Your Search Results

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        July 2016

        Tolerance, regulation and rescue

        by Brian Pullan

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        July 2018

        A History of the University of Manchester, 1973–90

        by Brian Pullan, Michele Abendstern

        Frank and entertaining account of the University of Manchester's struggle to meet the Government's demands for the rapid expansion of higher education in the 1950s and the 1960s. Looks at the University's ambitious building program: the controversial attempts to reform its constitution and improve its communications amid demands for greater democracy in the workplace, the struggle to retain its old pre-eminence in a competitive world where new 'green field' universities were rivalling older civic institutions. Tells the story, not just from the point of view of administrators and academics, but also from those of students and support staff (such as secretaries, technicians and engineers). Uses, not only official records, but also student newspapers, political pamphlets, and reminisences collected through interviews conducted by an experienced oral historian. The only book on the University of Manchester as a whole.

      • Trusted Partner
        Social & cultural history
        November 2013

        British queer history

        by Edited by Brian Lewis

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        June 2019

        Legenden der Schattenjäger-Akademie

        by Brennan, Sarah Rees; Wasserman, Robin; Johnson, Maureen; Clare, Cassandra

        Der Spin-off zur Bestsellerserie „Chroniken der Unterwelt“ - Action, Romantik, Spannung pur! Ohne Erinnerungen muss Simon, Clarys irdischer Freund, herausfinden, wer er eigentlich ist. Hat er das Zeug zum Helden und Dämonenjäger? Oder ist er doch der bleiche Comic-Fan, der nicht einmal die Kraft hat, eine Waffe der Nephilim richtig in der Hand zu führen? Seine Schattenjäger-Freunde Clary und Jace sind die einzigen, die alles über Simons Vergangenheit wissen. Und was sie erzählen, kann er kaum glauben: Simon hat als treuer Freund die Schattenjäger mehr als einmal aus tödlicher Gefahr gerettet. Jetzt muss er um Isabelle kämpfen, an deren Liebe er sich nicht erinnern kann, obwohl es in seinem Bauch kribbelt, wann immer Simon an sie denkt. War er wirklich mit diesem heldenhaften Mädchen zusammen - und wenn ja: Wie hat er das nur angestellt? 10 romantische und actionreiche Geschichten rund um die beliebten Heldengestalten Jace, Clary und Simon aus der Bestseller-Reihe „Chroniken der Unterwelt“. Von Kultautorin Cassandra Clare. Zu jeder Geschichte gibt es einen illustrativen Comic-Strip von Cassandra Jean. Dieser Band enthält die Episoden: Cassandra Clare/ Maureen Johnson, Legenden der Schattenjäger-Akademie (1): Willkommen in der Schattenjäger-Akademie Cassandra Clare/ Robin Wasserman, Legenden der Schattenjäger-Akademie (2): Der verschollene Herondale Cassandra Clare/ Maureen Johnson, Legenden der Schattenjäger-Akademie (3): Der Teufel von Whitechapel Cassandra Clare/ Sarah Rees Brennan, Legenden der Schattenjäger-Akademie (4): Nichts als Schatten Cassandra Clare/ Robin Wasserman, Legenden der Schattenjäger-Akademie (5): Das Böse, das wir lieben Cassandra Clare/ Robin Wasserman, Legenden der Schattenjäger-Akademie (6): Könige, Fürsten, so bleich Cassandra Clare/ Sarah Rees Brennan, Legenden der Schattenjäger-Akademie (7): Bittere Wahrheit Cassandra Clare/ Sarah Rees Brennan, Legenden der Schattenjäger-Akademie (8):Die Feuerprobe Cassandra Clare/Sarah Rees Brennan, Legenden der Schattenjäger-Akademie (9): Zu endloser Nacht geboren Cassandra Clare/ Robin Wasserman, Legenden der Schattenjäger-Akademie (10): Die Wiederkehr der Engel

      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        November 2011

        Real and Reel

        The education of a film critic

        by Brian McFarlane

        From a little before ten years of age Brian McFarlane became addicted to stories told on the screen, and the mere fact that he had difficulty in getting to see the films he wanted - or any for that matter - only made them seem more alluring. But it wasn't just seeing the films that mattered: he also wanted, and quite soon needed, to be writing about them and these obsessions have been part of his life for the next sixty-odd years. Real and reel is a light-hearted and but deeply felt account of a lifetime's addiction. It is one particular writer and critic's story, but it will strike sparks among many others. Though many other interests have kept Brian McFarlane's life lively, nothing else has exerted such a long-standing grip on the author's imagination as film. Editor of the Encyclopaedia of British Cinema, co-editor of Manchester University Press's British Film Makers series, and author of over a dozen critical works on film and adaptation, Brian McFarlane's autobiographical Real and reel can also be read as a biography of the subject of Film Studies itself. ;

