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      • Education

        Pedagogy and Praxis in the Age of Empire

        Towards a New Humanism

        by McLaren, P.

        ONE OF THE FIRST EDUCATIONAL BOOKS TO CHALLENGE THE BUSH REGIME'S WAR ON TERROR, ITS EDUCATIONAL POLICY, ITS FOREIGN POLICY AND ITS ASSAULT ON THE POORWritten by two leading international exponents of critical pedagogy, this book is a pioneering attempt to create a Marxist humanist and feminist pedagogy for the new century. Critical pedagogy is discussed as an important revolutionary act in bringing about a socialist future. In their conclusion, McLaren and Jaramillo cite an observation made by Arundhati Roy (2004) who insists that "there is no discussion taking place in the world today that is more crucial than the debate about strategies of resistance" (p. 195). McLaren and Jaramillo have clearly contributed to such a conversation with Pedagogy and Praxis in the Age of Empire and their work must be understood as a relevant component in that ongoing dialogue. Moreover, they have been courageous enough to remind us (following Roy) that if we believe democracy should be something more than the "free world's whore," something more than "Empire's euphemism for neoliberal capitalism" (Roy, 2004, p. 54, 56), we can no longer afford to remain indifferent to the horror and savagery unleashed by capitalism's barbaric machinations. ...We believe that McLaren and Jaramillo have introduced in PPAE an important and highly productive framework that can help lay the groundwork for expanding human relationships with nature, or, for beginning to ask questions such as who or what should be considered democratic participants. Valerie Scatamburlo-D'Annibale, Ghada Chehade, Richard Kahn, Clayton Pierce and Sheila L. MacrineJCEPS:Vol. 5 No. 2 (November 2007)Perhaps this book is more than just a symbolic warning, since what has transpired during the past decade, perhaps longer, is a reversal in true social justice, often accompanied by blatant denial to the children of the lesser gods of everything that makes up human dignity. Ben Tanosborn http://www.mwcnews.net/content/view/1696 Critical pedagogy reveals the social relations and institutional structures that mediate how educators approach the concept of curriculum, design, evaluation, and classroom instruction, in order to help students locate their agency so that they can act more coherently as individuals growing up in social conditions not of their own making. As McLaren and Jaramillo see it, a critical pedagogy against capitalism, empire, and imperialism is a pedagogy that works in the interests of working people, empowerment, and democracy. It is a pedagogy for socialism. Andrew Michael Lee, Socialism and Democracy, 2008

      • Science & Mathematics
        July 2017

        AstronZeitOnomie

        Die Formeln der Astronomie als Lösung für neue Ökonomie- und Soziologie-Modelle

        by Helmut Rasch (Albert Bright)

        World-wide-wealth and sustainability via astronomy laws for economic, sociological, ecological and sustainability solutions. We use astronomy rules to optimize (world) economic cycles (as counterpart to the first "physiocrat" and "cycle"-economist ever: Francois Quesnay (doctor), who used blood cycles to explain economic-cycles). My invention of the time formula was the breakthrough to a new "world" - also in the universe; my space formula invention based on it, led to the verification of the time and space formula itself. This was the final breakthrough against the established status quo regarding the - from now on - "obsolete" formula-fix-multipliers; the correlation of space and time (similar to Isaac Newton's correlation between gravity and centrifugal force) led to new "dimensional thinking"; the invention and relativization of "dark matter"(-formula) and "dark energy"(-formula) clarified the "remaining" 95% of the secrets of the universe (Einstein's focus on matter and its "environment" (energy, gravity, . ...) explain only 5% of the universe); Also my invention of a new formula for the universe, the "Dynamic Relativity", relativizes the previously valid formulas of Albert Einstein. The application of the laws of astronomy to economics, sociology, ecology and sustainability relativizes the current approaches in these areas (optimizations are, among others, the approaches of Maslow's pyramid of needs - and up to the approaches of the 17 SDG's "Sustainable Development Goals" of the UN "United Nations" - the 17 sustainability goals of the United Nations). All formulas and models have been classified and deposited for use as "scientific reference books" with the British Library and VG-WORT (Patent Office sub-organisation) - as well as submitted to the Nobel Prize Committees. All the theories are well suited to solving the most acute challenges regarding lack of demand; bad banks; speculative bubbles; debt bubbles; money, currency and interest rate bubbles; trade restrictions; (trade) wars; sustainability issues; Industry 4.0 - the employment problem of replacing jobs with machines; developing countries & poverty diabolical circles; and demographic change. The first German books are: (1.) AstronZeitOnomie, ISBN 978-3-7439-0186-5 with, among other things, the invented time formula, a new economic system, as well as an optimized asset/income system (LAZEB: Life-Work-TimeUnit-BONUS - based on the birth-life-energy of the stars) and a better currency system (TEMPUS - based on LAZEB); (2. ) AstronRaumOnomy, ISBN 978-3-7497-1696-8 with the invented space and "dark matter" formulas, and a better peace and liberty system; and (3.) AstronEfficiencyOnomy, ISBN 978-3-7497-9467-6 with the invented formulas of "Dynamic Relativity" and "Dark Energy", and a strong focus on efficiency aspects in astronomy and economics, which also serve peace and sustainability. These books can be ordered everywhere - also at www.world-wide-wealth.com . © Albert Bright

