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Promoted ContentHumanities & Social SciencesJuly 2010
Race, nation and empire
Making histories, 1750 to the present
by Catherine Hall, Keith McClelland, Julian Hoppit
The essays in this collection show how histories written in the past, in different political times, dealt with, considered, or avoided and disavowed Britain's imperial role and issues of difference. Ranging from enlightenment historians to the present, these essays consider both individual historians, including such key figures as E. A. Freeman, G. M. Trevelyan and Keith Hancock, and also broader themes such as the relationship between liberalism, race and historiography and how we might re-think British history in the light of trans-national, trans-imperial and cross-cultural analysis. 'Britishness' and what 'British' history is have become major cultural and political issues in our time. But as these essays demonstrate, there is no single national story: race, empire and difference have pulsed through the writing of British history. The contributors include some of the most distinguished historians writing today: C. A. Bayly, Antoinette Burton, Saul Dubow, Geoff Eley, Theodore Koditschek, Marilyn Lake, John M. MacKenzie, Karen O'Brien, Sonya O. Rose, Bill Schwarz, Kathleen Wilson. ;
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January 1994Die vierzehn Schwestern des Emilio Montez O'Brien
Roman
by Hijuelos, Oscar / Englisch Strand, Michael
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Literature & Literary StudiesApril 2026The poetry of suicide
Lessons in grief from the lives and deaths of poets
by J. T. Welsch
A profound exploration of the connection between poetry and suicide. 'Suicides have a special language,' Anne Sexton wrote in her 1964 poem 'Wanting to Die'. But is it a language we can learn to read? In The poetry of suicide, J. T. Welsch interweaves stories of poets who took their own lives with the long history of suicide in his own family, searching for a new way of understanding these difficult deaths. Beginning with Hamlet's 'To be or not to be?', he delves into the work of Dante, Sylvia Plath, Vladimir Mayakovsky and others, asking what it can teach us about suicide's messy reality. Suicide is more like poetry than we realise, Welsch argues. Both are filled with ambiguities, contradictions and unknowable intentions. Both demand and resist interpretation. Recovering the personal dimension often lost in our medicalised public discourse, Welsch finds practical ways of confronting suicide's poem-like difficulties.
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April 2026Little People, Big Dreams – Steven Spielberg
Deutsche Ausgabe
by María Isabel Sánchez Vegara, Keith Negley, Svenja Becker
Steven war sechs Jahre alt, als seine Eltern ihn zum ersten Mal mit ins Kino nahmen. The Greatest Show on Earth hieß der Film und Steven war so beeindruckt, dass sich fortan bei ihm alles ums Kino drehte. Sein erster Film, mit elf, zeigt die Kollision zweier Züge seiner Spielzeugeisenbahn. Mit 14 spannte er Nachbarskinder und Schulfreunde für einen Film ein, mit dem er den ersten Preis bei einem Amateur-Festival gewann. Es war der Beginn einer großen Karriere: Der weiße Hai, Jurassic Park, Schindlers Liste, Indiana Jones – seine Filme sind legendär, und Steven Spielberg wurde zu einem der erfolgreichsten Regisseure weltweit. Little People, Big Dreams erzählt von den beeindruckenden Lebensgeschichten großer Menschen: Jede dieser Persönlichkeiten, ob Philosophin, Forscherin oder Sportler, hat Unvorstellbares erreicht. Dabei begann alles, als sie noch klein waren: mit großen Träumen. Empfohlen ab 4 Jahren
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February 1973Werke in vier Bänden
by T. S. Eliot
T. S. Eliot, geboren 1888 in St. Louis/Missouri, gestorben 1965 in London, ist einer der bedeutendsten Dichter des 20. Jahrhunderts.
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