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      • Martini Maria Cristina | MMC Edizioni

        MMC EDIZIONI is a publishing house based in Rome.Born in 2001 as a generalist, along the time it has specialized almost exclusively in non-fiction, dedicated in particular (but not only) to the city of Rome.The main series, called "A walk with history" offers an alternative vision of the city through the historical reconnaissance and analysis of some of its urban furnishings that are not taken into consideration such as small fountains, clocks, inscriptions, sacred shrines, plaques. This series stands out for a particular graphic style and for the abundance of photographs, specially made for these books.Other series on Rome are instead dedicated to in-depth studies on specific historical and customs themes, or on the mysterious aspects of the city that also reveal its dark side.In the MMC catalogue are other non-fiction books on topics such as Music, Interculture, Anthropology and a series of stories for children encouraging solidarity, non-violence and respect for the environment

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      • Trusted Partner
        December 2025

        Searching for Tan Sitong

        by PENG XIAOLIN

        "Searching for Tan Sitong" is a collection of historical essays created by the Liuyang female writer Peng Xiaoling to commemorate the 120th anniversary of the martyrdom of Tan Sitong, a village sage. Based on Tan Sitong’s main activity experience in his life, based on the visit to the old place of Tan Sitong’s activities and his descendants, It is divided into six chapters, including life experience, fame and fame, visiting study in the north, staying in Nanjing, joining the reform, and going to the north during the Reform Movement. From the parents, brothers, wives, teachers, close friends who are closely related to each stage of Tan Sitong's life, and the reform during the reform period Selected more than 20 characters from the school, placed in the historical background of the changes in the late Qing Dynasty, through the description of the life and deeds of these characters, especially the description of the deeds during the Reform Movement of 1898, reproduced Tan Sitong with the technique of the stars arching over the moon. In his magnificent life, he praised his patriotism for saving the nation and devoting himself to the reform and alerting the people of the country with his death and ambition.

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        Literature & Literary Studies
        January 2013

        The lives of Thomas Becket

        by Michael Staunton

        This collection tells the story of Thomas Becket's turbulent life, violent death and extraordinary posthumous acclaim in the words of his contemporaries. The only modern collection from the twelfth-century Lives of Thomas Becket in English and features all his major biographers, including many previously untranslated extracts. Providing both a valuable glimpse of the late twelfth-century world, and an insight into the minds of those who witnessed the events. By using contemporary sources, this book is the most accessible way to study this central episode in medieval history. Thomas Becket features prominently in most medieval core courses. This book allows the subject to be taught as never before, and is highly suitable as a set text.

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        Literature & Literary Studies
        September 2020

        People and piety

        by Elizabeth Clarke, Robert W. Daniel, Anne Dunan-Page

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        Biography & True Stories
        February 2020

        Andrey Sheptytsky. Biography

        by Roman Horak

        Fourteen moments of the Passion of Christ, called stations, were recorded by human memory on the way of our salvation on Calvary. Fourteen moments of our humiliation and humiliation of our faith... How many humiliation he suffered, Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky, who felt like a Kyrenian, who helped us carry our cross, when those who called themselves leaders abandoned us, and when our language was banned. ...And the Lord took pity on us. And as a great manifestation of love for us, He sent Him, who was destined to go with us on His way to Calvary. Let's not forget: he was always a stranger among those for whom he came into this world. His conversion to his ancestors' faith was perceived ambiguously. The book is based on documentary materials, the authenticity of which has been confirmed. It creates the impression of a real epic of time and relationships. In addition to memories of the metropolitan, the testimony of the press, which recorded his every step, denunciations on him, materials of special services, protocols of interrogations, reports of employees and special agents, who have been monitoring Metropolitan Sheptytsky since 1937, were used. For a wide range of readers.