      • Science & Mathematics
        October 2019

        AstronEffizienzOnomie

        Die Formeln des Universums als Lösung für mehr Effizienz

        by Helmut Rasch (Albert Bright)

        World-wide-wealth and sustainability via astronomy laws for economic, sociological, ecological and sustainability solutions. We use astronomy rules to optimize (world) economic cycles (as counterpart to the first "physiocrat" and "cycle"-economist ever: Francois Quesnay (doctor), who used blood cycles to explain economic-cycles). My invention of the time formula was the breakthrough to a new "world" - also in the universe; my space formula invention based on it, led to the verification of the time and space formula itself. This was the final breakthrough against the established status quo regarding the - from now on - "obsolete" formula-fix-multipliers; the correlation of space and time (similar to Isaac Newton's correlation between gravity and centrifugal force) led to new "dimensional thinking"; the invention and relativization of "dark matter"(-formula) and "dark energy"(-formula) clarified the "remaining" 95% of the secrets of the universe (Einstein's focus on matter and its "environment" (energy, gravity, . ...) explain only 5% of the universe); Also my invention of a new formula for the universe, the "Dynamic Relativity", relativizes the previously valid formulas of Albert Einstein. The application of the laws of astronomy to economics, sociology, ecology and sustainability relativizes the current approaches in these areas (optimizations are, among others, the approaches of Maslow's pyramid of needs - and up to the approaches of the 17 SDG's "Sustainable Development Goals" of the UN "United Nations" - the 17 sustainability goals of the United Nations). All formulas and models have been classified and deposited for use as "scientific reference books" with the British Library and VG-WORT (Patent Office sub-organisation) - as well as submitted to the Nobel Prize Committees. All the theories are well suited to solving the most acute challenges regarding lack of demand; bad banks; speculative bubbles; debt bubbles; money, currency and interest rate bubbles; trade restrictions; (trade) wars; sustainability issues; Industry 4.0 - the employment problem of replacing jobs with machines; developing countries & poverty diabolical circles; and demographic change. The first German books are: (1.) AstronZeitOnomie, ISBN 978-3-7439-0186-5 with, among other things, the invented time formula, a new economic system, as well as an optimized asset/income system (LAZEB: Life-Work-TimeUnit-BONUS - based on the birth-life-energy of the stars) and a better currency system (TEMPUS - based on LAZEB); (2. ) AstronRaumOnomy, ISBN 978-3-7497-1696-8 with the invented space and "dark matter" formulas, and a better peace and liberty system; and (3.) AstronEfficiencyOnomy, ISBN 978-3-7497-9467-6 with the invented formulas of "Dynamic Relativity" and "Dark Energy", and a strong focus on efficiency aspects in astronomy and economics, which also serve peace and sustainability. These books can be ordered everywhere - also at www.world-wide-wealth.com . © Albert Bright

      • Science & Mathematics
        July 2018

        AstronRaumOnomie

        Die Formeln des Universums als Lösung für Freiheit und Frieden

        by Helmut Rasch (Albert Bright)