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        Non-graphic art forms
        May 2012

        The 'do-it-yourself' artwork

        Participation from Fluxus to New Media

        by Edited by Anna Dezeuze

        Viewers of contemporary art are often invited to involve themselves actively in artworks, by entering installations, touching objects, performing instructions or clicking on interactive websites. Why have artists sought to engage spectators in these new forms of participation? In what ways does active participation affect the viewer's experience and the status of the artwork? Spanning a range of practices including kinetic art, happenings, environments, performance, installations, relational and new media art from the 1950s to the present, this critical anthology sheds light on the history and specificity of artworks that only come to life when you - the viewer - are invited to 'do it yourself.' Rather than a specialist topic in the history of twentieth- and twenty-first century art, the 'do-it-yourself' artwork raises broader issues concerning the role of the viewer in art, the status of the artwork and the socio-political relations between art and its contexts.

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        November 2007

        Videogame, player, text

        by Edited by Barry Atkins and Tanya Krzywinska

      • Trusted Partner
        Lifestyle, Sport & Leisure
        June 2024

        Round our way

        Sam Hanna's visual legacy

        by Heather Nicholson

        Sam Hanna (1903-96), a pioneering filmmaker from Burnley, Lancashire, was dubbed the 'Lowry of filmmaking' by BBC broadcaster Brian Redhead in the 1980s. The well-meant label stuck, even though it misses the variety of Hanna's remarkable output. Hanna's intimate glimpses into the lives of strangers enable us to imagine the possible stories that lie behind the images. Away from mid-century exponents of documentary filmmaking and photography, Hanna shows us humanity and a microcosm of a world in change, where his subjects are caught up in issues far beyond their grasp that we, as onlookers years later, encounter and see afresh. Written and curated by historian Heather Norris Nicholson, Round our way combines stills, essays and archive photography to document Hanna's unique visual record on film, particularly in northern England, but also further afield, during decades of profound change.

      • Trusted Partner
        Plays, playscripts
        November 2016

        The Tragedy of Antigone, The Theban Princesse

        by Thomas May

        by Edited by Matteo Pangallo. Series edited by Paul Dean

        Thomas May's The Tragedy of Antigone (1631), edited by Matteo Pangallo, is the first English treatment of the story made famous by Sophocles. This edition contains a facsimile of the copy held at the Beinecke Library of Yale University, making the play commercially available for the first time since its original publication. The extensive introduction discusses, among other things, the ownership history of existing copies and their marginal annotations, and of the play's topical political implications in the light of May's wavering between royalist and republican sympathies. Writing during the contentious early years of Charles I's reign, May used Sophocles' Antigone to explore the problems of just rule and justified rebellion. He also went beyond the scope of the original, adding content from a wide range of other classical and contemporary plays, poems and other sources, including Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet and Macbeth. This volume will be essential reading for advanced students, researchers and teachers of early English drama and seventeenth-century political history.

      • Trusted Partner
        Literary studies: c 1500 to c 1800
        November 2011

        The Humorous Magistrate (Arbury)

        by Edited by Margaret Jane Kidnie

        The Humorous Magistrate is a seventeenth-century satiric comedy extant in two highly distinctive manuscripts. This, the earliest and clearly working draft of the play is bound with three other plays (including The Emperor's Favourite, published by the Malone Society in 2010) in a volume in the library of the Newdigate family of Arbury Hall, Nuneaton, Warwickshire. The second version, showing yet another stage of revision not found in the Arbury manuscript and orientated towards performance, was purchased by the University of Calgary from the English antiquarian Edgar Osborne in 1972. The relationship between the manuscripts was discovered in 2005. The anonymous play has been attributed to John Newdigate III (1600-1642). Like The Emperor's Favourite, it takes aim at the court; its particular object of satire is governmental strategies under the Personal Rule of Charles I. The play appears in print for the first time in these separate editions. The volumes are illustrated with several plates, some provided for comparative purposes.

      Subscribe to our

      newsletter