Search results for ""author dom"
Faber Music Ltd Mass of St Dominic
£6.19
MCD X Fsg Originals The Dominant Animal: Stories
£13.50
Hachette Le domaine des dieux
£15.26
Melbourne Books The Dominatrix Next Door
£23.39
OUP India Fiscal Domain for Panchayats
This volume focuses on the decentralization of governance and finances with the ultimate intent being to strengthen the panchayat level of governance, and thereby make more effective the delivery of the many critical functions assigned to them.
£8.47
University of Minnesota Press Thursdays and Every Other Sunday Off: A Domestic Rap by Verta Mae
Observations from the lives of African American domestic workers—back in printThursdays and Every Other Sunday Off is an exploration of the lives of African American domestic workers in cities throughout the United States during the mid-twentieth century. With dry wit and honesty, Vertamae Smart-Grosvenor relates the testimonies of maids, cooks, child care workers, and others as they discuss their relationships with their employers and their experiences on the job. She connects this work with popular culture, presenting Aunt Jemima, Mammies, Uncle Ben, and other charged figures through the eyes of domestic workers as opposed to their employers, and remembers her own family history (her mother and grandmother were domestic workers after migrating to Philadelphia from South Carolina). Interspersed with musings and interviews are historical references, quotations, and personal anecdotes that make this account all the more intimate, heartbreaking, and relevant.
£14.99
Dover Publications Inc. Victorian Domestic Architectural Plans and Details v. 1
£10.99
£21.15
Ediciones Tutor, S.A. Escuela de domin del aprendizaje a la competicin
Libro innovador por su enfoque científico de un juego de mesa de indudables valores deportivos. Texto ilustrado con numerosos gráficos que resulta asequible para el principiante, interesante para el iniciado, útil y divertido para ambos.
£13.88
Princeton University Press Venetian Humanism in an Age of Patrician Dominance
In comprehensive detail Margaret King analyzes the activities of the patricians who were predominant in the ranks of the humanists and who made humanist thought a powerful tool in the service of their class and of the city itself. Originally published in 1986. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
£67.50
Blue Dome Press The Baby in the Bag
£14.16
Blue Dome Press Hungry for Power: Erdogan's Witch Hunt & Abuse of State Power
£10.50
£15.95
Blue Dome Press Family: A Safe Heaven in a World of Turbulence
£10.04
Blue Dome Press Where is Turkey Headed?: Culture Battles in Turkey
£15.95
Blue Dome Press Science & Faith: Two Faces of the Same Fact
£9.37
Blue Dome Press Hizmet: Question & Answers on the Gulen Movement
£10.46
Blue Dome Press Healthy Desserts: with Natural Sweeteners
£10.04
University of Pennsylvania Press The Plantation Machine: Atlantic Capitalism in French Saint-Domingue and British Jamaica
Jamaica and Saint-Domingue were especially brutal but conspicuously successful eighteenth-century slave societies and imperial colonies. These plantation regimes were, to adopt a metaphor of the era, complex "machines," finely tuned over time by planters, merchants, and officials to become more efficient at exploiting their enslaved workers and serving their empires. Using a wide range of archival evidence, The Plantation Machine traces a critical half-century in the development of the social, economic, and political frameworks that made these societies possible. Trevor Burnard and John Garrigus find deep and unexpected similarities in these two prize colonies of empires that fought each other throughout the period. Jamaica and Saint-Domingue experienced, at nearly the same moment, a bitter feud between planters and governors, a violent conflict between masters and enslaved workers, a fateful tightening of racial laws, a steady expansion of the slave trade, and metropolitan criticism of planters' cruelty. The core of The Plantation Machine addresses the Seven Years' War and its aftermath. The events of that period, notably a slave poisoning scare in Saint-Domingue and a near-simultaneous slave revolt in Jamaica, cemented white dominance in both colonies. Burnard and Garrigus argue that local political concerns, not emerging racial ideologies, explain the rise of distinctive forms of racism in these two societies. The American Revolution provided another imperial crisis for the beneficiaries of the plantation machine, but by the 1780s whites in each place were prospering as never before—and blacks were suffering in new and disturbing ways. The result was that Jamaica and Saint-Domingue became vitally important parts of the late eighteenth-century American empires of Britain and France.
