Editorial Leonard Levy
Venezuelan gastronomic literature.
View Rights PortalThe Carl Hanser publishing house represents diversity that is second to none: Ranging from contemporary authors to international literary classics, and featuring children’s and young adults’ books as well as an informative, thought-provoking non-fiction programme, Hanser’s list is both stimulating and inviting.
View Rights PortalHistory through material culture is a unique, step-by-step guide for students and researchers who wish to use objects as historical sources. Responding to the significant, scholarly interest in historical material culture studies, this book makes clear how students and researchers ready to use these rich material sources can make important, valuable and original contributions to history. Written by two experienced museum practitioners and historians, the book recognises the theoretical and practical challenges of this approach and offers clear advice on methods to get the best out of material culture research. With a focus on the early modern and modern periods, this volume draws on examples from across the world and demonstrates how to use material culture to answer a range of enquiries, including social, economic, gender, cultural and global history.
The Simons of Manchester revives the history of one of Manchester's most influential families, the Simons. The book investigates the lives and public work of Henry and Emily Simon, and Ernest and Shena Simon. Through philanthropy and work in social reform, the two generations of the Simons greatly enriched Manchester's cultural and civic institutions, worked to improve the lives of its citizens, and helped to spearhead profound national reforms in health, housing, planning and education. While many people in Manchester are familiar with the Simon name through Shena Simon College, Simonsway, and the Simon Building at the University of Manchester, there is scant public knowledge of who the Simons were and their legacy. As such, this edited volume of collected essays aims to illuminate their fascinating lives and public service to rehabilitate the Simons and examine their local and national significance.
Introducing novels by the Nobel Prize for Literature author, Claude Simon, this text gives emphasis to peaks in his literary achievement: "The Flanders Road" (1960), "The Georgics" (1981) and "The Acacia" (1989). Alastair Duncan traces the development and recurrence of major themes, such as war, time and memory, and the constantly renewed inventiveness of Simon's manner. Duncan illustrates and comments on the various critical approaches which have been made to the novels over the years, from phenomenological interpretations, through structuralism to the autobiographical and psychobiographical approaches of the 1980s and 1990s. The text includes a chapter on Simon's most recent works ("Le Jardin des Plantes" 1997 and "Le Tramway" 2001).
In den Erinnerungen von Freunden und Bekannten an Begegnungen mit dem Dichter entsteht ein Bild von der Persönlichkeit Huchels. Zugleich wird ein Stück jüngster deutscher Literaturgeschichte rekonstruiert.
This book examines the links between major contemporary public sector reforms and neoliberal thinking. The key contribution of the book is to enhance our understanding of contemporary neoliberalism as it plays out in the public administration and to provide a critical analysis of generally overlooked aspects of administrative power. The book examines the quest for accountability, credibility and evidence in the public sector. It asks whether this quest may be understood in terms of neoliberal thinking and, if so, how? The book makes the argument that while current administrative reforms are informed by several distinct political rationalities, they evolve above all around a particular form of neoliberalism: constructivist neoliberalism. The book analyses the dangers of the kinds of administrative power seeking to invoke the self-steering capacities of society and administration itself.
In "Know Our Love", dem dritten Band der "Know us"-Reihe, wird die Geschichte um Ella, Simon und den geheimnisvollen Dilan entfaltet. Ella, ein geschätztes Mitglied ihrer eng verbundenen Freundesgruppe, stellt ihren neuen Freund Dilan vor, was unerwartete Gefühlsverwirrungen auslöst. Simon, der heimlich Gefühle für Ella hegt, spürt eine unerklärliche Anziehung zu Dilan. Diese sofortige, tiefgreifende Verbindung zu Dilan wirft bei Simon Fragen auf, zumal auch Dilan scheinbar mehr über Simon weiß, als es den Anschein hat. Die unerwartete Vertrautheit zwischen den beiden und Ellas Wahl führen zu einem Gefühlschaos, das Simon zwingt, seine eigenen Vorstellungen von Liebe und Beziehung zu hinterfragen. Als Simon schließlich Dilans Geheimnis aufdeckt, steht er vor einer Zerreißprobe, die ihn alles, was er über Liebe zu wissen glaubte, in Frage stellen lässt. Die Entdeckung wirft nicht nur seine Gefühle für Ella und Dilan durcheinander, sondern konfrontiert ihn auch mit tiefen Wahrheiten über sich selbst und die Natur der Liebe. Diese Dreiecksgeschichte, gewürzt mit Elementen der Selbstfindung, des Vertrauens und der Akzeptanz, verspricht eine emotionale Achterbahnfahrt. "Know Our Love" erkundet