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  • - The Chassidic Mysteries
    av Jiri Langer
    339

  • - George Crabbe, Aldeburgh and Suffolk
    av Frances Gibb
    285

    The influence of Aldeburgh and the Suffolk Coast on the poet behind 'Peter Grimes'.

  • - A Hundred Years of the English Novel
    av Julian Lovelock
    469

  • - William Booth, The Salvation Army and Skeleton Army Riots
    av James Gardner
    409 - 1 365,-

    Fresh research sheds light on the violent opposition faced by the Salvation Army in the late nineteenth century.

  • - A Study of Religion in a Pluralistic Society
    av Mong Ih-ren Ambrose
    509

  • - The Nature of Humanity and the Origin of Life
    av David Frost
    469

    A challenging critique of contemporary Neo-Darwinism, advocating a new balance between science and spirituality in understanding creation.

  • av Thomas Lickona
    285

    In this engaging and practical book Mark Pike and Thomas Lickona show how C.S. Lewis' wisdom for nurturing good character, and his much-loved Chronicles of Narnia, inspire us to virtue. Drawing upon the Judeo-Christian virtues of faith, hope and love and 'Narnian' virtues such as courage, integrity and wisdom, they present an approach to contemporary character education validated by recent research. An introduction to C.S. Lewis' thought on character and faith is followed by practical examples of how to use well-known passages from the Narnia novels as a stimulus for rich character development at home and in the classroom.

  • av Essex Cholmondeley
    285

  • - A Political and Sociological Analysis of British Colleges of Education
    av Clare Debenham
    1 105,-

    A social history based on new research of the expansion and subsequent decline of colleges of education in Great Britain.

  • av Niamh Middleton
    679

    Beyond Feminism.

  • - The Life and Times of Stephen Neill
    av Dyron B. Daughrity
    575 - 1 375,-

  • av Alan Kennedy
    479

    First published in 1930, Swallows and Amazons secured Arthur Ransome's reputation as one of the most influential children's authors of all time, yet prior to writing fiction he had had a turbulent career as a journalist and war correspondent in revolutionary Russia. In this refreshing account of Ransome's work, Alan Kennedy sets out to explain his enduring appeal, combining literary criticism with psychological expertise. Not only did Ransome apply a careful narrative theory to his works, his use of symbolism aligning them more with the modernist tradition than with the event-driven children's literature of contemporaries such as Richmal Crompton and Enid Blyton, but his novels are also more than usually autobiographical. This Kennedy ably demonstrates with reference to three particular challenges Ransome faced in a seriously conflicted life: his father's untimely death, his abandonment of his infant daughter in order to escape his catastrophic first marriage, and the innumerable compromises that kept him alive during his Russian exile. A Thoroughly Mischievous Person: The Other Arthur Ransome is the first study to tackle this matter systematically, giving casual and scholarly readers alike new insights into this fascinating figure.

  • - Astonishing Stories of Discovery and Hope
    av Timothy L. Carson
    349

  • - Baptist Wriothesley Noel, 1798-1873
    av Philip Hill
    529

    A comprehensive study of the life and thought of an influentialAnglican and Baptist minister.

  • - Die Formgeschichte des Evangeliums
    av Martin Dibelius
    515,-

  • av Peter S. Dillard
    529 - 1 115

    In Divine Audacity, Peter Dillardpresents a historically informed and rigorous analysis of the themes ofmystical union, volition and virtue that occupied several of the foremosttheological minds in the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries. Inparticular, the work of Marguerite Porete raises complex questions in theseareas, which are further explored by a trio of her near contemporaries. Theirrespective meditations are thoroughly analysed and then skilfully brought intodialogue.What emerges from Dillard's synthesis ofthese voices is a contemporary mystical theology that is rooted in Hugh ofBalma's affective approach, sharpened through critical engagement with MeisterEckhart's intellectualism, and strengthened by crucial insights gleaned fromthe writings of John Ruusbroec. The fresh examination of these thinkers - oneof whom paid with her life for her radicalism - will appeal to philosophers andtheologians alike, while Dillard's own propositions demand attention from allwho concern themselves with the nature of the union between the soul and God.  