£27.99
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Home Care for Ageing Populations: A Comparative Analysis of Domiciliary Care in Denmark, the United States and Germany
This book presents an up-to-date comparative analysis of domiciliary care policies for the older populations of Denmark, the United States and Germany with a particular focus on similarities and differences between these care regimes. The authors extend their discussions to include issues of welfare state classification, the changing role of the state as the provider of social care services, the recommodification of the care labour force and the increased emphasis placed on both informal care-giving and consumer power. The book makes an important contribution to the debate about the future care of older people and provides an informative and insightful analysis of the provision of publicly funded domiciliary care services from a cross-national perspective.Home Care for Ageing Populations will be of particular interest to academics working in the fields of social policy, social care, gerontology and public/employment policy and will prove a useful source for researchers conducting comparative analysis of social care systems. It will also be of interest to those within the community services / social care arena and public servants responsible for the coordination and delivery of homecare systems, as well as social workers, general practitioners, occupational therapists, and a host of other specialist staff working with older people.
£90.00
Ra-Ma S.A. Editorial y Publicaciones Domine GIMP manual práctico
Este libro está dedicado a todos aquellos interesados en el diseño digital y retoque fotográfico mediante el ordenador. El enfoque de software libre utilizando el programa GIMP proporciona al lector el conocimiento necesario para poder realizar las tareas, desde las más básicas hasta las más elevadas, con un software gratuito.GIMP, con características similares a Photoshop u otros softwares de pago, se ha convertido en uno de los programas de retoque fotográfico más utilizados, tanto en el sector amateur como en el profesional.En este libro se verán las principales herramientas y opciones proporcionadas por GIMP, así como todos los pasos necesarios a realizar para hacer un buen retoque fotográfico.Un enfoque eminentemente práctico permitirá al usuario ir probando cada una de las opciones disponibles en GIMP y, al finalizar el libro, obtendrá un amplio conjunto de diseños y retoques fotográficos realizados por usted mismo.
£20.10
Authorhouse Walking Daily in Dominion
£22.58
£18.95
The Dome Press Sleeper The Red Storm
Shortlisted for the Wilbur & Niso Smith Adventure Writing Prize 2019. J.D. Fennell is back with a brand new Will Starling adventure.
£9.04
Blue Dome Press Silver in Turkish Art
£25.99
Blue Dome Press The Humanity of Muhammad: A Christian View
£16.95
Ediciones Nuestro Conocimiento Sistema Doméstico Inteligente utilizando Internet de las Cosas
£49.41
£28.79
Logos Verlag Berlin GmbH Adaptive Wavelet Frame Domain Decomposition Methods for Elliptic Operator Equations
£60.59
Schnell & Steiner Buch-Geschichten in Raum Und Zeit Aus Der Dombibliothek Hildesheim
£67.70
Random House USA Inc The Geeks' Guide to World Domination: Be Afraid, Beautiful People
£13.95
Klampen, Dietrich zu Hilde Domin Dass ich sein kann wie ich bin Biografie
£25.20
Blue Dome Press Language of the Heart: A Sufi Interpretation of Form & Meaning in Contemporary Society
£10.04
Editorial Hispano Europea S.A. Cómo manejar el caballo sin domar guías fotográficas del caballo
Pocas cosas son tan gratificantes como conocer un caballo al que ninguna persona ha tocado y, tras unos minutos, unas horas o días, hacerle creer que los seres humanos no son tan malos después de todo!. La autora empieza mostrando las maneras de atrapar al caballo y separarle de sus compañeros, y continúa describiendo cómo ponerle la primera cabezada para después guiarle. Como con todas las enseñanzas, la autora basa sus consejos en la experiencia adquirida de su trabajo.
