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Speaking Tiger
Speaking Tiger is an independent publishing company based in New Delhi. Founded in September 2014, the company publishes a diverse list comprising quality fiction and non-fiction from South Asia and the rest of the world, with a strong emphasis on new voices.
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Promoted Content
Who's Hoo?
by Noya Spector
Who's Hoo? Ein faszinierendes Kinderbuch von Noya Spector Who-me, Who-you, Who-else und Who-knows sind vier bunte Eulen, deren Geschichte in diesem lustigen Buch für Kinder von 4 bis 7 in Reimen erzählt wird. Who’s Hoo? wurde von Noya Spector verfasst und illustriert. Es eignet sich zum Vorlesen für Kinder zu Hause oder in der Schule, aber auch zur Einzellektüre für Leselernkinder. Das Buch der Eulen ist das erste in einer Serie von vier Titeln, gefolgt von Elephants on the Go (Elefanten unterwegs), Lions on the Couch (Löwen auf der Couch) und At Home with Dogs (Zu Hause bei Hunden). Die Autorin verfügt über ein Ph.D. in Erziehungspsychologie von der University of Minnesota und ist Diagnostikexpertin in Behindertenerziehung. Neben ihren Kinderbüchern hat Dr. Noya Spector sechs Bücher für Eltern und Erzieher sowie Artikel über Menschenrechte von Personen mit Lernbehinderungen verfasst. Sie wird regelmäßig über ihre Methoden und professionellen Ansichten interviewt.
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Promoted Content
Qui est Hoo ?
by Noya Spector
Qui est Hoo ? Un livre fascinant pour enfants, écrit par Noya Spector. Qui-moi, Qui-toi, Qui-autre, Qui-sait, sont quatre hiboux en couleur, dont l'histoire est racontée en rimes dans ce livre hilarant pour enfants de 4 à 7 ans. Qui est Hoo ? a été écrit et illustré par Noya Spector, et il est parfait pour la lecture à voix haute à des enfants aussi bien à la maison qu'en classe, mais aussi pour la lecture individuelle durant les première étapes d'apprentissage de la lecture. Ce livre sur les hiboux est le premier livre d'une série incluant trois autres volumes : Éléphants sur la ligne de départ, Lions sur le canapé, A la maison avec les chiens. L'auteur de ce livre est titulaire d'un doctorat en psychologie éducative de l'Université de Minnesota, elle est également une excellente diagnosticienne dans le domaine de l'éducation spécialisée. A part ses livres pour enfants, Dr. Noya Spector a également publié six livres pour parents et professionnels, et même des articles sur les droits des personnes souffrant de troubles d'apprentissage. Elle est fréquemment interrogée sur ses méthodes et ses opinions professionnelles sur le sujet.
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Peace studies & conflict resolutionJune 2011
Negotiating Peace and Confronting Corruption
Challenges for Post-Conflict Societies
by Bertram I. Spector
In Negotiating Peace and Confronting Corruption, Bertram Spector argues that the peace negotiation table is the best place to lay the groundwork for good governance.
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The Arts
Rise Up
Voices of Today's Indigenous Music
by Craig Harris
The heartbeat of powwow/round dance drums and the melodies of wooden end-blown flutes have woven into a magnificent tapestry that includes Indigenous rock, blues, pop. jazz, country music, punk, classical, opera, hip-hop, rap, and electronica music. Picking up where my book, Heartbeat, Warble, and the Electronic Powwow (University of Oklahoma Press, 2014) left off, Rise Up brings together the autobiographical reflections of Native American Music Awards (NAMMY), Juno, Grammy, and Polaris Prize winners between 2015 and 2020. The genre’s top artists not only discuss their music but also their memories, heritage, day-to-day lives, and challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. The very first volume about Native artists working commercially today, Rise Up presents artists speaking for themselves without being filtered through a stereotypical lens. Indigenous communities have been calling for self‐determination in self‐representation in their craft. Rise Up answers that call.