        World-wide-wealth and sustainability via astronomy laws for economic, sociological, ecological and sustainability solutions. We use astronomy rules to optimize (world) economic cycles (as counterpart to the first "physiocrat" and "cycle"-economist ever: Francois Quesnay (doctor), who used blood cycles to explain economic-cycles). My invention of the time formula was the breakthrough to a new "world" - also in the universe; my space formula invention based on it, led to the verification of the time and space formula itself. This was the final breakthrough against the established status quo regarding the - from now on - "obsolete" formula-fix-multipliers; the correlation of space and time (similar to Isaac Newton's correlation between gravity and centrifugal force) led to new "dimensional thinking"; the invention and relativization of "dark matter"(-formula) and "dark energy"(-formula) clarified the "remaining" 95% of the secrets of the universe (Einstein's focus on matter and its "environment" (energy, gravity, . ...) explain only 5% of the universe); Also my invention of a new formula for the universe, the "Dynamic Relativity", relativizes the previously valid formulas of Albert Einstein. The application of the laws of astronomy to economics, sociology, ecology and sustainability relativizes the current approaches in these areas (optimizations are, among others, the approaches of Maslow's pyramid of needs - and up to the approaches of the 17 SDG's "Sustainable Development Goals" of the UN "United Nations" - the 17 sustainability goals of the United Nations). All formulas and models have been classified and deposited for use as "scientific reference books" with the British Library and VG-WORT (Patent Office sub-organisation) - as well as submitted to the Nobel Prize Committees. All the theories are well suited to solving the most acute challenges regarding lack of demand; bad banks; speculative bubbles; debt bubbles; money, currency and interest rate bubbles; trade restrictions; (trade) wars; sustainability issues; Industry 4.0 - the employment problem of replacing jobs with machines; developing countries & poverty diabolical circles; and demographic change. The first German books are: (1.) AstronZeitOnomie, ISBN 978-3-7439-0186-5 with, among other things, the invented time formula, a new economic system, as well as an optimized asset/income system (LAZEB: Life-Work-TimeUnit-BONUS - based on the birth-life-energy of the stars) and a better currency system (TEMPUS - based on LAZEB); (2. ) AstronRaumOnomy, ISBN 978-3-7497-1696-8 with the invented space and "dark matter" formulas, and a better peace and liberty system; and (3.) AstronEfficiencyOnomy, ISBN 978-3-7497-9467-6 with the invented formulas of "Dynamic Relativity" and "Dark Energy", and a strong focus on efficiency aspects in astronomy and economics, which also serve peace and sustainability. These books can be ordered everywhere - also at www.world-wide-wealth.com . © Albert Bright

      • Biography: literary
        April 2013

        Jane Austen & Adlestrop

        Her Other Family

        by Victoria Huxley

        The  story of Jane Austen's links with the idyllic village of Adlestrop and Stoneleigh Abbey, the ancestral home of the two branch of the Leigh family, has not yet been fully told.  Jane's mother, Cassandra, was a Leigh, a dynasty that boasted an Elizabethan Lord Mayor, ducal marriage alliances, a peerage granted by Charles I, eccentric Oxford luminaries, as well as the spectre of lunacy and bitter inheritance quarrels.   Jane Austen visited Adlestrop at least three times and kept in constant touch with events there by letter.  It wasi n Gloucestershire that she first heard of Humphry Repton wo was emplyed by the Leighs and saw at first hand how the 18th century craze for improvements totally changed the village.   Jane Austen & Adlestrop opens up a fresh window on the author's life and experience and is also a portrayal of archetypal English village's journey through the last two hundred years.

      • History of art: Byzantine & Medieval art c 500 CE to c 1400
        May 2011

        The Last American Puritan

        The Life of Increase Mather, 1639–1723

        by Michael G. Hall

        A critically acclaimed and accessible biography of one of the towering figures of New England's colonial period; winner of The Conference on Christianity and Literature's Book Award.

