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  • av Emily Hasler
    199,-

    Emily Hasler's second collection exposes the dailiness of disaster and charts the constantly shifting courses of rivers and lives. Local Interest maps the friable and slippery landscapes of Suffolk and Essex. This is a book of threatened habitats teeming with life. Here is poetry that wallows at the muddy edges of things.

  • av Jodie Hollander
    199,-

    Jodie Hollander's compelling second collection charts the emotional journey of the daughter of a professional classical pianist. These bold and arresting poems, rich with musicality, and fierce in their emotional honesty, chart the complicated repercussions of family dysfunction and musical obsession while traversing the landscape of the human condition.

  • av Thomas K. Lindner
    595,-

    An Open Access edition of this book is available on the Liverpool University Press website and the OAPEN library as part of the Opening the Future project with COPIM. A City Against Empire is the history of the anti-imperialist movement in 1920s Mexico City. It combines intellectual, social, and urban history to shed light on the city's role as an important global hub for anti-imperialism, exile activism, political art, and solidarity campaigns. After the Russian and the Mexican Revolution, Mexico City became a space and a symbol of global anti-imperialism. Radical politicians, artists, intellectuals, scientists, migrants, and revolutionary tourists took advantage of the urban environment to develop their visions of an anti-imperialism for the twentieth-century. These actors imagined national self-determination, international solidarity, and an emancipation from what they called "the West." Global, local, and urban factors interacted to transform Mexico City into the most important hub for radicalism in the Americas. By weaving together the intellectual history of Mexico, the urban and social histories of Mexico City, and the global history ofanti-imperialist movements in the 1920s, this books analyses the perfect storm of anti-imperialism in Mexico City.

  • av Paul E. Binns
    595,-

    A wide-ranging introduction to our planet Earth, its structure, landscapes, oceans and atmosphere. The book concludes with ' The Human Perspective', an account of the evolution of Homo Sapiens.

  • av Joseph A Kechichian
    849

  • av Matthew Kelly
    445

    The environmental humanities are one of the most exciting and rapidly expanding areas of interdisciplinary study, and this collection of essays is a pioneering attempt to apply these approaches to the study of nineteenth-century Ireland. By bringing together historians, geographers and literary scholars, the volume offers new and original insights into familiar topics.

  • av Claudio Vita-Finzi & Dominic Fortes
    659,-

  • av Miranda Corcoran
    359 - 1 319

  •  
    659,-

    An Open Access edition is available on the LUP and OAPEN websites. Across Europe, the early medieval period saw the advent of new ways of cereal farming which fed the growth of towns, markets and populations, but also fuelled wealth disparities and the rise of lordship. These developments have sometimes been referred to as marking an ‿agricultural revolution‿, yet the nature and timing of these critical changes remain subject to intense debate, despite more than a century of research. The papers in this volume demonstrate how the combined application of cutting-edge scientific analyses, along with new theoretical models and challenges to conventional understandings, can reveal trajectories of agricultural development which, while complementary overall, do not indicate a single period of change involving the extension of arable, the introduction of the mouldboard plough, and regular crop rotation. Rather, these phenomena become evident at different times and in different places across England throughout the period, and rarely in an unambiguously ‿progressive‿ fashion. Presenting innovative bioarchaeological research from the ground-breaking Feeding Anglo-Saxon England project, along with fresh insights into ploughing technology, brewing, the nature of agricultural revolutions, and farming practices in Roman Britain and Carolingian Europe, this volume is a critical new contribution to environmental archaeology and medieval studies in England and beyond. Contributors: Amy Bogaard; Hannah Caroe; Neil Faulkner; Emily Forster; Helena Hamerow; Matilda Holmes; Claus Kropp; Lisa Lodwick; Mark McKerracher; Nicolas Schroeder; Elizabeth Stroud; Tom Williamson.

  • av Timothy Murtagh
    1 669

    Irish Artisans and Radical Politics, 1776-1820: Apprenticeship to Revolution is a comparative study of the political activities of workers in three Irish cities: Dublin, Belfast and Cork.

  • av M. Keith Booker
    1 935

    Moreover, Joker is a highly political film that comments in important ways on American political history from roughly the beginning of the presidency of Richard Nixon through the end of the Trump presidency, with a special focus on the Reagan years.

  • av John F. Ryan
    585 - 1 669

  • av John Woolford
    1 299

  • av John Macklin
    655,-

    Mist (Niebla), published in 1914, is one of Miguel de Unamuno's key works; a truly Modernist work of Europe-wide significance which aims to shatter the conventions of fiction, using the novel as a vehicle for exploration of philosophical themes.

  • av Roger Seifert
    145,-

    This is the second volume on the history of the Transport and General Workers' Union (TGWU), covering the period 1932 to 1945. The union grew and large numbers of women joined, forming their own groups and playing an increasing role in union affairs.

  • av Alissa Burger
    359 - 1 319

  • av John Foster
    145,-

    This centenary history of Transport and General Workers Union, today Unite, records the voices of those who transformed British politics in the fourteen years between 1960 and 1974, bringing together their stories from Clydeside to the London docks and reveals how they created a new level of working class unity.

  • av Michael Ferrier
    355,-

  • av Charles (Professor of Religion and African Haberl
    515 - 1 835

  • av Haym Soloveitchik
    599,-

    Although Jews were at the centre of commercial activity in medieval Europe, a talmudic ban on any wine touched by a Gentile prevented them from engaging in the lucrative wine trade. Wine was consumed in vast quantities in the Middle Ages, and the banks of the Rhineland hosted some of the finest vineyards in northern Europe. German Jews were, until the thirteenth century, a merchant class. How could they abstain from trading in one of the region's major commodities? In time, they ruled that it was permissible to accept wine in payment of debt, but forbade trading in it, and they maintained that ban throughout the Middle Ages. Further study in the twelfth century, however, led Talmudists to discover that Jews were only forbidden to profit from trading in Gentile wine if they dealt with idolaters, but that trade with Christians and Muslims was permitted. Nevertheless, the German community refused to take advantage of this clear licence. Using Jewish and Gentile sources, this study probes the sources of this powerful taboo. In describing the complex ways in which deeply held cultural values affect Jews' engagement in the economy of the surrounding society, this book also illustrates the law of unintended consequence show the ban on Gentile wine led both to a major Jewish contribution to German viticulture and to the involvement of Jews in moneylending, with all its tragic consequences.

  • av Anne P. Alwis
    515,-

  • av Norman Russell
    769,-

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