£8.31
Tilted Windmill Press Domesticate Your Badgers: Become a Better Writer through Deliberate Practice
£21.99
WW Norton & Co The Madwoman and the Roomba: My Year of Domestic Mayhem
Ah, 55. Gateway to the golden years! Professional summiting. Emotional maturity. Easy surfing toward the glassy blue waters of retirement. . . . Or maybe not? Middle age, for Sandra Tsing Loh, feels more like living a disorganized 25-year-old’s life in an 85-year-old’s malfunctioning body. With raucous wit and carefree candor, Loh recounts the struggles of leaning in, staying lean, and keeping her family well-fed and financially afloat?all those burdens of running a household that still, all-too-often, fall to women. The Madwoman and the Roomba chronicles a roller coaster year for Loh, her partner, and her two teenage daughters in their ramshackle quasi-Craftsman, with a front lawn that’s more like a rectangle of compacted dirt and mice that greet her as she makes her morning coffee. Her daughters are spending more time online than off; her partner has become a Hindu, bringing in a household of monks; and she and her girlfriends are wondering over Groupon “well” drinks how they got here. Whether prematurely freaking out about her daughters’ college applications, worrying over her eccentric aging father, or overcoming the pitfalls of long-term partnership and the temptations of paired-with-cheese online goddess webinars, Loh somehow navigates the realities of what it means to be a middle-aged woman in the twenty-first century. Including a new epilogue hilariously recounting her family’s quarantine experience during the pandemic, The Madwoman and the Roomba is a “wildly funny” testament to Loh’s “brilliant wit and rock-solid resilience” (Henry Alford).
£13.38
Yale University Press The Dynamics of Global Dominance: European Overseas Empires, 1415–1980
For centuries Europeans ruled vast portions of the world, as inhabitants of west European countries sailed to distant continents and took possession of territories whose societies and economies they set out to change. How and why did these farflung empires form, persist, and finally fall? David Abernethy addresses these questions in this magisterial survey of the rise and decline of European overseas empires. Abernethy identifies broad patterns across time and space, interweaving them with fascinating details of cross-cultural encounters. He argues that relatively autonomous profit-making, religious, and governmental institutions enabled west European countries to launch triple assaults on other societies. Indigenous people also played a role in their eventual subjugation by inviting Europeans to intervene in their power struggles. Abernethy finds that imperial decline was often the unanticipated result of wars among major powers. Postwar crises over colonies’ unmet expectations empowered movements that eventually took territories as diverse as the thirteen British North American colonies, Spain’s South American possessions, India, the Dutch East Indies, Vietnam, and the Gold Coast to independence. In advancing a theory of imperialism that includes European and non-European actors, and in analyzing economic, social, and cultural as well as political dimensions of empire, Abernethy helps account for Europe’s long occupation of global center stage. He also sheds light on key features of today’s postcolonial world and the legacies of empire, concluding with an insightful approach to the moral evaluation of colonialism.
