Kirjojen hintavertailu. Mukana 11 244 527 kirjaa ja 12 kauppaa.

Kirjahaku

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

1000 tulosta hakusanalla Kate O'Shaughnessy

Gender, State and Social Power in Contemporary Indonesia
This book examines gender, state and social power in Indonesia, focusing in particular on state regulation of divorce from 1965 to 2005 and its impact on women. Indonesia experienced high divorce rates in the 1950s and 1960s, followed by a remarkable decline. Already falling divorce rates were reinforced by the 1974 Marriage Law, which for the first time regulated marriage for both Muslim and non-Muslim Indonesians and restricted access to divorce. This law defined the roles of men and women in Indonesian society, vesting household leadership with husbands and the management of the household with wives. Drawing on a wide selection of primary sources, including court records, legal codes, newspaper reports, fiction, interviews and case studies, this book provides a detailed historical account of this period of important social change, exploring fully the impact and operation of state regulation of divorce, including the New Order government’s aims in enacting this legal framework, its effects in practice and how it was utilised by citizens (both men and women) to advance their own agendas. It argues that the Marriage Law was a tool of social control enacted by the New Order government in response to the social upheaval and protests experienced in the mid 1970s. However, it also shows that state power was not hegemonic: it was both contested and co-opted by citizens, with men and women enjoying different degrees of autonomy from the state. This book explores all of these issues, providing important insights on the nature of the New Order regime, social power and gender relations, both during the years of its rule and since its collapse.
Gender, State and Social Power in Contemporary Indonesia
This book examines gender, state and social power in Indonesia, focusing in particular on state regulation of divorce from 1965 to 2005 and its impact on women. Indonesia experienced high divorce rates in the 1950s and 1960s, followed by a remarkable decline. Already falling divorce rates were reinforced by the 1974 Marriage Law, which for the first time regulated marriage for both Muslim and non-Muslim Indonesians and restricted access to divorce. This law defined the roles of men and women in Indonesian society, vesting household leadership with husbands and the management of the household with wives. Drawing on a wide selection of primary sources, including court records, legal codes, newspaper reports, fiction, interviews and case studies, this book provides a detailed historical account of this period of important social change, exploring fully the impact and operation of state regulation of divorce, including the New Order government’s aims in enacting this legal framework, its effects in practice and how it was utilised by citizens (both men and women) to advance their own agendas. It argues that the Marriage Law was a tool of social control enacted by the New Order government in response to the social upheaval and protests experienced in the mid 1970s. However, it also shows that state power was not hegemonic: it was both contested and co-opted by citizens, with men and women enjoying different degrees of autonomy from the state. This book explores all of these issues, providing important insights on the nature of the New Order regime, social power and gender relations, both during the years of its rule and since its collapse.
The Wrong Way Home

The Wrong Way Home

Kate O'Shaughnessy

RANDOM HOUSE USA INC
2024
sidottu
Twelve-year-old Fern believes she's living a noble life--but what if everything she's been told is a lie? This is a huge-hearted story about a girl learning to question everything, and to trust in herself. Fern's lived at the Ranch, an off-the-grid, sustainable community in upstate New York, since she was six. The work is hard, but Fern admires the Ranch's leader, Dr. Ben. So when Fern's mother sneaks them away in the middle of the night and says Dr. Ben is dangerous, Fern doesn't believe it. She wants desperately to go back, but her mom just keeps driving. Suddenly Fern is thrust into the treacherous, toxic, outside world. At first she thinks only about how to get home. She has a plan, but it will take time. As that time goes by, though, Fern realizes there are things she will miss from this place--the library, a friend from school, the ocean--and there are things she learned at the Ranch that are just...not true. Now Fern will have to decide. How much is she willing to give up to return to the Ranch? Should she trust Dr. Ben's vision for her life? Or listen to the growing feeling that she can live by her own rules?
The Wrong Way Home: (Newbery Honor Award Winner)

