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  • av Mustafa Aksakal
    383,-

  • Spar 14%
    av Heinrich Zimmer
    513 - 648,-

  • av Heinrich Zimmer
    280 - 564,-

  • Spar 13%
    av Heinrich Robert Zimmer
    307 - 550,-

    Examines the diverse cultural influences which have shaped the basic philosophical traditions of India.

  • av Heinrich Robert Zimmer
    205 - 389,-

    A landmark work that demystifies the rich tradition of Indian art, Myths and Symbols in Indian Art and Civilization analyzes key motifs found in legend, myth, and folklore taken directly from the Sanskrit. It provides a comprehensive introduction to visual thinking and picture reading in Indian art and thought. Ultimately, the book shows that profound Hindu and Buddhist intuitions on the riddles of life and death are universally recognizable.

  • av Erich Neumann
    249 - 389,-

    The renowned tale of Amor and Psyche, from Apuleius's second-century Latin novel The Golden Ass, is one of the most charming fragments of classical literature. Neumann chose it as the exemplar of an unusual study of feminine psychology. Unfolding the spiritual and mythical background of the pagan narrative, he shows how the contest between the mortal maid Psyche and the great goddess Aphrodite over the god Amor--Aphrodite's son, Psyche's husband--yields surprising and valuable insights into the psychic life of women.

  • av Erich Neumann
    249 - 389,-

  • Spar 10%
    av Erich Neumann
    259 - 446,-

  • av Erich Neumann
    337 - 441,-

  • av Erich Neumann
    259 - 389,-

  • av A. Wess Mitchell
    405,-

  • Spar 17%
    av Margaret S. Graves
    648,-

  • av Falk Lieder
    459 - 1 166,-

  • av Professor Angelica Lim
    350,-

  • av Stephen G. Brooks
    383 - 992,-

  • av Shirley Samuels
    383,-

  • av Nicholas Buccola
    405,-

  • Spar 10%
    av Frank Costigliola
    255 - 450

    A definitive biography of the U.S. diplomat and prize-winning historian George F. KennanThe diplomat and historian George F. Kennan (1904-2005) ranks as one of the most important figures in American foreign policy-and one of its most complex. Drawing on many previously untapped sources, Frank Costigliola's authoritative biography offers a new picture of a man of extraordinary ability and ambition whose idea of containing the Soviet Union helped ignite the Cold War but who spent the next half century trying to extinguish it. Always prescient, Kennan in the 1990s warned that the eastward expansion of NATO would spur a new cold war with Russia.Even as Kennan championed rational realism in foreign policy, his personal and professional lives were marked by turmoil. And though he was widely respected and honored by presidents and the public, he judged his career a failure because he had been dropped as a pilot of U.S. foreign policy. Impossible to classify, Kennan was a sui generis thinker, a trenchant critic of both communism and capitalism, and a pioneering environmentalist. Living between Russia and the United States, he witnessed firsthand Stalin's tightening grip on the Soviet Union, the collapse of Europe during World War II, and the nuclear arms race of the Cold War.An absorbing portrait of an eloquent, insightful, and sometimes blinkered iconoclast whose ideas are still powerfully relevant, Kennan invites us to imagine a world that Kennan fought for but was unable to bring about-one not of confrontations and crises but of dialogue and diplomacy.

  • Spar 23%
    av Thomas Jefferson
    1 591,-

  • av Richard Clark
    383 - 992,-

  • av Suzanne Mettler
    291,-

  • av Cynthia Miller-Idriss
    350,-

  • av Bruno Carvalho
    405,-

  • av John Franklin Jameson
    231 - 721,-

    Written when political and military history dominated the discipline, J. Franklin Jameson's The American Revolution Considered as a Social Movement was a pioneering work. Based on a series of four lectures he gave at Princeton University in 1925, the short book argued that the most salient feature of the American Revolution had not been the war for independence from Great Britain; it was, rather, the struggle between aristocratic values and those of the common people who tended toward a leveling democracy. American revolutionaries sought to change their government, not their society, but in destroying monarchy and establishing republics, they in fact changed their society profoundly. Jameson wrote, "e;The stream of revolution, once started, could not be con.ned within narrow banks, but spread abroad upon the land.? Jameson's book was among the first to bring social analysis to the fore of American history. Examining the effects the American Revolution had on business, intellectual and religious life, slavery, land ownership, and interactions between members of different social classes, Jameson showed the extent of the social reforms won at home during the war. By looking beyond the political and probing the social aspects of this seminal event, Jameson forced a reexamination of revolution as a social phenomenon and, as one reviewer put it, injected a "e;liberal spirit"e; into the study of American history. Still in print after nearly eighty years, the book is a classic of American historiography.

  • av Shamil Jeppie
    291,-

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