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        Humanities & Social Sciences
        January 2007

        Religion in Revolutionary England

        by Christopher Durston, Judith Maltby

        This book offers a collection of essays tightly focused around the issue of religion in England between 1640 and 1660, a time of upheaval and civil war in England. Edited by well-known scholars of the subject, topics include the toleration controversy, women's theological writing, observance of the Lord's Day and prayer books. To aid understanding, the essays are divided into three sections examining theology in revolutionary England, inside and outside the revolutionary National Church and local impacts of religious revolution. Carefully and thoughtfully presented, this book will be of great use for those seeking to better understand the practices and patterns of religious life in England in this important and fascinating period. ;

      • October 2018

        The influence of socialist ideas in the Revolution of the half century in Colombia (1849-1854)

        by Carlos Mario Manrique Arango, Leonor Arlen Hernández Fox

        This research studies the influence of socialist ideas on the revolution of 1850s, issues not addressed in the writings of history. For that, we analysed the liberal reforms, the organization of the craftsmen in the Democratic Societies and the organization of the political parties. We also reviewed the division of liberalism into Golgotha and democraticegalitarian and assessed the dissemination and appropriation of socialist ideas of the Golgotha liberals, the democratic-egalitarian liberals and the craftsmen of the period addressed. We consulted with a wide range of sources and used the historical logical method in the field of the history of ideas. Which made it possible to demonstrate that the influence of socialist ideas in the revolution of 1850s was manifested differently in the liberal Golgothas and in the democratic-egalitarian liberals and craftsmen. Thus, the results of this research proved that some of the socialist postulates were in line with the reforms that the Golgotha liberals considered to be carried out in the country, while for the democratic-egalitarian liberals and craftsmen the influence of these ideals was manifested in a thought and a political practice in favour of democracy and social equality.

      • A FIELD GUIDE TO SAINTS

        Celestial Saints Take on Your Daily Dilemmas

        by Viv Croot

        This is the ultimate self-help guide, featuring a saint for every occasion or problem. Choose from our celestial selection of saints who can help with 21st-century life’s dilemmas: from dental pain to career path gain. A potted history of each saint accompanies explanations of their significance, martyrdom and associated symbolism. Find the right saintly solution in this saints-on-the-go guide.

      • December 2018

        The Constructive View

        by Bojidar Yanev

        An image is worth a thousand words, by one estimate. A word to the wise suffices, according to another one. And it is written in many languages that strength derives from the unity of multitudes. If someone accustomed to defining structures in terms of numbers and drawings tries to unite words and images in a stable equilibrium, a constructive view might result. Countries are possessive, cities are transactional. Countries absorb energy, cities exude intelligence. As cities flourished in the Old World, their intelligence exceeded the space / time of their countries. The Eternal Rome outlived its Empire by millennia. To contain Paris after 1789, France split it into 12 Arrondissements, up to 20 since 1859, each with its own mayoralty.  Still, the City of Light stands for France body and soul. When the territory of a country expands, the role of the cities shrinks. Body energy rules the intelligence of the head. No single city can claim to represent the United States. Relying on local energy above cosmopolitan intelligence, the young nation did not make its largest cities state capitals. Democracy spread horizontally and centrifugally. Single-story America stretches far and wide between the oceans, while geological pre-history reaches deep down and high up in the national parks. The smaller a country, the more its population concentrates in the capital. New Yorkers outnumber many such populations, but add up to less than 3% of Americans. Like Shakespeare’s happy few they are a diverse but select minority. Exclusive “one-in-a-million” crowds compete with their equals throughout the multi-storied City canyons.  Packed on its islands, New York City digs deeper and stretches higher. Layers of past, present and future pile on top of each other from Calvary Cemetery in Queens to the Manhattan skyscrapers. Understanding a city requires familiarity with the back yards. In New York, as in Rome, Paris and London, there are also the catacombs, the water mains, the tunnels and the subways, the storehouses and the penthouses, the rooftop terraces, the swimming pools and parks, the elevators, and the bridges. The social gravity distributes the population vertically and horizontally, as implacably as the physical one. It buries the largest groups underground – in cemeteries and subways, and scatters big crowds over the surface.  Density and information thin out towards the peripheries. Countless nomads share the darkness of abandoned tunnels by strict unwritten laws. Discrete residents of bright penthouses transact uncountable fortunes by tentative written ones. In the four dimensions of the organic City – three in space and one in time – only the constructors can move freely. Today any tourist can walk through the remains of the Roman Colosseum from the tunnels to the tribunes. Two thousand years ago, when it was the center of the Empire, the builders alone enjoyed that freedom. As then, so always, they erect and support the material framework of the social spectacle, they know how the decor looks backstage, and what holds it up. Take a peak from their exclusive angles.

