barbie (Jodie Benson) is
at last united with her male counterpart, Ken (Michael Keaton). The
yearning to return home cannot be ignored, however, and many
comical adventures ensue as the toys make a series of elaborate
escape attempts. The film won Academy Awards for Best Animated
Feature Film and Music (Original Song).
There continues to be a growing interest in questions relating to
development and the Third World. With expansion of travel, greater
media coverage and new demands from academics for a rethinking of
development mechanisms, the Third World has become an area of
increasing interest. This volume explores aspects of culture and
development at a time of rapid global change. Contributors debate
the importance of culture to development discourse and the Third
World, stressing that if development is to have real meaning and
value at the local level, there must be a qualitative understanding
of the complexities and dynamics of everyday lives.
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Toy Story That Time Forgot (DVD)
Tom Hanks, Wallace Shawn, Kristen Schaal, Kevin Mckidd, Timothy Dalton, …
2
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R53
Discovery Miles 530
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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Festive-themed animated short from the 'Toy Story' franchise.
Shortly after Christmas Bonnie (voice of Emily Hahn) goes to visit
her friend Mason (R.C. Cope) for a play date, taking her toys Woody
(Tom Hanks), Buzz (Tim Allen), Trixie (Kristen Schaal), Rex
(Wallace Shawn) and Angel Kitty (Emma Hudak) with her. When Bonnie
sets them aside and goes off to play Mason's new game console the
toys discover the boy's dinosaur action figures called The
Battlesaurs. However, it becomes clear that The Battlesaurs aren't
aware they are toys when Woody and Buzz are forced to do battle
against their leader Reptilius Maximus (Kevin McKidd). With her
friends in danger it is left to Trixie to save the day...
Savage wars in Bosnia, Rwanda, Liberia, Iraq and many other places
continue to fill our television screens and newspapers with
terrible images of conflict. Despite the optimism about world
peace, brought about by the collapse of super-power hostilities in
the early 1990s, we seem to be encountering more wars, or at least
wars that are more socially traumatic. All too often, the media
suggest that these conflicts are caused by the return of primordial
loyalties and hatreds after the collapse of the Cold War, or that
mass slaughter can be explained by reference to the inherently evil
nature of individuals or groups. This book counters this kind of
nonsense, and asks why such views have gained a currency. It
examines the role of the media in inciting conflicts within
nations, as well as the adverse impacts of news reporting on
international perceptions - and on policy-making. But it also
reveals how valuable informed journalism can be. Above all, it
highlights the dangers of basing analysis on vague assertions about
deep human motivation, or on mythologies of the past and the
present promoted by the protagonists themselves.
The comic who's a guy's guy is now a bookseller's dream. The star
of ABC's Home Improvement, the #1 show on television, Tim Allen has
written the book millions have been awaiting--the naked truth about
his outlook on life, love, and lathes. Allen's movie debut this
November in The Santa Clause is certain to generate additional
media attention. Line drawings.
There continues to be a growing interest in questions relating to development and the Third World. With expansion of travel, greater media coverage and new demands from academics for a rethinking of development mechanisms, the Third World has become an area of increasing interest. Culture and Global Change explores aspects of culture and development at a time of rapid global change. Leading contributors engage with the current debate on the importance of culture to development discourse and the Third World, stressing that if development is to have real meaning and value at the local level, there must be a qualitative understanding of the complexities and dynamics of everyday lives. Culture and Global Change explores concepts of culture across the broader issues of development and in so doing shows that development will not be successful unless it is an integral part of existing cultural and social relations.
This sequel to 'Toy Story' sees pull-string cowboy Woody (voiced by
Tom Hanks) kidnapped by toy collector Al, who plans to sell him to
a Japanese toy museum. Assisted by Mr Potato Head, Slinky Dog and
Rex the Dinosaur, action figure Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) sets off
to the rescue, but when they get to Al's store Buzz is mistakenly
boxed up and his place taken by a new, flashier Lightyear model -
complete with utility belt! Meanwhile, Woody has discovered that he
was once the star of a popular children's television show, and is
no longer sure he wants to return to Andy's toy cupboard.
