(B) There is a book on the history and
culture of people X by John Doe (e.g. 1990).
Not exact matches
There's also entrepreneur, inventor and head
of X (formerly known as Google
X) Astro Teller's talk, «The unexpected benefit
of celebrating failure,» where he explains how
X has built a comfortable
culture where
people aren't afraid to take risks and try new things.
Speaking to popular
culture blog Assignment
X, the author said this as he again described the difference between his work and Tolkien's: «I think ultimately the battle between good and evil is weighed within the individual human heart, not necessarily between an army
of people dressed in white and an army
of people dressed in black.
Nonprofits almost certainly run into a similar problem, since
people aren't exactly likely to want to «Like» your post about the prevalence
of «rape
culture,» or the extinction
of a new species, or the fact that
X number
of people just got dumped on the street because
of cuts to housing funding.
Continue reading «Agreeing with IDS, Nick de Bois MP says the «celebrity
culture»
of the
X Factor is distorting the realistic ambitions
of young
people»»
As we all prepare for the onslaught
of «Best
of 2010» lists (don't get me wrong — I love»em — but they can certainly overwhelm a TBR list), check out this other kind
of list...
of «books that have found a place in Generation
X's (and for that matter, Y's and W's, too) common
culture; books that
people know about, relate to, and converge around, all from the last 25 years.»
First
person oral histories — from Seale, Kathleen Cleaver, Ericka Huggins, Khaled Raheem, Billy
X Jennings, and Emory Douglas, the minister
of culture who designed the group's newspaper — fortify the book.