      • August 2022

        A Companion to Margaret More Roper Studies

        Life Records, Essential Texts, and Critical Essays

        by Elizabeth McCutcheon, William Gentrup

        This volume is an important contribution to the field of Margaret More Roper studies, early modern women's writing, as well as Erasmian piety, Renaissance humanism, and historical and cultural studies more generally.Margaret More Roper is the learned daughter of St. Thomas More, the Catholic martyr; their lives are closely linked to each other and to early sixteenth-century changes in politics and religion and the social upheaval and crises of conscience that they brought. Specifically, Roper's major works - her translation of Erasmus's commentary on the Lord's Prayer and the long dialogue letter between More and Roper on conscience - highlight two major preoccupations of the period: Erasmian humanism and More's last years, which led to his death and martyrdom.Roper was one of the most learned women of her time and a prototype of the woman writer in England, and this edited volume is a tribute to her life, writings, and place among early women authors. It combines comprehensive and convenient joining of biographical, textual, historical, and critical components within a single volume for the modern reader. There is no comparable study in print, and it fills a significant gap in studies of early modern women writers.

      • Fiction
        October 2012

        My Dead Women

        by Guillermo Fadanelli

        Domingo has decided to fulfill the mission entrusted to him by his older brothers: placing a tombstone on his mother's grave. Time passes and the tombstone remains in the trunk of his car without having this man organizing himself to set out for the cemetery. Drunkenness is a difficult obstacle to overcome. Every morning he promises his absent mother that he will fulfill the mission, but once again breaks his oath. The death of his wife ends up undermining his lucidity and placing him in a state of constant delirium. Time transforms him into a melancholic, sullen and harmless man who quotes passages from Russian novels by heart and talks to his dead women. While this is happening the eyes of a teenage girl do not stop observing his behavior, it is her neighbor, the youngest of all the women with whom Domingo has managed to establish a true friendship. "Is it possible to communicate with people of that age?" He wonders as his confusion grows. My Dead Women is a novel about melancholy and human loneliness faced by a man whose drunkenness made him an expert on the states of the soul. guillermofadanelli.com

      • Analysierte Islamische Geschichte

        Persian

        by seyed jafare shahidy

        The aim of this book is to review the events and incidents that took place in the Islamic world from the time of its advent to the end of the Umayyad reign in the year 132 AH. Besides narrating these events and incidents, the author has also analytically examined their causes by relying on authentic historical evidences. The book consists of seven chapters. The first chapter describes the geographical position of Arabia and its socio-political conditions before the advent of Islam. In the second chapter the author elaborates on the advent of Islam, appointment of Prophet Mohammad (s) as the Divine Messenger of Allah, embracement of Islam by close associates of the Prophet, opposition faced from Quraysh, Prophet’s migration from Mecca to Median, the change of Qibla from Bait al-Moqaddas to Ka’ba, and Prophet’s struggles and wars against the infidels. The third chapter analyses the developments that took place in the world of Islam before Prophet’s sad demise. The fourth chapter analyses the issue of the successorship of the Prophet of God (s). A review of the conditions that prevailed in the world of Islam after the martyrdom of Imam Ali (a) is the main focus of the fifth chapter. Finally, chapters six and seven discuss the emergence of the Umayyad rule and the subsequent developments that took place in the Islamic world.

