Search results for ""Process Media""
Process Media Holy Food: How Cults, Communes, and Religious Movements Influenced What We Eat - An American History
£28.79
£19.79
£18.89
Process Media American Advertising Cookbooks: How Corporations Taught Us to Love Bananas, Spam, and Jell-O
£19.79
£21.59
Process Media Moondog: The Viking of 6th Avenue
£19.79
Process Media Get Your Pitchfork On!: The Real Dirt on Country Living
£17.09
£15.99
Process Media The Brickeaters
£16.99
Process Media A Witch's Bestiary: Visions of Supernatural Creatures
£19.79
£29.69
Process Media Raw Magic: Superfoods for Superpeople
£19.79
Process Media The Modern Utopian: Alternative Communities Then and Now
£17.09
Process Media Keef: A Story Of Intoxication, Love & Death
£19.79
£29.69
£94.99
£19.79
Process Media Frezno
£26.09
£17.99
£29.69
Process Media Morris Graves: His Houses, His Gardens
£38.69
Process Media The Secret Source: The law of Attraction and its Hermetic Influence Throughout the Ages
£14.87
£16.99
£15.99
Process Media Dear Andy Kaufman, I Hate Your Guts!
£17.09
Process Media Sheela-na-gig: Sacred Celtic Images of Feminine Divinity
£18.99
Process Media Earth A.d.
£19.79
Process Media Morris Kight: Humanist, Liberationist, Fantabulist: A Story of Gay Rights and Gay Wrongs
£19.79
Process Media Demons In The Age Of Light: A Memoir
£15.99
£21.59
Univocal Publishing LLC [...After the Media]: News from the Slow-Fading Twentieth Century
The media are now redundant. In an overview of developments spanning the past seventy years, Siegfried Zielinski’s [ . . . After the Media] discusses how the means of technology-based communication assumed a systemic character and how theory, art, and criticism were operative in this process. Media-explicit thinking is contrasted with media-implicit thought. Points of contact with an arts perspective include a reinterpretation of the artist Nam June Paik and an introduction to the work of Jake and Dinos Chapman. The essay ends with two appeals. In an outline of a precise philology of exact things, Zielinski suggests possibilities of how things could proceed after the media. With a vade mecum against psychopathia medialis in the form of a manifesto, the book advocates for a distinction to be made between online existence and offline being.
£22.99
University of British Columbia Press No Legal Way Out: R v Ryan, Domestic Abuse, and the Defence of Duress
An RCMP sting caught Nicole Doucet (Ryan) trying to hire a hitman to kill her ex-husband. It was supposed to be an open-and-shut case. It wasn’t.No Legal Way Out details the judicial process, media coverage, and legal implications of R v Ryan. Appealed up to the Supreme Court of Canada, Doucet’s initial acquittal – on the basis of duress in the context of abuse – was overturned, but a stay of proceedings meant that she could not be tried again. The court castigated the RCMP for not protecting her, prompting a one-sided investigation that ultimately exonerated the force and garnered substantial critical media attention for Doucet.R v Ryan limited the legal options for women seeking to escape abuse and had a profoundly negative impact on public perceptions of domestic violence. This unabashedly feminist analysis explains why the court, the police, and the media let down all women trapped by intimate partner terrorism.
£60.30
University of British Columbia Press No Legal Way Out: R v Ryan, Domestic Abuse, and the Defence of Duress
An RCMP sting caught Nicole Doucet (Ryan) trying to hire a hitman to kill her ex-husband. It was supposed to be an open-and-shut case. It wasn’t.No Legal Way Out details the judicial process, media coverage, and legal implications of R v Ryan. Appealed up to the Supreme Court of Canada, Doucet’s initial acquittal – on the basis of duress in the context of abuse – was overturned, but a stay of proceedings meant that she could not be tried again. The court castigated the RCMP for not protecting her, prompting a one-sided investigation that ultimately exonerated the force and garnered substantial critical media attention for Doucet.R v Ryan limited the legal options for women seeking to escape abuse and had a profoundly negative impact on public perceptions of domestic violence. This unabashedly feminist analysis explains why the court, the police, and the media let down all women trapped by intimate partner terrorism.
£24.29