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  • - Toward a Dialectical Libertarianism
    av Chris Matthew Sciabarra
    525

    This text demonstrates how crucial a role dialectics has played in the work of many great philosophers. Following a survey of dialectics from the Ancient Greeks to the Austrian school of economics, it investigates in detail the work of Murray Rothbard as a leading modern libertarian.

  • - Gender and the Politics of Household Authority in Early Modern France
    av Julie (University of Texas at Austin) Hardwick
    525

    This text examines the lives of notaries and their families in the French city of Nantes during the 16th and 17th centuries, and the daily experience of middling urban families - from work to family to neighbourhood to involvment in local politics.

  • av Patrick J. (Associate Professor of English Murphy
    475

    Examines the Old English riddles found in the tenth-century Exeter Book manuscript, with particular attention to their relationship to larger traditions of literary and traditional riddling.

  • - Anthropological Perspectives on Yugoslav Ethnicity, Culture, and History
     
    525

    Before the former Yugoslavia was divided by wars, its inhabitants lived side by side in peace. These essays seek to explain how former neighbours became enemies, with the hope that understanding what drove these peoples apart will help us discover ways for them to coexist in peace again.

  • - Plato, Frank Speech, and Democratic Judgment
    av Elizabeth (Mt. Holyoke College) Markovits
    449,-

    Argues that the search for sincerity in the public arena actually constitutes a dangerous distraction from more important concerns, including factual truth and the ethical import of political statements. This title shows Plato to have an appreciation for rhetoric rather than a desire to purge it from public life.

  • - From Protest to Persecution in the Century After Saint Francis
    av David (Professor) Burr
    517

    This work offers a comprehensive history of the so-called Spiritual Franciscans, a protest movement within the Franciscan order. Burr shows that the movement existed as a loyal opposition in the late 13th century, but by 1318 Pope John XXII had forced it beyond the boundaries of legitimacy.

  • - The Making of the Rosary in the Middle Ages
    av Anne Winston-Allen
    459

  • av Rachel Feldhay Brenner
    499

  • - Julie, or the New Eloise
     
    489

  • av Lu Ann (College of William & Mary ) Homza
    459 - 1 529

  • - The Imperial Mission
    av Mario Liverani
    465,-

  • - John Jewel and the Elizabethan Church
     
    579

    Brings together scholars from several disciplines in Reformation studies to examine the life, work, and enduring significance of John Jewel, bishop of Salisbury from 1560 to 1571.

  • - The Philosophy of Generosity in Shakespeare and Marlowe
    av Sean Lawrence
    422

    Forgiving the Gift challenges the tendency to reflexively understand gifts as exchanges, negotiations, and circulations. Lawrence reads plays by Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare as informed by an early modern belief in the possibility and even necessity of radical generosity, of gifts that break the cycle of economy and self-interest.The prologue reads Marlowe''s Dr. Faustus to show how the play aligns gift and grace, depicting Faustus''s famous bond as the instrument simultaneously of reciprocal exchange and of damnation. In the introduction, the author frames his argument theoretically by placing Marcel Mauss''s classic essay, "The Gift," into dialogue with Jacques Derrida, Emmanuel Levinas, and Paul Ricoeur to sketch two very different understandings of gift-giving. In the first, described by Mauss, the gift becomes a covert form of exchange. Though Mauss contrasts the gift economy with the market economy, his description of the gift economy nevertheless undermines his own project of discovering in it a basis for social solidarity. In the second understanding of gift exchange, derived from the philosophy of Levinas, the gift expresses the radical asymmetry of ethical concern.Literature and philosophy scholars alike will benefit from the original readings of The Merchant of Venice, Edward II, King Lear, Titus Andronicus, and The Tempest, which constitute the body of the text. These readings find in the plays a generosity that exceeds the social practice of gift-giving, because extraordinarily generous acts of friendship or filial affection survive the collapse of social norms. Antonio in Merchant and the title character in Edward II practice a friendship whose extravagance marks its excess. Lear, on the other hand, brings about his tragedy by attempting to reduce filial love to debt. Titus also discovers a love excessive to social convention when rape and mutilation annihilate his daughter''s cultural value. Finally, Prospero in The Tempest sacrifices power and even his own life for the love of his daughter, giving a gift rendered asymmetrical by both its excess and its secrecy.While proposing new readings of works of Renaissance drama, Forgiving the Gift also questions the model of human life from which many contemporary readings, especially those characterized as new historicist or cultural materialist, grow. In so doing, it addresses questions of how we are to understand literary texts-and how we are to live with others in the world.