      • Political ideologies
        October 2021

        Rechtspopulismus und Dschihad (Right-wing Populism and Jihad)

        Nautilus Flugschrift

        by Marc Thörner

        Similarities of western right-wing populists to radical Islamists are not merely coincidental – they share the same origin. “Neocolonialists!” – “Islamic Terrorists!”, these are the accusations with which the old and new right in the west and Islamists all over the world refer to each other. Apparently, right-wing populists and jihadists are sworn enemies. But if you take a look at the writings and authors that both movements refer to, you will find the same sources: Ernst Jünger, Martin Heidegger, Alexis Carrel. All three of them serve as reference not only for the New Right but also for the pioneers of radical Islam. Marc Thörner points out the common origin of these thoughts and their different but still related manifestations today: Both movements condemn secularism, liberalism and homosexuality, both commit to traditional social structures and values like religion, order and obedience, self-sacrifice and martyrdom, both fight individualism and rationalism. In Syria, radical Islamists and the political right already act like allies. Will they continue their mutual hostility in Europe or will they soon congregate here as well? For his research, Marc Thörner spoke to Alexander Gauland of German far right party AfD and travelled to the frontlines of Syrian civil war; he interviewed leading representatives of the Assad Regime, talked to Iranian writers, met Lebanese fascists and followers of Hisbollah as well as historians and Arabists in Europe.

      • December 2023

        The Personalism of Edith Stein

        A Synthesis of Thomism and Phenomenology

        by Robert McNamara

        Edith Stein’s life and thought intersect with many important movements of life and thought in the twentieth century. Through her life and eventual martyrdom, she gave witness to the primacy of truth and faith in the face of political totalitarianism, and in her philosophical works, she contributed to a synthesis of phenomenological thought with the thought of Aquinas, while also progressively advancing a compelling form of philosophical personalism. As a result, Stein represents one of the most important Catholic thinkers of the twentieth century and is a figure of growing fascination and devotion among believers and nonbelievers alike. The Personalism of Edith Stein is an investigation of Stein’s mature philosophical anthropology, exploring her engagement with the thought of Aquinas and Thomism while maintaining the phenomenological mode of investigation. Through a careful examination of Stein’s later works under the themes of human nature, the human individual, and the human being’s relation to God, McNamara shows that Stein’s mature personalism is considerably expanded and substantiated by her assimilation of key anthropological and metaphysical teachings of Aquinas and Thomism, and, conversely, that Stein significantly develops and deepens these same teachings through a phenomenological reconsideration of each from a personalist perspective. As a whole, the study reveals the profound accord between Stein’s mature thought and the received teachings of Aquinas, while yet carefully attending to the remaining differences between them. Ultimately, the author proposes that Stein imbues the teachings of Aquinas with a fundamental personalization such that her mature anthropology can be understood as a Thomistically informed personalism that represents a significant, original contribution to the anthropological dimension of the philosophia perennis.

      • Education

        An Unordinary Death

        …The life of a Palestinian

        by Sabra, K.C.

        Most children come into life, initially at least, with a degree of trust that they are going to be treated fairly. The way a social order kills that sense of trust is often cumulative, overt and consciously executed. Within such a situation it is likely that, once becoming a man (or woman), he will not develop an instinctive inhibition about killing his co-species. One will commit such an act upon a group or individual with whom he has no sense of identity and with whom there is no empathy or conscious feeling of guilt relating to their destruction. It is an uncomfortable revelation and a hideous result of social deconstruction. Such is the case Jenna Hayat, a young woman Palestinian woman. A limping soul navigating through a dismal passage of existence, Israeli occupation is a septic wound in her heart that can't be healed, and being Palestinian is like being punished for a crime she hasn't committed. She is not hell-bent revolutionary; she is not a feminist or a nationalist, and she is not a psychopath with a death wish. She is just an ordinary young woman, trapped amid savaged inequalities. Jenna once remarked to a close friend that life was so long when you are not happy. Hers was very unhappy. Her mother succumbs to cancer, she is not permitted to marry the only man she ever loved, and she feels herself alone in is world in which there is no mercy. A martyrdom mission makes perfect sense in a life such as hers and longevity is inconsequential. Jenna makes a final and far-reaching decision, which is to look for her mercy from God instead of mere mortal men.