      • Music
        January 2013

        Getting a Handel on Messiah

        Getting a Handel on Messiah

        by David W. Barber

        David. W. Barber has delighted readers all around the world with the quirky definitions of Accidentals on Purpose, the irreverent history of Bach, Beethoven and the Boys, a hilariously offbeat history of dance and ballet in Tutus, Tights and Tiptoes and a host of other internationally bestselling books of musical humor and literature. Chances are you’ve heard Handel's Messiah at least once, if not many times. Maybe you've even performed it, as have countless musicians around the world. After all, it's probably one of the best-loved, and certainly one of the best-known, works in the standard repertoire. But if you think you know all there is to know about the great composer’s famous oratorio, think again. For example, it may surprise you to learn that: – Handel’s first impulse to compose the work came not from religious or even musical inspiration. It had a whole lot more to do with money. – The very first performance of Messiah took place not in London, but in Dublin – and not with a huge choir and orchestra, but with only a relative handful of musicians. – Although church groups and clergy members now praise Messiah as an example of religious music at its best, Handel had to disguise his oratorio for its first performance in London, in order to sneak it past the prissy church authorities. – The Hallelujah chorus wasn’t originally called that at all, but had a different (and much longer!) name. – Although Handel was proud of Messiah, he didn’t think it was his best work. His favorite oratorio was one that hardly anyone has ever heard of, much less heard. All these and many more entertaining (and entirely true!) facts await your discovery as internationally bestselling author David W. Barber takes you on another delightful romp through the pages of music history – as it ought to be taught!

      • Mathematics

        Counting stories

        Imaginary Problems for Real Mathematicians

        by Rudi matematici

        Will the great mathematicians in history ever have had fun proposing and solving problems of recreational mathematics? Or, occupied by their high offices, will they have avoided putting themselves to the test with problems created only for the fun of it? Whatever the answer, it is easy to imagine that what would have appeared paltry problems to them could be ‘difficult’ for ordinary people. The Rudi Mathematici, hesitating over their great passions – telling stories about mathematicians and proposing entertaining problems of mathematics – have found the strange compromise of imagining some great mathematical minds at crucial times in their (real) lives, while they propose and solve some questions which in actual fact they probably never really had to tackle. This way, we find Isaac Newton as a precursor of Sherlock Holmes in the attempt to solve (mathematically) a case of murder, or see an irritated John Von Neumann stealing sweets from Ed Teller, while the Earth risks blowing up; not to mention the strange way with which Vilfredo Pareto, Paul Erdős, G. H. Hardy, Leonardo and others treated the intriguing questions of the world of numbers.

      • History
        May 2011

        The Glorious Revolution in America

        by David S. Lovejoy

        An outstanding examination of the Crises that lead to the colonial rebellions of 1689.

      • Preserving & freezing
        July 2019

        Bakery and Confectionery Products

        Processing,Quality Assessment,Packging and Storage Techniques

        by Lakshmi Jagarlamudi

        The first few chapters introduces the reader to the crop, its origin and distribution, varieties cultivated throughout the country and their characteristics. Later the trade of banana, both international and domestic, is explained along with the ways the fruit is consumed in different parts of the world. A exclusively deals with the nutritive and therapeutic values of banana followed by the post harvest aspects at length in seven chapters with all the latest scientific developments. The last three s explain about the processing and value addition including the waste/by-products utilization. The readers will find it comprehensive with all the information relevant to post harvest aspects of bananas and plantains.

      • Biography & True Stories
        December 2020

        Amazonas con pincel

        by Victoria Combalía

        This book proposes a fascinating, clear and didactic journey through the life and work of women artists. Camille Claudel, Frida Kahlo or Dora Maar, among others, occupy the pages of this book illustrating a wide time period and their corresponding styles, from Impressionism to the 1940s of the 20th century.This work constitutes a corrected and enlarged part of Amazonas con brush, a book published in 2006. The texts seek a balance between the historical importance of the creators and the interest in their life, which sheds much light on the difficulties of being a woman and artist at the same time. For this reason, special attention has been paid to their working conditions, their success or neglect of their careers, and those who were able to encourage them or, on the contrary, silence them. They fought, like men, to express their vision of the world and renew artistic language, but in a social context far removed from equal opportunities. This book written by Victoria Combalía was in 2006 the first publication that was published in Spain focused on women artists.

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