Chris Turner es un autor galardonado y uno de los principales escritores y oradores de Canadá sobre soluciones para el cambio climático y la transición energética global. Sus obras más vendidas fueron finalistas del National Business Book Award, y su escritura de reportajes ha obtenido múltiples National Magazine Awards. El trabajo de Turner profundiza en las complejidades de los desafíos ambientales, ofreciendo perspectivas perspicaces sobre la transición energética global. Combina hábilmente una investigación rigurosa con narrativas convincentes, con el objetivo de inspirar a los lectores hacia soluciones prácticas y una perspectiva esperanzadora.
'EU Law' will ensure you grasp the main concepts of your EU law module with ease. This book explains the facts and associated case law for: The constitution of EU law, its institutions, the sources of EU law and the means of enforcement; the relationship with national law; the law of the single market EU competition law EU discrimination law and other social policy; and much more.
Unlocking the Law is the groundbreaking series of textbooks with a unique approach to the study of law. Designed specifically to make the subject matter accessible, the text includes features, activities, key facts charts, diagrams, and clear headings and sub-headings to aid students in understanding the different areas within their course. Unlocking the Law textbooks have been written specifically to ensure that readers understand fully the concepts required and are able to apply them with confidence. All titles in the series follow the same format and include the same features so students can move easily from one subject to another. The series covers all the core subjects required by the Bar Council and the Law Society for entry onto professional qualifications. Unlocking the Law remains the most original and accessible textbook series available.
Masculine, Feminine, Neuter focuses on Roland Barthes' insights into literature, exploring his relationships with peers and influences across various languages and eras. This volume is part of a comprehensive five-volume collection, showcasing Barthes' evolution as a cultural critic and his transition from structuralism to literary semiology. The essays, interviews, and reviews highlight his innovative approach and enduring impact on literary theory, making this collection a significant resource for understanding his contributions to 20th-century thought.
This book is both a personal journey and an introduction to the cinema cultures of Africa. A book about the politics of cultural survival, it is also a major overview of African cinema and television.The first part of the book traces the development of African cinema - from colonization to Afrocentrism. The author examines this development through a variety of fundamental the decolonization of the imagination; the quest for legendary African origins and the mobilization of African cultural values. The second part of the book analyses specific films, particularly through narrative and in terms of their African specificity - in the use of silence, orality and humour. Finally, the author explores the social and economic contexts of the African cinema and television industry - including its often vexed relations with the West and the problems of production and distribution African film-makers face.Exploring the achievements and challenges of those who seek to affirm African cultural values through film, the book also covers the African television industry and African-American cinema. It includes interviews with film-makers, stills from the films and, ultimately, a plea for seeing and respecting the otherness of the Other. Winner of the French National Film Centre's best filmbook of 1997 and now available in four languages, this is book which takes us into a process of learning how to look.
Baudrillard’s work of the last two decades has downplayed the position of the critical subject and gone over to the standpoint of the object. Nowhere is this objective (non-)critique which results so clearly played out as in the Cool Memories series.Here again, in this fourth collection of fragments and sketches, Baudrillard’s stance is less that of the interventionist intellectual analysing the world as critical subject than of the barely participant observer, an object among objects, an ‘internal exile’, watching the world ‘world itself’ with such fierce insistence, yet registering with acuity our general deficit of reality and meaning.
Baudrillard sees the power of the terrorists as lying in the symbolism of slaughter – not merely the reality of death, but in a sacrifice that challenges the whole system. Where previously the old revolutionary sought to conduct a struggle between real forces in the context of ideology and politics, the new terrorist mounts a powerful symbolic challenge which, when combined with high-tech resources, constitutes an unprecedented assault on an over-sophisticated and vulnerable West. This new edition is up-dated with the essays ‘Hypotheses on Terrorism’ and ‘Violence of the Global’.
From the sierras of New Mexico to the streets of New York and LA by night—”a sort of luminous, geometric, incandescent immensity”—Baudrillard mixes aperçus and observations with a wicked sense of fun to provide a unique insight into the country that dominates our world. In this new edition, leading cultural critic and novelist Geoff Dyer offers a thoughtful and perceptive take on the continued resonance of Baudrillard’s America.
Awarded the Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing, this book offers a compelling exploration of contemporary political issues, blending personal narrative with incisive analysis. The author delves into the complexities of governance, societal challenges, and the impact of policy decisions on everyday life. Through engaging storytelling and critical insights, it encourages readers to reflect on the political landscape and their role within it, making it a significant contribution to political discourse.
In this analysis of the popular TV show, the author looks at how the show is created, its finest moments and the influence it has across the world. He also discusses the characters' moral values, such as Marge and Lisa and the environment, Homer and consumerism and Mr Burns and corporate villainy. Originally published: 2004
Sea Dragons. Pirates. Sea Serpents. Wizards. The Black Claw and Red Claw Island clans are on the brink of war. A young islander named Darek risks everything to prove his worth as a sailor. Adventure awaits...and the ride of his life. But there are far deadlier things than pirates on the open sea. A wizard begins to raise sea serpents from the depths. Can Darek learn to harness the growing power within himself in time? Dive into this epic fantasy adventure filled with magic, hope, and peril. Smell the salt on the wind as dragon and serpent dive below the crystal blue waters in this exciting prequel to the Dragon Sea Chronicles