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Psychoanalysis and Severe Handicap The Hand in the Cap

Steps in Leadership

Scientific and Medical Knowledge Production 1796-1918 Volume II: Humanity

Scientific and Medical Knowledge Production 1796-1918 Volume III: Authority

A Pictorial Guide to Metamorphic Rocks in the Field

New Technology and Mediated Chinese Tourists

Phosphoric Acid Purification Uses Technology and Economics

Social Europe

Suicidal Behaviour Bereavement and Death Education in Chinese Adolescents Hong Kong Studies

The Falklands/Malvinas Conflict Forty Years On

The Falklands/Malvinas Conflict Forty Years On

Taking place in 1982 a major event in both post-colonial history and the final phase of the Cold War as well as a cultural touchstone for two different countries the Falklands/Malvinas Conflict is one of the most important events of the last two decades of the twentieth century. This volume builds upon the aims of the international Falklands/Malvinas Conflict’s thirty-seventh anniversary conference held at The University of Manchester on 25th and 26th April 2019 examining both Argentine and British sides of the conflict as well as joining together the voices of the Falklands/Malvinas veterans with those of Falklands/Malvinas commentators teasing out the multifaceted nature of the conflict. This allows readers to connect first-hand veterans’ accounts with academics’ and commentators’ research as well as providing a larger picture and broader scope of how the 1982 conflict played out and is remembered in not only Argentina and Britain but also the United States forty years after the conflict. Including previously unheard first-hand accounts of the Falklands/Malvinas Conflict from key Argentine and British participants and combatants such as Commodore Michael Clapp and Major General Julian Thompson and key members of 2 PARA this volume offers a unique understanding of the conflict from a range of perspectives. Therefore this volume is an invaluable resource for students and researchers interested in the Falklands/Malvinas Conflict. | The Falklands/Malvinas Conflict Forty Years On

GBP 130.00
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Not All Claps and Cheers Humor in Business and Society Relationships

Not All Claps and Cheers Humor in Business and Society Relationships

Scholars from various disciplines have studied humor since antiquity. Yet over the centuries these researchers have also struggled to conceptualize a viable well-accepted notion of humor. Beyond pleasure and amusement people use humor for a variety of social functions. On the one hand humor can cause others to like the humorous source more attract regard ease conversations promote expression and the exchange of ideas introduce new topics of discussion or smooth interactions. On the other hand in aggressive forms humor can halt verbal interactions modify the usual rules of conversation communicate critiques or contribute to the creation of subversive environments. Not All Claps and Cheers: Humor in Business and Society Relationships is an original research anthology that considers different angles from which to address the use of humor by individuals groups and business actors in their interactions within around and across organizations—that is at the interfaces of business and society. Accordingly the research anthology is organized in four sections—Humor Business and Society From Society to Business: Humor’s Use and Roles in Activist Movements From Business to Society: Humor’s Use and Roles in Marketing Corporate Communications and Public Relations and Society within Business: Humor’s Use and Roles in the Workplace and in Organizations. This ground-breaking research anthology draws on material from marketing communications human resources and stakeholder theory to throw light on this poorly understood facet of human business behavior. | Not All Claps and Cheers Humor in Business and Society Relationships

GBP 130.00
1

City for Conquest

A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom Volume 2 From Creation to the Victory of Scientific and Literary Methods

A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom Volume 2 From Creation to the Victory of Scientific and Literary Methods

Given the powerful and forthright title of Andrew Dickson White's classic study it is best to make clear his own sense of the whole as given in the original 1896 edition: My conviction is that science though it has evidently conquered dogmatic theology based on biblical texts and ancient modes of thought will go hand in hand with religion and that although theological control will continue to diminish religion as seen in the recognition of a 'power in the universe not ourselves which makes for righteousness' and in the love of God and of our neighbor will steadily grow stronger and stronger not only in the American institutions of learning but in the world at large. White began to assemble his magnum opus a two volume work first published in 1896 as A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom. In correspondence he wrote that he intended the work to stake out a position between such religious orthodoxy as John Henry Newman's on one side and such secular scoffing as Robert Ingersoll's on the other. Historian Paul Carter declared that this book did as much as any other published work toward routing orthodoxy in the name of science. Insofar as science and religion came to be widely viewed as enemies with science holding the moral high ground White inadvertently became one of the most effective and influential advocates for unbelief. | A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom Volume 2 From Creation to the Victory of Scientific and Literary Methods

GBP 130.00
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Out of Time? Temporality In Disability Performance

Out of Time? Temporality In Disability Performance

Out of Time? has many different meanings amongst them outmoded out of step under time pressure no time left or simply delayed. In the disability context it may also refer to resistant attitudes of living in “crip time” that contradict time as a linear process with a more or less predictable future. According to Alison Kafer “crip time bends the clock to meet disabled bodies and minds. ” What does this mean in the disability arts? What new concepts of accessibility crip futures and crip resistance can be staged or created by disability performance? And how does the notion of “out of time” connect crip time with pandemic time in disability performance? The collective volume seeks to respond to these questions by exploring crip time in disability performance as both a concept and a phenomenon. The book tackles the topic from two angles: on the one hand from a theoretical point of view that connects performance analysis with crip and performance theory on the other hand from a practice-based perspective of disability artists who develop new concepts and dramaturgies of crip time based on their own lived experiences and observations in the field of the performing and disability arts. The book gathers different types of text genres forms and styles that mirror the diversity of their authors. Besides theoretical and academic chapters on disability performance the book also includes essays poems dramatic texts and choreographic concepts that ref lect upon the alternative knowledge in the disability arts. | Out of Time? Temporality In Disability Performance

