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      • sally : deja-vu

        SALLY, a comic/manga/graphic novel author, is from Taipei, TAIWAN.Originally a student of architecture, she is currently a member of the manga colllective Club Zip and publishes her work commercially and independently. Her work "Left Hand" won the Silver Award of Japan International MANGA Award and "Going My Way?" has been serialized in Taiwan, Thailand, Korea, and Indonesia.promotion clips of work in youtube

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      • SaltWay

        In addition to trade representation for a select group of independent publishers in international markets SaltWay Global provides Rights Sales and bespoke Marketing services.

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        The Arts
        November 2013

        Popular television in authoritarian Europe

        by Peter Goddard

        This lively and ground-breaking collection brings together work on forms of popular television within the authoritarian regimes of Europe after World War Two. Ten chapters based on new and original research examine approaches to programming and individual programmes in Spain, Greece, Czechoslovakia, Romania, the USSR and the GDR at a time when they were governed as dictatorships or one-party states. Drawing on surviving archives, scripts and production records, contemporary publications, YouTube clips and interviews with producers and performers, its chapters recover examples of television programming history unknown beyond national borders and often preserved largely in the memories of the audiences who lived with them. The introduction examines how television can be considered 'popular' in circumstances where audience appeal is often secondary to the need for state control. Published in English, Popular television in authoritarian Europe represents a significant intervention in transnational television studies, making these histories available to scholars for the first time, encouraging comparative enquiry and extending the reach - intellectually and geographically - of European television history. There is a foreword by John Corner and an informative timeline of events in the history of television in the countries covered. ;

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        Humanities & Social Sciences
        March 2017

        'An Irish empire'?

        Aspects of Ireland and the British Empire

        by Sally Visick

        This volume, which explores aspects of the experience of Ireland and Irish people within the British Empire, addresses a central concern of modern Irish scholarship. Much academic writing about Ireland, its history and culture is dominated by the vocabulary of imperialism. Engels described Ireland as England's first colony. Contemporary observers frequently characterise it as having a post-colonial society. Ireland, on the other hand, was also part of the metropolitan core of the Empire and supplied many of its soldiers, settlers and administrators. The paradox that Ireland was both 'imperial' and 'colonial' lies at the heart of this book which includes studies of Irish service in the Empire as well as the impact of imperial concerns in Ireland. Concentrating on the period since the mid-nineteenth century, the scope of the volume is impressively broad. Popular culture, sport and film are investigated, as well as business history and the military and political 'sinews of Empire'. The book will be of particular value to institutions teaching Irish and British history to degree level and the growing number of Irish studies courses being offered in Great Britain and North America.

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        September 2001

        BabySprache - BabyTalk

        Wie Eltern die Intelligenz ihrer Kinder fördern können

        by Ward, Sally

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        May 2012

        Sally

        Ich verkaufte mich für meine Familie

        by Päsler, Elke

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        Humanities & Social Sciences
        July 1997

        The new woman

        by Sally Ledger

        Sexually transgressive, politically astute and determined to claim educational and employment rights equal to those enjoyed by men, the new woman took centre stage in the cultural landscape of late-Victorian Britain. By comparing the fictional representations with the lived experience of the new woman, Ledger's book makes a major contribution to an understanding of the 'woman question' at the fin de siecle. She alights on such disparate figures as Eleanor Marx, Gertrude Dix, Dracula, Oscar Wilde, Olive Schreiner and Radclyffe Hall. Focusing mainly on the last two decades of the nineteenth century, the book's later chapters project forward into the twentieth century, considering the relationship between new woman fiction and early modernism as well as the socio-sexual inheritance of the 'second generation' new woman writers. ;

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        July 2008

        BabySprache - BabyTalk

        Wie Eltern die Intelligenz ihrer Kinder fördern können

        by Ward, Sally / Englisch Herbst, Gabriele

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        May 2003

        BabySprache - BabyTalk

        Wie Eltern die Intelligenz ihrer Kinder fördern können

        by Ward, Sally / Übersetzt von Herbst, Gabriele

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        February 2012

        Die Entwicklung der Rechtsprechung zum Recht der Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen.

        Ein Vergleich des englischen und deutschen Rechts.

        by Horler, Sally

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        The Arts
        September 2024

        The Cinema of Cecilia Bartolomé

        Feminism and Francoism

        by Sally Faulkner

        Were it not for authoritarian state censorship, Cecilia Bartolomé's name would figure alongside those of her contemporaries Agnès Varda and Claire Denis as a pioneering feminist filmmaker of the twentieth century. With this bold claim, this book seeks both to write the history of Bartolomé's extant filmography, and speculative about censored and un-filmed work, thereby fashioning a new way of writing a feminist creative life in film. The first volume on this director to be written in English, The Cinema of Cecilia Bartolomé is also the first volume on the director published in any language for over twenty years. By focusing on Spanish-language cinema of the 1960s-1990s, the period when feminism, like democracy, was re-born and seemingly consolidated in Spain, the study brings historical depth and transnational reach to current debates in the wake of #MeToo.

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        Humanities & Social Sciences
        June 2017

        Hospitals and charity

        by Sally Mayall Brasher

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