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Humanities & Social SciencesMarch 2020
SITOPIA
How Food Can Save The World
by Carolyn Steel
A vital call for us to rediscover the way that food binds us to each other and to the natural world, and in doing so find new ways of living -- Christopher Kissane, Guardian Steel's ideas have become a matter of urgency -- Clare Saxby, Times Literary Supplement Essential reading! A visionary look at how quality food should replace money as the new world currency -- Tim Spector Steel offsets the obviously weighty subject matter with a lightness of touch and twinkling eye for luminous details… an unambiguously essential read -- George Reynolds, Daily Telegraph The beauty of food is that it is so many things at once: necessity and treat, nature and artifice, the subject of science, philosophy, etiquette and art. The book is accordingly multiple in its themes, an all-you-can-eat buffet of thoughts and facts about food...a brave and ambitious book, Observer Prize Shortlisted: https://wainwrightprize.com/sitopia/ Discussed on BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme, Weds 17th Sept (Starts at 2hrs & 20 mins in: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m000mkst) From our foraging hunter-gatherer ancestors to the enormous appetites of modern cities, food has shaped our bodies and homes, our politics and trade, and our climate. Whether it’s the daily decision of what to eat, or the monopoly of industrial food production, food touches every part of our world. But by forgetting its value, we have drifted into a way of life that threatens our planet and ourselves. Yet food remains central to addressing the predicaments and opportunities of our urban, digital age. Drawing on insights from philosophy, history, architecture, literature, politics and science, as well as stories of the farmers, designers and economists who are remaking our relationship with food, Sitopia is a provocative and exhilarating vision for change, and how to thrive on our crowded, overheating planet. In her inspiring and deeply thoughtful new book Carolyn Steel, points the way to a better future. Carolyn Steel is a leading thinker on food and cities. Her first book, Hungry City, received international acclaim, establishing her as an influential voice in a wide variety of fields across academia, industry and the arts. It won the Royal Society of Literature Jerwood Award for Non-Fiction and was chosen as a BBC Food Programme book of the year. A London-based architect, academic and writer, Carolyn has lectured at the University of Cambridge, London Metropolitan University, Wageningen University and the London School of Economics and is in international demand as a speaker. Her 2009 TED talk has received more than one million views.
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Humanities & Social SciencesSeptember 2019
MUTATIONS: DISSONANCES OF PROGRESS
by Adauto Novates (editor)
The eleventh book in the series Mutations, Dissonances of progress discusses how the progress of technology brought undeniable benefits to humanity – such as advances in medicine and communication –, improving our daily life. On the other hand, it brought speed and superficiality to the relations of the human being with its surroundings, and degraded several aspects of current life with the exacerbation of individualism, the substitution of moral values, the overestimation of religious beliefs, the economy as the utmost referential of life in common, the knowledge of specialists to the detriment of thinkers. The essays in this volume analyze this situation and indicate paths for reflection.
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Individual artists, art monographsJanuary 2019
The Last Days of Mankind
A Visual Guide to Karl Kraus’ Great War Epic
by artwork by Deborah Sengl; contributions by Marjorie Perloff, Matthias Goldmann, Anna Souchuk and Paul Reitter
"Eye-catching": Top 10 Anticipated Art Books Publishers Weekly Garnering critical success over the past four years, Viennese artist Deborah Sengl has exhibited taxidermied rats, drawings and paintings to restage Karl Kraus’ infamous, nearly-unperformable play The Last Days of Mankind (Die Letzten Tage der Menschheit, 1915–22). Featuring Sengl’s entire installation, this edition includes essays that examine her ambitious dramaturgy, which condenses the 10-15 hour drama into an abridged reading of its themes: human barbarism, the role of journalism in war, the sway of popular opinion and the absurdities of nationalism. The Last Days of Mankind offers an agit-prop protest envisioning human folly through animal actors, who become more than human, while confronting a violence particular to humankind, laced with selfishness and greed. The work is a hundred years old, but for me it is still current. We may not have war in the immediate vicinity, but the war within us is as strong, if not stronger, as it was then.– Deborah Sengl