Kirjojen hintavertailu. Mukana 11 342 296 kirjaa ja 12 kauppaa.

Kirjahaku

Etsi kirjoja tekijän nimen, kirjan nimen tai ISBN:n perusteella.

1000 tulosta hakusanalla Adrian Lysenko

Abacus Evolve Challenge Year 3 Textbook

Abacus Evolve Challenge Year 3 Textbook

Adrian Pinel; Jeni Pinel

PEARSON EDUCATION LIMITED
2009
pokkari
Abacus Evolve Challenge activities deliver: ·         Depth â?? exploring maths objectives at a deeper level of thinking and understanding ·         Breadth â?? building up a bigger picture by exploring ideas that relate to the central concept being studied ·         Pace â?? exploring objectives beyond the scope of the general year group level.
Abacus Evolve Challenge Year 4 Textbook

Abacus Evolve Challenge Year 4 Textbook

Adrian Pinel; Jeni Pinel

Pearson Education, Oxford
2009
pokkari
Abacus Evolve Challenge activities deliver: Ã?·Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Depth ââ?¬â?? exploring maths objectives at a deeper level of thinking and understanding Ã?·Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Breadth ââ?¬â?? building up a bigger picture by exploring ideas that relate to the central concept being studied Ã?·Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Ã? Pace ââ?¬â?? exploring objectives beyond the scope of the general year group level.
Cincuenta Poemas Y UNA Sola Filosofia

Cincuenta Poemas Y UNA Sola Filosofia

Adrian Rodriguez

Adrian Rodriguez
2007
nidottu
Soy lo suficientemente artista como para dibujar libremente sobre mi imaginacion La imaginacion es mas importante que el conocimiento El conocimiento es limitado La imaginacion circunda el mundo ALBERT EINSTEIN Mi poesia es inspirada en el genio EINSTEIN y espero tu reflecion Adrian
Truth and Fiction: Notes on (Exceptional) Faith in Art