die Vielschichtigkeit menschlicher Beziehungen und die Bedeutung von echtem Vertrauen und tiefer Verbundenheit, was den Roman zu einem unvergesslichen Leseerlebnis innerhalb der beliebten "Know us"-Reihe macht. Beleuchtet intensiv die Herausforderungen und emotionalen Turbulenzen einer Dreiecksbeziehung, in der traditionelle Partnerschaftsgrenzen durchbrochen werden, und bietet tiefe Einblicke in die Polyamorie. Authentische Charakterentwicklung und vielschichtige Gefühlswelten der Protagonisten werden einfühlsam dargestellt, während sie ihre Beziehungen in einer Welt voller gesellschaftlicher Erwartungen navigieren. Durchgängig spannend mit einem unvorhersehbaren Finale, das die Leser*innen bis zur letzten Seite fesselt. Moderne Themen wie die Queerbewegung und Fridays for Future werden geschickt in die Handlung integriert, was dem Roman eine zusätzliche aktuelle Relevanz verleiht. Lebendige Nebencharaktere bereichern die Handlung mit ihrer Vielfalt und sorgen für zusätzliche Tiefe im Erzähluniversum. Feiert die Vielfalt der Liebe und bietet eine Plattform für eine offene Auseinandersetzung mit alternativen Beziehungsformen und der Akzeptanz verschiedener Lebensmodelle.
England and the 1966 World Cup presents a cultural analysis of what is considered a key 'moment of modernity' in the nation's post-war history. Regarded as having an importance beyond its primary sporting purpose, the World Cup in England is examined within the complexity of the cultural, social and political changes that characterised the mid-1960s. Yet, although addressing the importance of non-sport related connections, the book maintains a focus on football, discussing it as a 'cultural form' and presenting an original perspective on the aesthetic accomplishment in football tactics by England's manager, Alf Ramsey. The study considers the World Cup in relation to the cup tradition, England as the World Cup host nation, the England squad and masculinity, the modernism of England's manager Alf Ramsey, design and commercial aspects of the World Cup, a critical engagement within existing academic accounts, and an examination of how England's victory has been remembered and commemorated.
Thomas May's The Tragedy of Antigone (1631), edited by Matteo Pangallo, is the first English treatment of the story made famous by Sophocles. This edition contains a facsimile of the copy held at the Beinecke Library of Yale University, making the play commercially available for the first time since its original publication. The extensive introduction discusses, among other things, the ownership history of existing copies and their marginal annotations, and of the play's topical political implications in the light of May's wavering between royalist and republican sympathies. Writing during the contentious early years of Charles I's reign, May used Sophocles' Antigone to explore the problems of just rule and justified rebellion. He also went beyond the scope of the original, adding content from a wide range of other classical and contemporary plays, poems and other sources, including Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet and Macbeth. This volume will be essential reading for advanced students, researchers and teachers of early English drama and seventeenth-century political history.
Despite the scholarship and political activism devoted to keeping the memory of the Paris Commune alive, there still remains much ignorance both in France and elsewhere, about the traumatic civil war of 1871; some 20,000 to 35,000 people were killed on the streets of Paris in just the final week of the conflict. Colette Wilson identifies a critical blind-spot in French studies and employs new critical approaches to neglected texts, marginalised aspects of the illustrated press, early photography and a selection of novels by Emile Zola. This book will be of interest to students and academics studying France in the nineteenth century from a number of different perspectives war and revolution studies, cultural studies, history and cultural memory, literature, art history, photography, the illustrated press, city studies and human geography. The book will appeal equally to all lovers of Paris who wish to know and understand more about the city's turbulent past.
Early modern dietaries are prose texts recommending the best way to maintain physical and psychological well-being. Three sixteenth-century dietaries contains Thomas Elyot's Castle of Health, Andrew Boorde's Compendious Regiment and William Bullein's Government of Health, all popular and influential works that were typical of a genre advising the reader on how best to maintain physical and psychological health. They are here introduced, contextualized and edited for the first time in a modern spelling edition. Introductory material explores the dietary genre, its relationship to humanism, humoral theory, and the wide range of authorities with which the dietary authors engaged. The volume includes an examination of the bibliographical and publication history of each work, comprehensive explanatory notes and appendices that provide prefaces to earlier editions, a glossary, and a list of authorities and works cited or alluded to in the dietaries.
