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  • av Alain Berthoz
    300,-

    Berthoz describes how human beings on earth perceive and control bodily movement. In his view, the brain acts like a simulator that is constantly inventing models to project onto the changing world, models that are corrected by steady, minute feedback from the world.

  • Spar 13%
    - With a New Afterword
    av Roger Owen
    246

    Monarchical presidential regimes in the Arab world looked as though they would last indefinitely-until events in Tunisia and Egypt made clear their time was up. This is the first book to lay bare the dynamics of a governmental system that largely defined the Arab Middle East in the twentieth century, and the popular opposition they engendered.

  • Spar 10%
    - The Scot Who Founded American Ornithology
    av Edward H. Burtt
    380

    On the bicentennial of his death, this beautifully illustrated volume pays tribute to the Scot who became the father of American ornithology. Alexander Wilson made unique contributions to ecology and animal behavior. His drawings of birds in realistic poses in their natural habitat inspired Audubon, Spencer Fullerton Baird, and other naturalists.

  • Spar 15%
    - Responses to John Brown and the Harpers Ferry Raid
     
    526,-

    This landmark anthology collects speeches, letters, newspapers, journals, poems, and songs to demonstrate that John Brown's actions at Harpers Ferry altered the course of history. Without Brown, the Civil War probably would have been delayed by four years and emancipation movements in Brazil, Cuba, even Russia might have been disrupted.

  • Spar 12%
    av G. W. Bowersock
    350,-

    Proceeding directly from an evaluation of the ancient sources--the testimony of friends and enemies of Julian as well as the writings of the emperor himself--the author traces Julian's youth, his command of the Roman forces in Gaul, and his emergence as sole ruler in the course of a dramatic march to Constantinople.

  • - Victorians to Moderns
    av Stephen Kern
    724,-

    Kern interprets the sweeping change in loving that spanned a period when scientific discoveries reduced the terrors and dangers of sex, when new laws gave married women control over their earnings and their bodies, when bold novelists and artists shook off the prudishness and hypocrisy that so paralyzed the Victorians.

  • - Keywords in American Politics Since Independence
    av Daniel T. Rodgers
    545,-

    Contention, argument, and power are the tradition in American political talk. Any country that began in revolution was bound to have this history. But the language of argument uses particular words with particular, sometimes shifting, meanings. Rodgers looks at these words and what they have meant over time in this vital political history.

  • Spar 26%
     
    619,-

    This collection of essays addresses the meaning and practice of political citizenship in China over the past century, raising the question of whether reform initiatives in citizenship imply movement toward increased democratization.

  • Spar 14%
    - With a New Preface
    av John S. Rigden
    424,-

    Rigden's biography of I. I. Rabi, one of the most influential physicists of the 20th century, is now reissued with a new Preface. Rabi's discovery of the magnetic resonance method won him the Nobel Prize in 1944 and stimulated refinements in quantum electrodynamics, molecular beam methods, radio astronomy, atomic clocks, and solid state masers.

  • - Essay on the Broadway Musical
    av D. A. Miller
    454,-

    Miller probes what all the jokes laugh off: the embarrassingly mutual affinity between a "general" cultural form-the musical-and the despised "minority"-gay men-that was in fact that form's implicit audience.

  • - A History
    av Baruch Kimmerling
    437,-

    The authors offer a balanced, authoritative account of the history of the Palestinian people from their modern origins to the Oslo peace process and beyond. They unravel what went right-and what went wrong-in the process, and what lessons we can draw about the forces that help to shape a people.

  • - Childless Americans and the Pursuit of Happiness
    av Elaine Tyler May
    454,-

    Chronicling astonishing shifts in public attitudes toward reproduction, May reveals the intersection between public life and the most private part of our lives--sexuality, procreation, and family.

  • - The Developing Adolescent
    av S. Shirley Feldman
    724,-

    This book offers professionals and nonprofessionals alike important access to the reality of normal adolescent experience. The authors recognize that only if we begin to understand and articulate the parameters of successful adolescent development can we hope to intervene with those individuals whose lives seem aimed toward unsatisfactory futures.

  • Spar 14%
    - Character and the Social Order in Connecticut, 1690-1765
    av Richard L. Bushman
    424,-

    The years 1690-1765 in America have usually been considered a waiting period prior to the Revolution. Bushman, in his study of colonial Connecticut, shows how, during these years, economic ambition and religious ferment profoundly altered Puritan society, enlarging the bounds of liberty and inspiring resistance to established authority.

  • - From Fetus to Adolescent
    av Kyra Karmiloff
    470,-

    A remarkable mother-daughter collaboration balances the respected views of a well-known scholar with the fresh perspective of a younger colleague in a comprehensive overview of the theory and practice of language acquisition.