Truth and Fiction: Notes on (Exceptional) Faith in Art

Adrian Martin; Milcho Manchevski

Punctum Books
2012
nidottu
Reflecting upon his experience making his 2010 feature film Mothers, a cinematic triptych interweaving three narratives that are each, in their own way, about the often tenuous lines between truth and fiction, and one of which actually morphs into a documentary about the aftermath in a small Macedonian town where three retired cleaning women were found raped and killed in 2008 and the murderer turned out to be the journalist covering the story for a major Macedonian newspaper, the Oscar-nominated Macedonian-born and New York-based writer-director Milcho Manchevski writes that, "Most of us look at films differently or accept stories in a different way if we believe that they are true. We watch a documentary film in a different way from the way we watch a drama. We read a magazine article in a different way from the way in which we read a short story. Sometimes, we even treat a film that employs actors differently than a regular drama because we were told that it is based on something that really happened. We treat these works based on truth or reporting on the truth in different ways. Why? What is it in our relation to reality or in our relation to what we perceive to be reality that makes us value a work of artifice (an art piece) differently depending on our knowledge or conviction of whether that work of artifice is based on events that really took place?"In this extended essay, or letter, Manchevski ruminates the different ways in which both filmmakers and audiences create, experience, and absorb the cinematic narrative with a certain trust and faith in the artwork to render, not the factual truth, per se, but the importantly shared experience of trusting "the plane of reality created by the work itself," such that "we trust its inner logic and integrity, we have faith in what happens while we give ourselves to this work of art." Truth becomes a question of what artist and audience can see and feel together: what feels real becomes the world we inhabit.The book also includes an Afterword, "Truth Approaches, Reality Affects," by internationally renowned film scholar Adrian Martin.
Last Day Every Day: Figural Thinking from Auerbach and Kracauer to Agamben and Brenez
Where is film analysis at today? What is cinema theory up to, behind our backs? The field, as professionally defined (at least in the Anglo-American academic world), is presently divided between contextual historians who turn to broad formations of modernity, and stylistic connoisseurs who call for a return to old-fashioned things like authorial vision, tone, and mise en sc ne. But there are other, vital, inventive currents happening - in criticism, on the Internet, in small magazines, and renegade conferences everywhere - which we are not hearing much about in any official way. Last Day Every Day shines a light on one of these exciting new avenues. Is there a way to bring together, in a refreshed manner, textual logic, hermeneutic interpretation, theoretical speculation, and socio-political history? A way to break the deadlock between classical approaches that sought organic coherence in film works, and poststructuralist approaches that exposed the heterogeneity of all texts and scattered the pieces to the four winds? A way to attend to the minute materiality of cinema, while grasping and contesting the histories imbricated in every image and sound? In "A Philosophical Interpretation of Freud," Paul Ricoeur (drawing upon Hegel) remarks: "The appropriation of a meaning constituted prior to me presupposes the movement of a subject drawn ahead of itself by a succession of 'figures, ' each of which finds its meaning in the ones which follow it." The notion of the figural has recently become popular in European film theory and analysis, especially due to the work of Nicole Brenez - in which the figure stands for "the force . . . of everything that remains to be constituted" in a character, object, social relation or idea. Her use of the term refers back to magisterial work of German literary philologist Erich Auerbach (Mimesis), who decoded the religious interpretive system wherein all persons and events are grasped as significant only insofar as they prefigure their fulfilment on the 'last day' of divine judgment. Auerbach's 1920s work on figuration in Dante was an important influence on his friend Walter Benjamin; and it was this 'theological' aspect of Benjamin's thought that caught Kracauer's attention, leading to the problematic of the redemption of worldly things. Last Day Every Day traces the notion of figural thinking from Weimar then to Paris (and beyond) today, taking in contemporary writings by William Routt and Giorgio Agamben, as well as two filmmakers also touched by such thinking and its cultural ambience: Josef von Sternberg (The Blue Angel) and Douglas Sirk (The Tarnished Angels). Figural analysis has a resonance for its practitioners today that goes far beyond its theological roots and undertones. It has become a way to trace and write cultural history, sensitive to the smallest but most powerful vibrations, exchanges, and metamorphoses within texts, whether filmic, literary, pictorial, aural, or theatrical. Modern cinema, in particular, often reverberates with the apocalyptic thunder of the last day (think Lars von Trier's Melancholia or Abel Ferrara's 4:44 Last Day on Earth) - while also opening us to the miracles and mysteries, the perplexities and potentialities, of every day.
A Boomer's Path

A Boomer's Path

Adrian L. Kerley

Echo Lane Press
2018
nidottu
A journey in verse . . . As author Adrian Kerley learned during his years in Australia, "boomer" is Australian slang for an old, male kangaroo. Although this book wasn't written for kangaroos, it was written with a different sort of "boomer" in mind: Baby Boomers.In this collection of thoughts and poems, Adrian invites you to join him on a journey from the gold fields of Australia, along the lanes of Europe, through the woods of the Blue Ridge Mountains to the fields of memory, moments, and mystery.As you read these words, you'll find yourself drifting away from the everyday to other places and times: the turquoise waters of the Caribbean, a cottage in Scotland and even the backyard of a five-year-old in 1950's North Carolina. In thes pages you'll travel vast distances in moments and escape along sandy shorelines or wooded paths. So journey here for a while, experience the warmth of tropical winds and rediscover seldom-visited emotions.
About Michael Baxandall

About Michael Baxandall

Adrian Rifkin

JOHN WILEY AND SONS LTD
1999
nidottu
A distinguished group of art historians reflect on the work of Michael Baxandall, in terms of its importance for their own formation, its location in the development of a new art history, and its influence on the broader languages and theories of contemporary cultural theory.
The Mysteries of Ephesos