The Wrong Way Home: (Newbery Honor Award Winner)

Kate O'Shaughnessy

Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers
2024
sidottu
Twelve-year-old Fern believes she's living a noble life--but what if everything she's been told is a lie? This is a huge-hearted story about a girl learning to question everything--and to trust in herself. A NEWBERY HONOR BOOK - A CALIBA GOLDEN POPPY AWARD FINALIST - A KIRKUS REVIEWS AND BOOKLIST BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR Fern's lived at the Ranch, an off-the-grid, sustainable community in upstate New York, since she was six. The work is hard, but Fern admires the Ranch's leader, Dr. Ben. So when Fern's mother sneaks them away in the middle of the night and says Dr. Ben is dangerous, Fern doesn't believe it. She wants desperately to go back, but her mom just keeps driving. Suddenly thrust into the treacherous, toxic, outside world, Fern can think only of how to get home. She has a plan, but it will take time. As that time goes by, though, Fern realizes there are things she will miss from this place--the library, a friend from school, the ocean--and there are things she learned at the Ranch that are just...not true. Now Fern will have to decide. How much is she willing to give up to return to the Ranch? Should she trust Dr. Ben's vision for her life? Or listen to the growing feeling that she can live by her own rules?
The Wrong Way Home

The Wrong Way Home

Kate O'Shaughnessy

RANDOM HOUSE USA INC
2025
nidottu
Twelve-year-old Fern believes she's living a noble life--but what if everything she's been told is a lie? This is a huge-hearted story about a girl learning to question everything--and to trust in herself. Fern's lived at the Ranch, an off-the-grid, sustainable community in upstate New York, since she was six. The work is hard, but Fern admires the Ranch's leader, Dr. Ben. So when Fern's mother sneaks them away in the middle of the night and says Dr. Ben is dangerous, Fern doesn't believe it. She wants desperately to go back, but her mom just keeps driving. Suddenly thrust into the treacherous, toxic, outside world, Fern can think only of how to get home. She has a plan, but it will take time. As that time goes by, though, Fern realizes there are things she will miss from this place--the library, a friend from school, the ocean--and there are things she learned at the Ranch that are just...not true. Now Fern will have to decide. How much is she willing to give up to return to the Ranch? Should she trust Dr. Ben's vision for her life? Or listen to the growing feeling that she can live by her own rules?
Lasagna Means I Love You

Lasagna Means I Love You

Kate O'Shaughnessy

RANDOM HOUSE USA INC
2023
sidottu
What are the essential ingredients that make a family? Eleven-year-old Mo is making up her own recipe in this unforgettable story that's a little sweet, a little sour, and totally delicious. Nan was all the family Mo ever needed. But suddenly she's gone, and Mo finds herself in foster care after her uncle decides she's not worth sticking around for. Nan left her a notebook and advised her to get a hobby, like ferret racing or palm reading. But how could a hobby fix anything in her newly topsy-turvy life?Then Mo finds a handmade cookbook filled with someone else's family recipes. Even though Nan never cooked, Mo can't tear her eyes away. Not so much from the recipes, but the stories attached to them. Though, when she makes herself a pot of soup, it is every bit as comforting as the recipe notes said. Soon Mo finds herself asking everyone she meets for their family recipes. Teaching herself to make them. Collecting the stories behind them. Building a website to share them. And, okay, secretly hoping that a long-lost relative will find her and give her a family recipe all her own. But when everything starts to unravel again, Mo realizes that if she wants a family recipe--or a real family--she's going to have to make it up herself.
The Lonely Heart of Maybelle Lane