  • - A Comic Treatment
     
    339

    "A collection of comics presenting diverse views of menopause. Contributors address a range of life experiences, ages, gender identities, ethnicities, and health conditions"--

  • - Stories from HIV/AIDS Care Unit 371
    av Columbia College Chicago / Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine) Czerwiec, Creative Writing / Artist-in-Residence & MK (Adjunct Professor
    289

  • - The History and Administration of Judah in the 8th-2nd Centuries BCE in Light of the Storage-Jar Stamp Impressions
    av Oded Lipschits
    925

    Examines the administrative system and function of stamp impressions on storage jars in ancient Israel, illustrating the history of Judah during six centuries of subjugation to the empires that ruled the region.

  • av Ronny Reich
    1 725

    A report of archaeological excavations at the City of David, the southeastern hill of second- and first-millennium BCE Jerusalem, conducted under the auspices of the Israel Antiquities Authority.

  • - An Archaeologist's Journey to the Land of the Bible
    av Seymour (Sy) (Dorot Director and Professor of Archaeology Emeritus Gitin
    449

    A narrative of the events that led the author to a career in archaeology and eventually to 34 years as director of the W. F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research in Jerusalem.

  • av Alhena Gadotti
    1 035

    Investigates the study of Sumerian by nonnative Akkadian speakers during the Old Babylonian period in areas outside major cities whose schools have been studied extensively. Provides transliterations and translations of 715 cuneiform school exercise texts.

  • - A View from Below
    av Edward Gudeman
    815

    Examines how the gospel of John draws on a number of Jewish and Greco-Roman traditions for the conception of the abyss and sea in Revelation, and how this background plays a key role in how the abyss functions in scripture.

  • - Religion and Geography
     
    1 269

    A collection of essays addressing the nexus of religion and geography in the ancient Near East, presenting several case studies that cover a range of time periods and areas to illuminate the diverse phenomena that occur when religion is viewed through the lenses of space and place.

  •  
    289

    An exploration of the complexities of the human brain in graphic novel format.

  • av Cristina Duran
    375

    A narrative, in graphic novel format, following Cristina Duran and Miguel Angel Giner Bou as they rebuild and reinvent themselves after their daughter Laia is born with cerebral palsy. Their story continues through the arduous process of adopting their second daughter, Selam, from Ethiopia.

  •  
    325,-

    A series of vignettes, in graphic novel format, that explore the lives of ten young Iranian men and women from diverse backgrounds.

  • av Fabien Toulme
    355

  • - Forensics, Surveillance, Identity
     
    1 379

    A multidisciplinary collection of essays exploring current scholarship on the history of human identification. Examines how techniques of identification are entangled within a wider sphere of cultural identity formation.

  • - The Shroud of Turin in Baroque Italy
    av Andrew R. (Miami University of Ohio) Casper
    579

    An art-historical analysis of the Shroud of Turin as a sacred image in the artistic culture of early modern Italy.

  • - The Tumultuous Life and Tragic Death of William Lamport
    av Andrea (Biblioteca Digital Mexicana (BDMAX)) Martinez Baracs
    319,-

    Examines the life and work of William Lamport (d. 1659), an Irish rebel, soldier, poet, and thinker who was burned at the stake by the Inquisition in Mexico. Includes a collection of Lamport's most representative writings, including poetry, psalms, and a plan for a Mexican uprising against Spain.

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