£30.59
University of Illinois Press MEDICAL REVOLUTIONARIES: The Enslaved Healers of Eighteenth-Century Saint Domingue
How slave healers inspired the Haitian Revolution, toppled the slave system, and led to the loss of France
£17.99
The University of Chicago Press The American Warfare State: The Domestic Politics of Military Spending
How is it that the United States-a country founded on a distrust of standing armies and strong centralized power-came to have the most powerful military in history? Long after World War II and the end of the Cold War, in times of rising national debt and reduced need for high levels of military readiness, why does Congress still continue to support massive defense budgets? In The American Warfare State, Rebecca U. Thorpe argues that there are profound relationships among the size and persistence of the American military complex, the growth in presidential power to launch military actions, and the decline of congressional willingness to check this power. The public costs of military mobilization and war, including the need for conscription and higher tax rates, served as political constraints on warfare for most of American history. But the vast defense industry that emerged from World War II also created new political interests that the framers of the Constitution did not anticipate. Many rural and semirural areas became economically reliant on defense-sector jobs and capital, which gave the legislators representing them powerful incentives to press for ongoing defense spending regardless of national security circumstances or goals. At the same time, the costs of war are now borne overwhelmingly by a minority of soldiers who volunteer to fight, future generations of taxpayers, and foreign populations in whose lands wars often take place. Drawing on an impressive cache of data, Thorpe reveals how this new incentive structure has profoundly reshaped the balance of wartime powers between Congress and the president, resulting in a defense industry perennially poised for war and an executive branch that enjoys unprecedented discretion to take military action.
£26.06
MH - Indiana University Press Bush on the Home Front Domestic Policy Triumphs and Setbacks
£60.30
De Gruyter Opposites attract: How to transfer knowledge across different industry domains
Cross-industry innovation introduces a dilemma for the innovation process. On one hand, there is a broad consensus in research that diversity in knowledge leads to increased levels of novelty in innovation. On the other hand, the crossing of industries boundaries is known to cause knowledge boundaries between actors. This book contributes to this end, by the development of new understanding of important aspects in cross-industry innovation. The empirical bases for this research are case data from the Pumps & Pipes association in US and Norway (conferences and 7 Norwegian cross-industry collaborations), and cross-industry cases from the Norway Health Tech cluster.
£71.10
University of Pennsylvania Press Ruling the Spirit: Women, Liturgy, and Dominican Reform in Late Medieval Germany
Histories of the German Dominican order have long presented a grand narrative of its origin, fall, and renewal: a Golden Age at the order's founding in the thirteenth century, a decline of Dominican learning and spirituality in the fourteenth, and a vibrant renewal of monastic devotion by Dominican "Observants" in the fifteenth. Dominican nuns are presumed to have moved through a parallel arc, losing their high level of literacy in Latin over the course of the fourteenth century. However, unlike the male Dominican friars, the nuns are thought never to have regained their Latinity, instead channeling their spiritual renewal into mystical experiences and vernacular devotional literature. In Ruling the Spirit, Claire Taylor Jones revises this conventional narrative by arguing for a continuous history of the nuns' liturgical piety. Dominican women did not lose their piety and literacy in the fifteenth century, as is commonly believed, but instead were urged to reframe their devotion around the observance of the Divine Office. Jones grounds her research in the fifteenth-century liturgical library of St. Katherine's in Nuremberg, which was reformed to Observance in 1428 and grew to be one of the most significant convents in Germany, not least for its library. Many of the manuscripts owned by the convent are didactic texts, written by friars for Dominican sisters from the fourteenth through the fifteenth century. With remarkable continuity across genres and centuries, this literature urges the Dominican nuns to resume enclosure in their convents and the strict observance of the Divine Office, and posits ecstatic experience as an incentive for such devotion. Jones thus rereads the "sisterbooks," vernacular narratives of Dominican women, long interpreted as evidence of mystical hysteria, as encouragement for nuns to maintain obedience to liturgical practice. She concludes that Observant friars viewed the Divine Office as the means by which Observant women would define their communities, reform the terms of Observant devotion, and carry the order into the future.