Tim Allen stars as Scott Calvin, a cynical toy company executive
who is forced to take over the job of Santa Claus when he and his
son Charlie witness the previous incumbent falling off a roof. Soon
Scott finds himself putting on weight, growing a white beard and
fulfiling his obligation to deliver presents to all the children
around the world. He even finds himself reluctantly getting into
the spirit of things!
It's Santa vs. Jack Frost as the two go head to head over who runs
Christmas. In this third instalment of the series, Scott Calvin
(Tim Allen) aka Santa Clause is up against it. With his wife
Carol/Mrs Clause (Elizabeth Mitchell) pregnant, and her parents due
for a visit, a lightning makeover of Santa's village is needed to
protect his identity. With too much to do and time running out,
Santa's happy to let Jack Frost (Martin Short) step up and save the
day. Unfortunately for Santa, Frost has been waiting to seize his
moment, and soon he's in control of Christmas. Now, with his powers
gone, will Scott choose to return to his normal life, or will he
try to take back the reins from sneaky Jack Frost?
This major new title provides definitions, biographies and
explanations detailing the key terminology, issues, people and
events in the field of humanitarianism, a topic that is
increasingly at the forefront of international relations. This
Dictionary provides information which will be essential to all
those involved in humanitarianism.
A Dictionary of Humanitarianism brings together knowledge and
insight from a number of different fields, such as political
economy, human rights, international law, security studies,
anthropology and international relations, and this
multi-disciplinary approach provides a unique view of one of the
most important subject areas in international relations today.
Recent events such as the reconstruction of Iraq are included,
making the Dictionary up-to-date on the key issues of
humanitarianism today.
Entries include:
Bosnia, Peace Keeping, Conflict Resolution, Security Council,
CAFOD, Civil War, Earthquakes, Genocide, Humanitarian Intervention,
Just War, Malnutrition, Medecins Sans Frontieres, Oxfam, Terrorism,
and The World Bank.
This book will prove valuable to journalists and researchers, staff
of aid agencies and other charities, reference libraries, students
and university or departmental libraries, businesses, government
departments, international organizations and research institutes.
The book will also provide a useful reference tool for university
courses dealing with the topic of humanitarianism.
The author of A Dictionary of Humanitarianism is Dr Tim Allen of
the London School of Economics, who has written and contributed to
many publications on the issues of humanitarianism and
international development, including thebooks Culture and Global
Change, Poverty and Development into the 21st Century, and The
Media of Conflict - War Reporting and Representations of Ethnic
Violence.
Poverty & Development in the 21st Century provides a fully
updated, interdisciplinary overview of one of the world's most
complex and pressing social problems. The book analyses and
assesses key questions faced by practitioners and policy makers,
ranging from what potential solutions to world poverty are open to
us to what form development should take and whether it is
compatible with environmental sustainability. The third edition
considers the complex causes of global poverty and inequality,
introducing major development issues that include hunger, disease,
the threat of authoritarian populism, the refugee crisis and
environmental degradation. Three new chapters illustrate the impact
of climate, refugee and health crises on development by drawing on
accounts of lived experience to explore the real-world implications
of theory. Refreshed student-centred learning features include
boxes outlining key concepts, definitions and cases that explore
contested issues in greater depth. These case studies encourage
critical reflection on key issues, from refugees' personal accounts
of containment to the Ebola epidemic to indigenous perspectives on
climate change. Questions posed at the start of each chapter
provide a framework for critical reflection on key assumptions and
theories within the field of development. Each chapter also clearly
unpacks figures and tables, supporting students to develop a
nuanced understanding of economic arguments and key skills of data
interpretation Digital formats and resources The third edition is
available for students and institutions to purchase in a variety of
formats, and is supported by online resources. - The e-book offers
a mobile experience and convenient access along with functionality