This book examines the motivations for the European Union's (EU) policy towards the Common Market of the South (Mercosur), the EU's most important relationship with another regional economic integration organisation. It argues that the dominant explanations in the literature - balancing the US, global aspirations, being an external federator, long-standing economic and cultural ties, economic interdependence, and the Europeanization of Spanish and Portuguese national foreign policies - fail to adequately explain the EU's policy. In particular, these accounts tend to infer the EU's motives from its activity. Drawing extensive primary documents, this book argues that the major developments in the relationship - the 1992 Inter-institutional Agreement and the 1995 Europe Mercosur Inter-regional Framework Cooperation Agreement - were initiated by Mercosur and supported mainly by Spain. This means that rather than pursuing a strategy, as implied by most of the existing literature, the EU was largely responsive.
Making a bold intervention into critical security studies literature, this book explores the ontological relationship between mortality and security. It considers the mortality theories of Heidegger and Bauman alongside literature from the sociology of death, before undertaking a comparative exploration of the memorialisation of four prominent post-terrorist sites: the World Trade Centre in New York, the Bali bombsite, the London bombings and the Norwegian sites attacked by Anders Breivik. By interviewing the architects and designers of these reconstruction projects, the book shows that practices of memorialisation are a retrospective security endeavour - they conceal and re-narrate the traumatic incursion of death. Disaster recovery is replete with security practices that return mortality to its sublimated position and remove the disruption posed by mortality to political authority. The book will be of significant interest to academics and postgraduates working in the fields of critical security studies, memory studies and international politics.
Lerne mit Peter & Piet die Natur kennen! Puh, ist das heiß! Förster Peter und Eichhörnchen Piet schwitzen vor dem Forsthaus um die Wette. Während Peter sich mit einem Eis erfrischt, macht sich das Eichhörnchen auf die Suche nach einem kühleren Plätzchen. Unterwegs begegnet Piet vielen anderen Tieren, die ihm verraten, was sie machen, wenn ihnen zu warm ist. Der Frosch springt ins kalte Wasser, das Wildschwein suhlt sich in der großen Matschpfütze, und der Grashüpfer versteckt sich im Schatten der Grashalme. Doch diese Tipps sind nichts für Piet. Schließlich erreicht das Eichhörnchen den alten Buchenwald. Wie angenehm kühl es dort ist! Das muss Piet unbedingt seinem Freund Peter erzählen. Ein neues Abenteuer im Wald von Erfolgsautor Peter Wohlleben und seiner Tochter Carina Wohlleben. Ganz viele Klappen, hinter denen du spannende Infos rund um den Wald entdecken kannst. Das erste Pappbilderbuch von Bestsellerautor Peter Wohlleben und seiner Tochter Carina Wohlleben. Macht Lust, die Wunder der Natur zu erleben. Eine sehr charmant und liebevoll erzählte Sachgeschichte. Klimapositiv produziert. Wenn du Lust auf weitere Peter Wohlleben Kinderbücher hast, schau dir auch diese Bücher rund um Wald und Tiere an: „Hörst du, wie die Bäume sprechen“, „Weißt du, wo die Tiere wohnen“, „Kommst du mit nach draußen“ oder „Weißt du, wo die Baumkinder sind?“ an.
Little Ayélévi is very cunning. She always wins at the game of "Who would win the most beautiful flower." This situation intrigued his brother who wanted to understand the secret of these repeated successes. Ayélévi is very clever; will it still be for a long time?
More than two years of pandemic is more than two years of corona clutter. Only a staggering level of helpfulness, improvisation and flexibility prevented the healthcare system from collapsing completely. In this highly topical book, pharmacist Simon Krivec tells of his incredible experiences and the stormy ups and downs of pandemic madness, missing masks and disinfectants, and the feeling of having been totally abandoned by a helpless state. We learn, for instance, of the short-term procurement of large quantities of ethanol and the transportation of the highly flammable substance, and just what lured the author – and 71,400 euros in cash – to visit the port of Neuss at night.
This volume in the Critical Theory and Contemporary Society series explores the arguments between critical theory and epistemology in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Focusing on the first and second generations of critical theorists and Luhmann's systems theory, the book examines how each approaches epistemology. It opens by looking at twentieth-century epistemology, particularly the concept of lifeworld (Lebenswelt). It then moves on to discuss structuralism, poststructuralism, critical realism, the epistemological problematics of Foucault's writings and the dialectics of systems theory. This unique work takes a comparative look at structuralism and post-structuralism's epistemological theory with special reference to scientific reason. It also investigates Luhmann's works in epistemology. The aim is to explore whether the focal point for epistemology and the sciences remain that social and political interests actually form a concrete point of concern for the sciences as well.