The Mysteries of Ephesos

Adrian Anderson

Threshold Publishing
2021
pokkari
Rudolf Steiner often spoke of "The Mysteries".Have you ever wondered what took place in these various Centres?In the Ephesian Mysteries acolytes experienced their Higher-self as a potential nurtured by Artemis-Diana. But what these acolytes underwent in the great temple is generally unknown to scholars.However there are meditative verses and private notebook entries about this goddess and what the acolytes were to achieve, from Rudolf Steiner. These are newly translated for this book and explored. Key sections from his two lectures on Ephesos with its famous statue are included, together with a helpful commentary.The spiritual meaning of Artemis-Diana, Dionysos, Mysa and Iackhos, and other deities is explored, enhanced by the author's knowledge of ancient Greek.
Pistis Sophia

Pistis Sophia

Adrian Anderson

Threshold Publishing
2024
pokkari
The Pistis Sophia codex is the most valuable record of ancient esoteric Christianity ever found - but until now large sections of it were incomprehensible.Dr. Anderson's scholarship with the original Coptic and Greek text has resulted in a translation which provides much needed clarity. Core aspects of this esoteric Christianity were established through his The Gospel of John - an Initiatory Quest translation, which revealed the veiled esoteric basis of the Gospel.The teachings in the codex are presented as a dialogue between the disciples and the risen Christ about spiritual realities and the initiatory path.The structure of the cosmos underlying this text, especially the twelve Aions, has now been resolved. Without this, it was impossible to put most of the teachings into any context. The work of Rudolf Steiner was an invaluable resource for this task.The story of Pistis Sophia is revealed as a dramatic presentation of the task of protecting humanity's faculty of spiritual perception, undertaken by Christ.Reincarnation and Fate (karma) are regarded as compatible with both 'forgiveness' of sins and the deeper, esoteric 'cancelling' of sins.There is also a valuable Introduction, an Index and two helpful diagrams. The last two documents of the codex (60 pages) have been omitted. This is explained in the Introduction.
Red Rite Hand

Red Rite Hand

Adrian Harte

In Case of Emergency Press
2023
pokkari
Adrian Harte's poetry collection is a startling and intense exploration of the poet in his world, with poems of humour, love, violence, trauma. Harte dissects and examines life with honesty and courage and a baffled outrage at the inhumanity of much of the modern world. Richly evocative, Red Rite Hand is a triumphant first collection, remarkable for the poetic skill of the writer and the control and passion of his work.
The Dancing Man

The Dancing Man

Adrian Caesar

Recent Work Press
2024
pokkari
In the face of fire, flood, plague, environmental catastrophe and political chaos the challenge is that poetry, in Auden's words, 'show an affirming flame'. The poems in The Dancing Man are an attempt to move from grief and loss towards consolations, however limited these might be. Intimations of connection and inter-dependence between all living things is the fragile basis for a first step towards spiritual re-orientation and an art of hope.
Straight Jacket

Straight Jacket

Adrian Deans

High Horse Publishing
2013
nidottu
'If God is too indifferent, or too non-existent to take care of His creation, then clearly it's up to Me.' Morgen Tanjenz is a lawyer with an overactive sense of justice. His mission in life is to reward the virtuous, punish the ignorant and avenge those who won't avenge themselves. His favourite pastime is 'life sculpture' - anonymously intervening in the lives of strangers to change their destiny in ways he thinks they deserve. But Morgen isn't the only one changing lives in the city. A serial killer is on the prowl and taunting the police in letters to the local rag. But, as the body count rises, Detective Sergeant Blacksnake Fowler can hardly focus on the job with so many distractions: his boss hates him, his deputy is trying to undermine him and the woman he loves is having an affair. In the cicada-throbbing heat of a Sydney summer, the threads of a strange story become entangled in a wild conclusion no one will see coming. 'a ripsnorter of a ride through the dark heart of the burbs... may just be Australia's answer to American Psycho.' - Kirsten Krauth, just_a_girl 'Sometimes funny, sometimes disturbing, and always compelling... with a super-original premise and a one-of-a-kind protagonist'. - Tony Wilson, Making News 'A disturbingly good read. Unnerving and darkly comic.' - Stuart Quin, Ealing Studios Australia