The Lonely Heart of Maybelle Lane

O'Shaughnessy Kate

Knopf Books for Young Readers
2020
sidottu
This sparkling middle-grade debut is a classic-in-the-making Maybelle Lane is looking for her father, but on the road to Nashville she finds so much more: courage, brains, heart--and true friends. Eleven-year-old Maybelle Lane collects sounds. She records the Louisiana crickets chirping, Momma strumming her guitar, their broken trailer door squeaking. But the crown jewel of her collection is a sound she didn't collect herself: an old recording of her daddy's warm-sunshine laugh, saved on an old phone's voicemail. It's the only thing she has of his, and the only thing she knows about him. Until the day she hears that laugh--his laugh--pouring out of the car radio. Going against Momma's wishes, Maybelle starts listening to her radio DJ daddy's new show, drinking in every word like a plant leaning toward the sun. When he announces he'll be the judge of a singing contest in Nashville, she signs up. What better way to meet than to stand before him and sing with all her heart? But the road to Nashville is bumpy. Her starch-stiff neighbor Mrs. Boggs offers to drive her in her RV. And a bully of a boy from the trailer park hitches a ride, too. These are not the people May would have chosen to help her, but it turns out they're searching for things as well. And the journey will mold them into the best kind of family--the kind you choose for yourself.
Kate O'Brien and the Fiction of Identity

Kate O'Brien and the Fiction of Identity

Aintzane Legarreta Mentxaka

McFarland Co Inc
2011
pokkari
Kate O'Brien's work is now widely considered canonical in the English language, and the author herself an icon for Ireland seeking to reinvent itself. O'Brien's novel Mary Lavelle, banned upon publication in 1936, is a key work of the twentieth century that has suffered from critical neglect despite its wider popularity with readers. This book reexamines Mary Lavelle, exploring its role in the modernist canon and its importance to political and queer activism. The novel's biographical and autobiographical experimentation is of particular note. Through the lens of this crucial novel, the oeuvre of Kate O'Brien is recontextualized and reassessed.
Kate O'Brien and Spanish Literary Culture

Kate O'Brien and Spanish Literary Culture

Jane Davison

Syracuse University Press
2017
nidottu
One of the most important Irish novelists of the twentieth century, Kate O’Brien (1897–1974) was also a pioneer of women’s writing. In a career that spanned almost fifty years, nine novels, nine plays, two travelogues, and copious criticism, O’Brien rebelled against the narrow nationalism andrestrictive Catholicism prevalent in independent Ireland. In this highly original approach to O’Brien’s work, Davison traces the influence of three leading Spanish writers—Jacinto Benavente, Miguel deCervantes, and Teresa of Avila. O’Brien’s lifelong fascination with Spanish literature and culture offered an oblique way of resisting the Catholic and conservative imperatives of the Irish Free State. In a series of close comparative readings, Davison identifies the origin of O’Brien’s creative disinhibition and ultimately situates her within a tradition of dissident Irish women writers.
Kate O'Brien and the Basques/ La Escritora Kate O'Brien Y Euskadi
This is a singular piece of literary research and criticism by a scholar fluent in English, Spanish, Irish and Basque who has utilized all the sources available to write a thorough study of Kate O'Brien (called by Dr. Declan Kilberd one of the top 20 Irish authors of the 20th century). O'Brien (1897-1974) was not only a playwright and a splendid writer of prose but a close student of the Basques at a time when the very survival of their society was at terrible risk. As a feminist O'Brien was fascinated by the role of women and the identity politics of Republican Spain as well as the Francoist regime that took control in 1939.Kate O'Brien's best known work is the 1936 novel Mary Lavelle; it was banned in both Spain and Ireland for many years. This work is discussed at length and placed in the context of her other fiction, reportage and polemics. Very popular in the 1940s she fell into obscurity until revived in the 1990s in part because of her championing of gay and lesbian characters in her novels and plays and in part because of the brilliant writing than ran uninterruptedly from 1931 when she won the James Tait Black memorial prize till her last novel in 1958.
Kate o Shanter's Tale