      • Fiction
        September 2015

        Threatcon Delta

        Assault on the Pentagon

        by David Alexander

        Threatcon Delta: Assault on the Pentagon tells the story of how terrorism, treason and global organized crime converge to place the most potent symbol of American military power under the control of a determined and ruthless group of heavily armed and extremely dangerous men who can’t be stopped, yet who must be stopped. This global superthriller is based both on author David Alexander’s extensive and detailed research into the history of the Pentagon, combined with first-hand knowledge of the Pentagon's most closely held secrets by this veteran defense insider, all of which has been artfully woven into a masterpiece of high-concept suspense fiction. In fact, the combined impact of accuracy and authenticity blended with superb storytelling may find some readers asking themselves if perhaps some parts of the story shouldn't have been made public, for fear that terrorists or global criminals might some day use it as a basis for an actual plan of attack. Yet the assault on the Pentagon portrayed in the book is no standard terrorist martyrdom mission either. Those who’ve taken over the headquarters of the United States military have an exit strategy that has been brilliantly devised to shuttle them to safety and provide for the enjoyment of their ill-gotten profits -- a scam on a global scale that promises to net the Building’s hijackers a considerable fortune. By any standard, Threatcon Delta: Assault on the Pentagon is action thriller fiction at its boldest and best. It’s one of the achievements that have earned David Alexander a secure place at the top of the list of the world’s masters of the game.

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        Biography & True Stories

        BORIS PAHOR - THAT'S HOW I LIVED

        STOLETJE BORISA PAHORJA

        by TATJANA ROJC

        The life story of BORIS PAHOR (1913), a Slovene writer and centenarian, is at the same time a story about one of the most turbulent centuries in human history. With his clear standpoints and engagement, the author has always challenged current authorities and found himself in some of the most difficult situations of the 20th century. That’s How I Lived is also a story about Trieste and the lives of the people who moved there from rural areas, about the sad fates of Pahor’s patriotic friends and, of course, about his own Calvary through the Third Reich’s concentration camps. It offers an insight into Pahor’s private life, his first experiences of love and the first meetings with people with similar intellectual views and allies. The reader follows Pahor through his much-noticed conflicts with Slovene politicians and his activities on the international stage in favour of the rights of minority cultures. The narrative is supplemented with documents and photographs.

      • Fiction

        Process 3K 1988

        by Arbër Ahmetaj

        "What happened that day, Kosta?" This question ensnares the reader from the outset of the book. "The 3K Process 1988" delves into the significance of freedom, addressing the drama individuals face when confronting totalitarian regimes. At the heart of the novel are two parallel narratives and two friends—students—one, in the role of the author, who revisits the past years later through memories, and Kosta, who carries a significant trauma from childhood that haunts him throughout his life and grows daily, forming an avalanche in his personal calvary of suffering, imprisonment, and... Their friendship manages to survive the pressure and fear, illuminating human values amidst the murky political and social haze. Their stories reflect the deep imprint of dictatorship and its effects on people's lives. Despite the bleakness of those times, the author, honest with himself and the world, offers an interesting perspective, with a vein of subtle humor, beautiful, dreamlike events, and the redeeming colors of youth. "The 3K Process 1988" is a thrilling novel with chilling events that captivate the reader until the last page. It reminds us that freedom and dignity are precious values and that resisting injustice is a difficult but always inspiring battle.

      • Religion & beliefs
        July 2015

        People Under Power

        Early Jewish and Christian Responses to the Roman Empire

        by Edited by Michael Labahn and Outi Lehtipuu

        This volume presents a batch of incisive new essays on the relationship between Roman imperial power and ideology and Christian and Jewish life and thought within the empire. Employing diverse methodologies that include historical criticism, rhetorical criticism, postcolonial criticism, and social historical studies, the contributors offer fresh perspectives on a question that is crucial for our understanding not only of the late Roman Empire, but also of the growth and change of Christianity and Judaism in the imperial period.

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