Now showing items 30781-30800 of 49013

    • Radonić, Ljiljana (2021)
      This volume is the first to examine the museum landscape of all post-socialist EU member states. How do museums present the Second World War, the Holocaust, and Soviet crimes? As part of their nations’ attempts to join the ...
    • Förster, Hans; Sänger-Böhm, Kerstin; Schulz, Matthias H. O. (2021)
      Sahidic is one of the most important Coptic literary dialects. A modern, critical edition of the Sahidic translation of the New Testament has long been missing from the academic field. A research project funded by the FWF ...
    • Roig Sanz, Diana; Fólica, Laura; Ikoff, Ventsislav (2022)
      Translation history and literary translation, on the one hand, and periodical publications, on the other, have been extensively analysed within the fields of translation studies, comparative literature, and media studies, ...
    • Bielsa, Esperança (2022)
      Translation history and literary translation, on the one hand, and periodical publications, on the other, have been extensively analysed within the fields of translation studies, comparative literature, and media studies, ...
    • (2021)
      After the 2012 facsimile edition this volume contains critical editions of Demetrius’ Psalter and the Medical Folia preserved in it in Cyrillic transliteration. Besides treatises on textual criticism and the lexical ...
    • Langthaler, Rudolf (2021)
      The first part presents fundamental differentations of Kants ethics and philosophy of religion. In the second part Habermas‘ interpretation and critique of Kants philosophiy of religion is subected to an detailed critique.
    • Giamarelos, Stylianos (2022)
      Since its first appearance in 1981, critical regionalism has enjoyed a celebrated worldwide reception. The 1990s increased its pertinence as an architectural theory that defends the cultural identity of a place resisting ...
    • Coldwell, Paul; Morgan, Ruth M. (2022)
      Picturing the Invisible presents different disciplinary approaches to articulating the invisible, that which is not known or that which is not provable. The challenge that we have seen is how to articulate these concepts, ...
    • Lall, Marie (2021)
      This book reviews the state of education in Myanmar over the past decade and a half as the country is undergoing profound albeit incomplete transformation. Set within the context of Myanmar’s peace process and the wider ...
    • D.M. Green, John; Henry, Ros (2021)
      Olga Tufnell (1905–85) was a British archaeologist working in Egypt, Cyprus and Palestine in the 1920s and 1930s, a period often described as a golden age of archaeological discovery. For the first time, this book presents ...
    • Inuzuka, Takaaki (2021)
      Alexander Williamson was professor of chemistry at UCL (1849–87) and a leading scientist of his time. He taught and cared for visiting Japanese students, thereby assisting them with their goal of modernising Japan. This ...
    • Vaughan, Megan; Adjaye-Gbewonyo, Kafui; Mika, Marissa (2021)
      Epidemiological Change and Chronic Disease in Sub-Saharan Africa offers new and critical perspectives on the causes and consequences of recent epidemiological changes in sub-Saharan Africa, particularly on the increasing ...
    • Aldrich, Richard; Woodin, Tom (2021)
      The history of the UCL Institute of Education is one of persistent renewal. Since its founding in 1902 as the London Day Training College, through its establishment as a university institute and merger with UCL, the IOE ...
    • Davies, Aled; Jackson, Ben; Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, Florence (2021)
      The late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries are commonly characterised as an age of ‘neoliberalism’ in which individualism, competition, free markets, and privatisation came to dominate Britain’s politics, economy ...
    • Padfield, Deborah; Zakrzewska, Joanna M. (2021)
      What is persistent pain? How do we communicate pain, not only in words but in visual images and gesture? How do we respond to the pain of another, and can we do it better? Can explaining how pain works help us handle it? ...
    • Scott, David (2021)
      This is a philosophical work that develops a general theory of ontological objects and object-relations. It does this by examining concepts as acquired dispositions, and then focuses on perhaps the most important of these: ...
    • Driver, Felix; Nesbitt, Mark; Cornish, Caroline (2021)
      Mobile Museums presents an argument for the importance of circulation in the study of museum collections, past and present. It brings together an impressive array of international scholars and curators from a wide variety ...
    • Johnson, Cassidy; Jain, Garima; Lavell, Allan (2021)
      Environmental changes have significant impacts on people’s lives and livelihoods, particularly the urban poor and those living in informal settlements. In an effort to reduce urban residents’ exposure to climate change and ...
    • Steadman, Philip (2021)
      Renaissance Fun is about the technology of Renaissance entertainments in stage machinery and theatrical special effects; in gardens and fountains; and in the automata and self-playing musical instruments that were installed ...
    • O'Connell, Rebecca; Brannen, Julia (2021)
      Food is fundamental to health and social participation, yet food poverty has increased in the global North. Adopting a realist ontology and taking a comparative case approach, Families and Food in Hard Times addresses the ...