GBP 130.00
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In the Shadow of Transitional Justice Cross-national Perspectives on the Transformative Potential of Remembrance

In the Shadow of Transitional Justice Cross-national Perspectives on the Transformative Potential of Remembrance

This volume bridges two different research fields and the current debates within them. On the one hand the transitional justice literature has been shaken by powerful calls to make the doctrine and practice of justice more transformative. On the other hand collective memory studies now tend to look more closely at meaningful silences to make sense of what nations leave out when they remember their pasts. The book extends the scope of this heuristic approach to the different mechanisms that come under the umbrella of transitional justice including legal prosecution truth-seeking and reparations alongside memorialisation. The 15 chapters included in the volume written by expert scholars from diverse disciplinary and societal backgrounds explore a range of practices intended to deal with the past and how making the invisible visible again can make transitional justice - or indeed any societal engagement with the past - more transformative. Seeking to combine contextual depth and comparative width the book features two key case analyses - South Africa and Sri Lanka - alongside discussions of multiple cases including such emblematic sites as Rwanda and Argentina but also sites better known for resisting than for embracing international norms of transitional justice such as Turkey or Côte d’Ivoire. The different contributions grouped in themed sections progressively explore the issues actors and resources that are typically forgotten when societies celebrate their pasts rather than mourning their losses and in doing so open new possibilities to build more inclusive processes for addressing the present consequences of past injustice. | In the Shadow of Transitional Justice Cross-national Perspectives on the Transformative Potential of Remembrance

GBP 130.00
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The Struggle for Asia 1828–1914 A Study in British and Russian Imperialism

Eyewitnesses to Massacre American Missionaries Bear Witness to Japanese Atrocities in Nanjing

Vluchtelingen en immigratie

The Relation of Wealth to Welfare

Posthuman Buddhism and the Digital Self The Production of Dwellspace

Posthuman Buddhism and the Digital Self The Production of Dwellspace

In Posthuman Buddhism and the Digital Self Les Roberts extends his earlier work on spatial anthropology to consider questions of time spaciousness and the phenomenology of self. Across the book’s four main chapters – which range from David Bowie’s long-standing interest in Buddhism to street photography of 1980s Liverpool to the ambient soundscapes of Derek Jarman’s Blue or to the slow contemplative cinema of Tsai Ming-Liang – Roberts lays the groundwork for the concept of ‘dwellspace’ as a means by which to unpick the shifting spatial temporal and experiential modalities of everyday mediascapes. Understood as a particular disposition towards time Roberts’s foray into dwellspace proceeds from a Pascalian reflection on the self/non-self in which being content in an empty room vies with the demands of having content in an empty room. Taking the idea of posthuman Buddhism as a heuristic lens Roberts sets in motion a number of interrelated lines of enquiry that prompt renewed focus on questions of boredom distraction and reverie and cast into sharper relief the psychosocial and creative affordances of ambience spaciousness and slowness. The book argues that the colonisation of ‘empty time’ by 24/7 digital capitalism has gone hand-in-hand with the growth of the corporate mindfulness industry and with it the co-option commodification and digitisation of dwellspace. Posthuman Buddhism is thus in part an exploration of the dialectics of dwellspace that orbits around a creative self-praxis rooted in the negation and dissolution of the self one of the foundational cornerstones of Buddhist theory and practice. | Posthuman Buddhism and the Digital Self The Production of Dwellspace

GBP 130.00
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Frederick Eden Pargiter A Revenue History of the Sundarbans from 1765 to 1870

Frederick Eden Pargiter A Revenue History of the Sundarbans from 1765 to 1870

The Sundarban stretches from the brackish waters of the broad Hooghly on the west to the fresh waters of the still broader Meghna to the east; the turbid waters of the Bay of Bengal on its southern limits to the zamindari or pargana lands on its northern extremity and includes in its southern fringes the dense natural mangrove forests it is famous for. The revenue history of Sundarbans is linked up with its riverine and coastal networks to its strategic location at the head of the Bay of Bengal which made it a natural protective barrier for the densely populated city of Calcutta. The massive transformation combined with the changed physical structure of Sundarban influenced society and economy on the one hand and invited settlers to establish their control in that region on the other. The text of Pargiter focuses on the revenue history of a larger part of Sundarbans viz. Jessore Khulna Bakarganj and some parts of 24-Parganas since the inception of the colonial rule in Bengal. It has also been shown how the colonial administrators took various types of measures for collecting revenue by the way of land reclamation. The introductory note by the editor analyses the revenue settlement policies which had been implemented on different occasions to ensure the revenue maximization policies of the British Raj on the one hand and to establish an human settlement in the deltaic region on the other. Please note: Taylor & Francis does not sell or distribute the Hardback in India Pakistan Nepal Bhutan Bangladesh and Sri Lanka | Frederick Eden Pargiter A Revenue History of the Sundarbans from 1765 to 1870

GBP 145.00
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Dynamics of Youth Agency in Times of Crisis Beyond the Impasse in the Mediterranean?