  • av Mary Cathcart Borer
    339

  • - Christians, Graeco-Romans and Scripture in the Second Century
    av Jeremy Hudson
    509 - 1 199

  • av R.S. Bray
    469

    The global outbreak of Covid-19 appears to be unprecedented in a world which has not suffered a serious pandemic for a century, while society had almost forgotten the enormous impact of highly infectious diseases throughout history. Pestilence, however, has played a major role in ending the Golden Age of Athens, wrecking Justinian's plans to restore the Roman Empire to its former glory, and killing untold millions in Latin America after the Spanish invasion. Despite its importance, historians have tended to minimise the role of infectious disease, partly because of a lack of scientific knowledge. This has resulted in a distorted view both of the past and of the danger of disease to modern society. In Armies of Pestilence, R.S. Bray, a distinguished biologist and an able historian, corrects this view with an exploration of the influence of disease on history. The book surveys the principal epidemics around the world and across the centuries, including scholarly discussion around those which cannot be certainly identified. In each case, Bray examines the origins of the outbreaks, as well as the symptoms, the mortality rate and the social and economic turmoil left in their wake. Bray pays special attention to the infamous organism that caused the Black Death, Yersina pestis, as well as other grimly familiar bogey-men of pestilential history including malaria, smallpox, typhus, cholera and influenza, and AIDS. Government responses to outbreaks are assessed, and the inability of governments to deal effectively with disease is a recurring theme. The relationship between disease and war, with the former often responsible for more deaths than the latter, is also considered in detail, as was the case during the last great influenza pandemic of 1918-19, at the end of the First World War

  • - Understanding Violence and the sacred after Rene Girard
    av Paul Gifford
    409 - 1 249

    A compelling analysis of the connection between violence and the sacred, using Rene Girard's mimetic theory to point the way towards Christian reconciliation.

  • - Culture and Creed from a Philosophical Standpoint
    av William Charlton
    1 189,-

    A philosophical examination of religion and society, offering a closely reasoned challenge to the dominant Western discourse of secular liberalism.

  • av John Curtis
    1 115

    A collection of essays in memory of the curator and scholar Terence Mitchell, exploring the history and archaeology of Ancient Persia.

  • - Reading John Damascene and Symeon the New Theologian on Christian Bioethics
    av Ioannis Bekos
    505

    A critique of contemporary bioethical thought, drawing on the Patristic tradition to develop a Christian anthropology that offers an alternative approach to bioethics.

  • - and another Twenty-Five Mysteries of Children's Literature
    av Dennis Butts
    329

    A new collection of essays exploring the questions raised by children's fiction, from textual puzzles to historical and cultural conundrums.

  • av Denis O. Lamoureux
    705,-

    A new and provocative approach to origins that trancends the traditional 'evolution-versus-creation' debate, and offers a vision of evolution as the unfolding of God's creative power.

  • av Johannes Hirschberger
    475,-

    A new and expanded edition of the classic introduction to the development of Western Philosophy, from the Ancient Greeks to the 20th Century.

  • - A Social History
    av Dennis Brailsford
    409,-

    Moving beyond a chronological record, this account places sport within the wider context of British life, examining its social, political, financial and international implications. It discusses the roles and styles of play that have marked the varying stages of British social history, and their influence on our contemporary experience.

  • av John R. de Jong
    509

    George MacDonald (1824-1905) was writing at a time of Evangelical unease. In a society ravaged by Asiatic cholera, numbed by levels of infant mortality, and fearful of revolution and the toxicity of industry (to name but a few of the many challenges), the 'gospel' proclaiming eternal damnation for unbelievers was hardly good news; rather, Christianity was increasingly viewed as the source of bad news and a tool of state oppression. MacDonald agreed: in his view, the church had become a vampire, sucking the blood of her children instead of offering them Eucharistic life. In contrast, like Christ, MacDonald offers us a child. Although at first sight a familiar Romantic incarnation, in MacDonald's theology 'the child' becomes an unlikely icon challenging the vampire's kingdom and confronting the foundations of much of Western theology. John R. de Jong's meticulously researched study of MacDonald's work - especially his 'realist' and fantasy novels - in its Victorian context is of more than historical interest. In light of the growth of fundamentalist expressions of Christianity, we are encouraged to consider embracing MacDonald's radical solution to religious vampirism: becoming children.

  • - Thomas Traherne and Nature's Role in the Moral Formation of Children
    av Chad Michael Rimmer
    469

  • av David Martin
    409,-

    David Martin was one of the world's leading commentators on secularization theory. He was also a committed and lifelong reader of English poetry. Christianity and 'The World' develops Martin's argument against simplistic secularization narratives with reference to the history of poetry, a topic with which few social theorists have been concerned. Martin shows the enduring but ever-changing centrality of Christian thought and practice, in its many different forms, to English poetry. Always mindful that the most important aspects of poetry's history can be captured only by attending to the minutest particulars of individual poems and poets, Martin's study sheds unexpected light on a wide range of English poets, from Spenser and Shakespeare to T.S. Eliot and Geoffrey Hill. The result is a study at once informed by an authoritative sociological perspective on secularization and richly coloured by the singular intensity of Martin's own reading life.

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