  • av Michael Tomasello
    470,-

    Bridging evolutionary theory and cultural psychology, Tomasello argues that the roots of the human capacity for symbol-based culture are based in a cluster of uniquely human cognitive capacities. These include capacities for understanding that others have intentions of their own, and for imitating what someone else has intended to do.

  • - How Entrepreneurs, Companies, and Countries Triumphed in Three Industrial Revolutions
    av Thomas K. McCraw
    639,-

    What explains the economic success of the U.S., Britain, Germany, and Japan? What can be learned from the performances of leading business firms? How important were specific innovations by individual entrepreneurs? What is the nature of capitalist development? McCraw and his coauthors present penetrating answers to these questions.

  • - The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism
    av Alfred D. Chandler Jr.
    724,-

    Representing ten years of research into the history of the managerial business system, this book concentrates on patterns of growth and competitiveness in the U.S., Germany, and Great Britain, tracing the evolution of large firms into multinational giants and orienting the late twentieth century's most important developments.

  • Spar 17%
    - Sariputra (c. 1335-1426) and the End of Late Indian Buddhism
    av Arthur McKeown
    494

    Arthur McKeown examines newly revealed Tibetan and Chinese biographies of Sariputra and a collection of historical documents in Sanskrit, Tibetan, and Chinese. These sources point to a fundamental reconsideration of later Indian Buddhism, its relationship with Brahmanism and Islam, and its enduring importance throughout Asia.

  • - The Battle to Control the Design of New Technologies
    av Woodrow Hartzog
    446,-

    Woodrow Hartzog develops the underpinning of a new kind of privacy law responsive to the way people actually perceive and use digital technologies. Rather than permit exploitation, it would demand encryption, prohibit malicious interfaces that deceive users and leave them vulnerable, and require safeguards against abuses of biometric surveillance.

  • - Inequality and Redistribution, 1901-1998
    av Thomas Piketty
    416,-

    This pioneering work by Thomas Piketty explains the facts and dynamics of income inequality in France in the twentieth century. On its publication in French in 2001, it helped launch the international program led by Piketty and others to explore the grand patterns and causes of global inequality research that has since transformed public debate.

  • av Theophrastus
    346

    Fictionalized faults are the focus of Characters by Theophrastus (c. 370-c. 285 BCE). The Hellenistic poet Herodas wrote Mimes, in which everyday life is portrayed and character as opposed to plot depicted. Mimes by Sophron (fifth century BCE) and anonymous mime fragments also represent that genre.

  • av Terence
    350,-

    The six plays by Terence (died 159 BCE), all extant, imaginatively reformulate Greek New Comedy in realistic scenes and refined Latin. They include Phormio, a comedy of intrigue and trickery; The Brothers, which explores parental education of sons; and The Eunuch, which presents the most sympathetically drawn courtesan in Roman comedy.

  • av Terence
    352,-

    The six plays by Terence (died 159 BCE), all extant, imaginatively reformulate Greek New Comedy in realistic scenes and refined Latin. They include Phormio, a comedy of intrigue and trickery; The Brothers, which explores parental education of sons; and The Eunuch, which presents the most sympathetically drawn courtesan in Roman comedy.

  • av Aristophanes
    350,-

    Aristophanes (c. 450-c. 386 BCE) has been admired since antiquity for his wit, fantasy, language, and satire. In Acharnians a small landowner, tired of the Peloponnesian War, magically arranges a personal peace treaty; and Knights, perhaps the most biting satire of a political figure (Cleon) ever written.

  •  
    350,-

    Dithyrambic poets of the new school were active from the mid-fifth to mid-fourth century BCE. Anonymous poems include drinking songs, children's ditties, and cult hymns.

  • av Aelian
    353,-

    Aelian's Historical Miscellany (Varia Historia) is a pleasurable example of light reading for Romans of the early third century. Offering engaging anecdotes about historical figures, retellings of legendary events, and enjoyable descriptive pieces, Aelian's collection of nuggets and narratives appealed to a wide reading public.

  • av Chariton
    350,-

    Chariton's Callirhoe, subtitled "Love Story in Syracuse," is a fast-paced historical romance of the first century CE and the oldest extant novel.

  • av Florus
    350,-

    Works such as those of the mime-writer Publilius Syrus, who flourished c. 45 BCE, and Rutilius Namatianus, who gave a graphic account of his voyage from Rome to Gaul in 416 CE, represent the wide variety of theme that lends interest to Latin poetry produced during a period of four and a half centuries.

  • av Lucian
    359

    Lucian (c. 120-190 CE), apprentice sculptor then travelling rhetorician, settled in Athens and developed an original brand of satire. Notable for the Attic purity and elegance of his Greek and for literary versatility, he is famous chiefly for the lively, cynical wit of the dialogues in which he satirizes human folly, superstition, and hypocrisy.

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