£52.20
Duke University Press Domestication Gone Wild: Politics and Practices of Multispecies Relations
The domestication of plants and animals is central to the familiar and now outdated story of civilization's emergence. Intertwined with colonialism and imperial expansion, the domestication narrative has informed and justified dominant and often destructive practices. Contending that domestication retains considerable value as an analytical tool, the contributors to Domestication Gone Wild reengage the concept by highlighting sites and forms of domestication occurring in unexpected and marginal sites, from Norwegian fjords and Philippine villages to British falconry cages and South African colonial townships. Challenging idioms of animal husbandry as human mastery and progress, the contributors push beyond the boundaries of farms, fences, and cages to explore how situated relations with animals and plants are linked to the politics of human difference—and, conversely, how politics are intertwined with plant and animal life. Ultimately, this volume promotes a novel, decolonizing concept of domestication that radically revises its Euro- and anthropocentric narrative. Contributors. Inger Anneberg, Natasha Fijn, Rune Flikke, Frida Hastrup, Marianne Elisabeth Lien, Knut G. Nustad, Sara Asu Schroer, Heather Anne Swanson, Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, Mette Vaarst, Gro B. Ween, Jon Henrik Ziegler Remme
£76.50
Indiana University Press Giambattista and Domenico Tiepolo: Master Drawings from the Anthony J. Moravec Collection
Giambattista and Domenico Tiepolo documents an important collection of master drawings donated by an individual to the Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Museum of Art at Indiana University, including five drawings by the celebrated Venetian genius Giambattista Tiepolo and sixteen drawings by his most famous son, Domenico Tiepolo. Twelve of the sixteen form part of Domenico's most important drawing series—his exhaustive visual exploration of the New Testament. Also included are two drawings discovered after the 2006 publication of Domenico Tiepolo: A New Testament and seen here for the first time. Gealt and Knox are world-renowned experts on the Tiepolos and this book will serve as a useful reference to understanding their work as draftsmen. This beautiful illustrated volume will appeal to art lovers, biblical scholars, and those who value the unique work of the Tiepolos.
£39.00
Bristol University Press Global Domestic Workers: Intersectional Inequalities and Struggles for Rights
EPDF and EPUB available Open Access under CC-BY-NC licence. Drawing from the EU-funded DomEQUAL research project across 9 countries in Europe, South America and Asia, this comparative study explores the conditions of domestic workers around the world and the campaigns they are conducting to improve their labour rights. The book showcases how domestic workers’ movements put ‘intersectionality in action’ in representing the interest of various marginalized social groups from migrants and low-income groups to racialized and rural girls and women. Casting light on issues such as subjectification, and collective organizing on the part of a category of workers conventionally regarded as unorganizable, this ambitious volume will be invaluable for scholars, policy makers and activists alike.
£24.99
Stanford University Press Cultures of Servitude: Modernity, Domesticity, and Class in India
Domestic servitude blurs the divide between family and work, affection and duty, the home and the world. In Cultures of Servitude, Raka Ray and Seemin Qayum offer an ethnographic account of domestic life and servitude in contemporary Kolkata, India, with a concluding comparison with New York City. Focused on employers as well as servants, men as well as women, across multiple generations, they examine the practices and meaning of servitude around the home and in the public sphere. This book shifts the conversations surrounding domestic service away from an emphasis on the crisis of transnational care work to one about the constitution of class. It reveals how employers position themselves as middle and upper classes through evolving methods of servant and home management, even as servants grapple with the challenges of class and cultural distinction embedded in relations of domination and inequality.
£21.99
Lysa Publishers Domicilium Sapientiae: Studi Sull'umanesimo Italiano
£113.19
Stanford University Press Paths to Peace: Domestic Coalition Shifts, War Termination and the Korean War
Paths to Peace begins by developing a theory about the domestic obstacles to making peace and the role played by shifts in states' governing coalitions in overcoming these obstacles. In particular, it explains how the longer the war, the harder it is to end, because domestic obstacles to peace become institutionalized over time. Next, it tests this theory with a mixed methods approach—through historical case studies and quantitative statistical analysis. Finally, it applies the theory to an in-depth analysis of the ending of the Korean War. By analyzing the domestic politics of the war's major combatants—the Soviet Union, the United States, China, and North and South Korea—it explains why the final armistice terms accepted in July 1953 were little different from those proposed at the start of negotiations in July 1951, some 294,000 additional battle-deaths later.
£55.80