Kate o Shanter's Tale

Matthew Fitt

Luath Press Ltd
2003
pokkari
After a wild night-oot up at Kirk Alloway, Tam o Shanter has got some explaining to do. How does Kate take the news o his hell-raising ceilidh wi the witches? Why is the family cuddie wrapped aroond a lamp post? Does Tam get his tea or has he had his chips? Read and recited at Burns Suppers all over the world, Kate o Shanter's Tale is a classic of modern Scots poetry. Complemented by more rants and whigmaleeries by Scots writer Matthew Fitt, this vibrant first collection engages as much as it entertains.
Kate O'Brien

Kate O'Brien

Mentxaka

Edward Everett Root Publishers Co. Ltd.
2021
pokkari
This new book provides a significant introduction and critical survey of the diverse works of Kate O'Brien (1897 - 1974) the Irish novelist, playwright, film-script writer, short-story writer, journalist and biographer. Her novels in particular promoted gender equality and a greater understanding of gender diversity. / This study introduces students to Kate O'Brien as an artist and an activist woman in the world. It studies her normative and non-normative representations of sexualities and affects, typically embodied in a young woman who happens to fall as a clog into the crushing social machine. The book offers a discussion of her work's political contents and effects, including her leftist commitments and issues of censorship. / Aintzane Legarreta Mentxaka's theoretical lenses include feminist, queer, postcolonial, and anti-authoritarian analysis, as well as the critical assessment of criticism originating in them. / Different generations and historical moments have elicited various readings from Kate O'Brien's lusciously rich and demandingly ambiguous legacy. Once she was a specimen in the bestiary of Irish contrarians, later a tall sharp pike brandished by feminist academics, then a pied-a-terre for Catholic Ireland's postcolonial scouts, and later still a caped crusader for queer dissidents. Kate O'Brien's lively critical afterlife is still missing something: a thorough analysis of her aesthetics, now distinctive, now consonant with those of her peers. This book reviews salient critical concerns, places mortar in the gaps, and suggests some possible extensions in the work-in-progress that is a full assessment of Kate O'Brien. / Kathleen Mary Louise "Kate" O'Brien was born in Limerick City. She graduated in English and French from the newly established University College, Dublin. She moved to London, where she worked as a teacher. In 1922-23, she worked as a governess in the Basque Country, in the north of Spain, where she began to write fiction. After the success of her play Distinguished Villa in 1926, she took to full-time writing. She was awarded both the 1931 James Tait Black Prize and the Hawthornden Prize for her debut novel Without My Cloak. She is best known for her 1934 novel The Ante-Room, her 1941 novel The Land of Spices, and the 1946 novel That Lady. / Many of her books deal with issues of female agency and sexuality in ways that were new and radical at the time. Her 1936 novel, Mary Lavelle, was banned in Ireland and Spain, while The Land of Spices was banned in Ireland upon publication Throughout her life, O'Brien felt a special affinity with Spain. Her experiences in the Basque Country inspired Mary Lavelle. She also wrote a life of the Spanish mystic Teresa of Avila, and she used the relationship between the Spanish king Philip II and Maria de Mendoza for her anti-fascist novel That Lady. / O'Brien wrote a political travelogue, Farewell Spain, to gather support for the leftist cause in the Spanish Civil War. / Contents: Introduction, focusing on the grid-like structure of Kate O'Brien's thematic and stylistic concerns. A biographical sketch placing Kate O'Brien's artistic and personal development and choices in their historical and geographical context. Three chapters discussing three areas identified as crucial in Kate O'Brien's work: aesthetics, sexuality, and politics. A brief Conclusion, sketching potential areas for further investigation.
Kate O'Brien