tools, navigation features, and links that offer extra learning
support: www.oxfordtextbooks.co.uk/ebooks - Students and lecturers
are further supported by online resources to encourage deeper
engagement with content. For students: Web links organised by
chapter to deepen students' understanding of key topics and explore
their research interests For lecturers: Customisable PowerPoint
slides support effective teaching preparation Figures and tables
from the book allow clear presentation of key data and support
students' data analysis
The texts in this volume run parallel with the years of Austerity
leading to Brexit and its fallout, issues internalised here before
resurfacing within new narrative contexts and scenarios in which
modern cultural history competes with autobiographical conflict to
be transported elsewhere by the chimera of language. Motifs arising
from the perspective of age and change echo, but sparsely; what
really unites the poems is a cruel humour, as often self-directed
as aimed at the democracy of poisons. “Tim Allen combines images
with the anarchic verve of Lautréamont and the early
Surrealists. The sentences which result are both playful and
rebellious, generating quirky narrative threads which are soon
subsumed again by the text. Each poem is a helter skelter rush of
improvisation, an exercise in indeterminacy bounded only by the
imposed 28 line, four stanzas form used throughout the book.â€
—Simon Collings “Why does what they call high modernism have so
much religion bronchial hymns and ripped sacking in it? There
is a phase of childhood when the child does nothing but ask awkward
questions, and Tim Allen may be an example of someone who never
abandoned this phase. His unwillingness to retain the answers
opened up a new world with new conventions. Are things really as
they are or are they ceaselessly reformulated into moral patterns
by the generalising powers of language? As the prose units
of democracy of poisons develop, their polished and
surreal surface becomes more and more convincing. The title
presumably refers to a 24-hour media slew in which toxic ideas try
to win popularity contests. There is a camaraderie of bad ideas.â€
—Andrew Duncan
The Voice Thrower is from a batch of long poems begun in the 90s,
arising in my "anti poetry" phase. The title should speak for
itself, except it doesn't, which is the whole point of being a
voice thrower. The poem had a twin, The Submissive Bastards,
initially sharing the trope of a red sky at dusk, but TVT's sky
turned into a horizon at sea, specifically from Portland looking
west across Lyme Bay (Portlanders call it West Bay anyway). While
The Voice Thrower's bastard twin became more controlled, TVT grew
ever wilder until, while trying to round it off, I began to suspect
the poem was an unconscious attempt to engage with the memory of my
mother (Hannah Lawton), yet I resisted making this the focus and
let the poem mutate again, the original trope of the red horizon
(my mother had red hair) spreading rhizome-like through the various
scenarios. The irony though was that the more it tried to resist
biography the more autobiographical it became. -Tim Allen
"I had in mind a kind of anti prose poem that would look and smell
like one but give a different taste and have a different texture.
One way of doing this was by making the conclusion of each Set flat
and deflationary, almost deliberately poor in the sense that they
never approached closure, either artificially or in actuality."
(Tim Allen)
Examines refugees' own strategies for return that do not always
relate to formal repatriation schemes. It is well known that there
are millions of refugees in Africa. It is less well known that
there are milions of refugees who have returned home. This book
puts these 'returnees' on the map, documenting some of what happens
to people when they go back to their countries of origin and start
to pick up the pieces of their lives. Published in association with
UNRISD; North America: Africa World Press
This volume focuses on population displacement in Northeast Africa.
For many people, flight across an international border occurs
repeatedly and is not a uniquely traumatic event. For many more,
displacement has occurred within their own countries. The
contributors suggest that in situations of such long-term upheaval,
notions of flight into refuge and repatriation to a homeland cease
to have much meaning. These populations have received minimal
assistance from international organizations and have lacked
protection from oppressive governments and marauding guerillas.
Their plight has largely been ignored. North America: Africa World
Press
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