Kate O'Brien

Mentxaka

Edward Everett Root Publishers Co. Ltd.
2021
sidottu
This new book provides a significant introduction and critical survey of the diverse works of Kate O'Brien (1897 - 1974) the Irish novelist, playwright, film-script writer, short-story writer, journalist and biographer. Her novels in particular promoted gender equality and a greater understanding of gender diversity. / This study introduces students to Kate O'Brien as an artist and an activist woman in the world. It studies her normative and non-normative representations of sexualities and affects, typically embodied in a young woman who happens to fall as a clog into the crushing social machine. The book offers a discussion of her work's political contents and effects, including her leftist commitments and issues of censorship. / Aintzane Legarreta Mentxaka's theoretical lenses include feminist, queer, postcolonial, and anti-authoritarian analysis, as well as the critical assessment of criticism originating in them. / Different generations and historical moments have elicited various readings from Kate O'Brien's lusciously rich and demandingly ambiguous legacy. Once she was a specimen in the bestiary of Irish contrarians, later a tall sharp pike brandished by feminist academics, then a pied-a-terre for Catholic Ireland's postcolonial scouts, and later still a caped crusader for queer dissidents. Kate O'Brien's lively critical afterlife is still missing something: a thorough analysis of her aesthetics, now distinctive, now consonant with those of her peers. This book reviews salient critical concerns, places mortar in the gaps, and suggests some possible extensions in the work-in-progress that is a full assessment of Kate O'Brien. / Kathleen Mary Louise "Kate" O'Brien was born in Limerick City. She graduated in English and French from the newly established University College, Dublin. She moved to London, where she worked as a teacher. In 1922-23, she worked as a governess in the Basque Country, in the north of Spain, where she began to write fiction. After the success of her play Distinguished Villa in 1926, she took to full-time writing. She was awarded both the 1931 James Tait Black Prize and the Hawthornden Prize for her debut novel Without My Cloak. She is best known for her 1934 novel The Ante-Room, her 1941 novel The Land of Spices, and the 1946 novel That Lady. / Many of her books deal with issues of female agency and sexuality in ways that were new and radical at the time. Her 1936 novel, Mary Lavelle, was banned in Ireland and Spain, while The Land of Spices was banned in Ireland upon publication Throughout her life, O'Brien felt a special affinity with Spain. Her experiences in the Basque Country inspired Mary Lavelle. She also wrote a life of the Spanish mystic Teresa of Avila, and she used the relationship between the Spanish king Philip II and Maria de Mendoza for her anti-fascist novel That Lady. / O'Brien wrote a political travelogue, Farewell Spain, to gather support for the leftist cause in the Spanish Civil War. / Contents: Introduction, focusing on the grid-like structure of Kate O'Brien's thematic and stylistic concerns. A biographical sketch placing Kate O'Brien's artistic and personal development and choices in their historical and geographical context. Three chapters discussing three areas identified as crucial in Kate O'Brien's work: aesthetics, sexuality, and politics. A brief Conclusion, sketching potential areas for further investigation.
Kate's Best Loved Flowers in Grayscale

Kate's Best Loved Flowers in Grayscale

Kate O'Connor-Hoekstra

Lilac Inn Press
2022
pokkari
"Best Loved Flowers in Grayscale" is truly unique in the vast sea of Adult coloring books. Unlike most coloring books, Kate's book is a collection of images from her original paintings; they are not clip art or overly familiar images long in public domain. This book is also unique in that each coloring image is accompanied by a meditation on its opposing page. In these floral meditations, Kate shares how the soulful act of creating is in itself a meditation, during the actual painting and long after. she invites the colorist to think about their work in the same way to benefit fully from the act of creating their own version of Kate's images.Kate O'Connor-Hoekstra is known for her original romantic floral paintings, done in a realistic style with vibrant hues and values. As a result of her meditative process, they deliver great emotional impact. One viewer has said, "They are the kind of paintings that make you smile". The variety of hues and values of Kate's original paintings are perfectly captured in the range of values the grayscale images. Thus, this coloring book allows colorists to produce artwork that preserves the dramatic effects of the original painting, while they are free to choose colors that may be different from Kate''s. This range of values, available in grayscale images, is what intermediate to advanced colorists seek in order to create depth in their work.Another unique feature of the book is the colorist's access to Kate's website where the original paintings can be seen, and perhaps provide some inspiration