Sentences with phrase «explores the book as»

In keeping with the Center's mission, our exhibitions endeavor to place book art practice within the larger context of contemporary art, exploring the book as object, as media, and as a site of resistance.
This unique and beautiful exhibition explores the book as a sculptural object that employs a variety of image - making processes.
I hope you'll explore the book as well as LeVine's other output.

Not exact matches

But unless you are really knowledgeable and already an expert about this subject, and you have an angle that has never been explored, it will be very hard to convince people that your book about happiness — as opposed to the 70 already out there — is the one to read.
As Stuart Banner explores in his book The Death Penalty: An American History, one of the earliest American - made capital statutes — as opposed to ones borrowed from England — was passed in New York in the aftermath of a 1712 slave revolAs Stuart Banner explores in his book The Death Penalty: An American History, one of the earliest American - made capital statutes — as opposed to ones borrowed from England — was passed in New York in the aftermath of a 1712 slave revolas opposed to ones borrowed from England — was passed in New York in the aftermath of a 1712 slave revolt.
The 2016 U.S. presidential election heightened public awareness of a concept known as the «filter bubble,» coined by Upworthy co-founder Eli Pariser and explored in his 2011 book The Filter Bubble: How the New Personalized Web Is Changing What We Read and How We Think.
Penang has been featured in the book «1,000 Places to See Before You Die» and has been ranked by Yahoo! Travel as one of the top 10 islands to explore before you die.
High - achievers will enjoy exploring the science of meditation in this book, as it is evidence - based.
The book has more of a consumer - goods angle, but many of the ideas explored — such as measuring customers» lifetime value — also apply to business - to - business settings.
One final aspect of food technology, which I explore in my book, Sex, Bombs and Burgers, is its use by the United States as a weapon, figuratively speaking.
As Kevin Kelly, co-founder of Wired, writes in his latest book New Rules for the New Economy, «The great benefits reaped by the new economy in the coming decades will be due in large part to exploring and exploiting the power of decentralized and autonomous networks.»
Wells describes the book as the continuation of an enterprise begun in 1989, which aimed to «explore the reasons for the decay of evangelical thinking, and not least in theology.»
The Jeremianic theme of idolatry as falsehood has been recently explored by Thomas W. Overholt, The Falsehood of Idolatry: A Study In the Theology of the Book of Jeremiah (Studies In Biblical Theology; Naperville: Allenson, 1970).
In my new book, «The American Bible: How Our Words Unite, Divide, and Define a Nation,» I explore 27 texts that have served as «scripture» of sorts in American public life.
What is surprising in the context of this book is the desire of both «life - liberators» and «world - changers» to explore the phenomenon of play as a possible means toward their respective visions of wholeness.
Journalist Peter Seewald became famous for his books written in collaboration with Joseph Ratzinger, later Benedict XVI: what began as one interview for a major German newspaper developed into a series of books over a number of years, exploring deep theological issues and the complex debates of our time.
As he wrote earlier in this chapter, any use of the test as «a substitute for searching conversation» about world view / setting and the other dimensions of narrative explored later in the book was in his view more likely to yield a mechanist reduction than a deepened symbolic understandinAs he wrote earlier in this chapter, any use of the test as «a substitute for searching conversation» about world view / setting and the other dimensions of narrative explored later in the book was in his view more likely to yield a mechanist reduction than a deepened symbolic understandinas «a substitute for searching conversation» about world view / setting and the other dimensions of narrative explored later in the book was in his view more likely to yield a mechanist reduction than a deepened symbolic understanding.
Near the end of the book, he explores the puzzle of a virtuoso violinist who loses her abilities to dementia, highlighting on the one hand his reluctance to view the loss of the abilities due to dementia as a loss of dignity, and to view her as more «dignified» than a janitor by virtue of her virtuosic abilities.
Once this hurdle is over, the reader will find this an excellent book which explores, with great sensitivity and understanding, the question of what it means to be human, why each human person has great value and importance, and why the frail and gravely ill matter just as much as the rest of us.
There are, as one would expect, several essays in the book on Jews and Judaism, some reflecting Kristol's religious interests» the need, for example, to sustain in Jewish identity a religious element and not merely a cultural one» others his political ones, exploring the relations of modern American Jews with a pluralistic American society that has given them an uncommonly large, though not unlimited, berth.
A shelf full of books — eight novels, seven collections of short stories, three memoirs, and 11 works for children, to be exact — explore the same theme as his recent novel Shosha: the theme of cosmic exile, wherein God has forgotten his graciousness.
When asked how the glossary will help he said: «People will sometimes have particular words they struggle with but on the whole this will be a helpful school in parishes and sometimes with clergy as well but it's part of the wider training to enable people to use this liturgical tool and explore the riches of the prayer book going forward.»
Amy is a theologian who, as well as contributing to a number of books, authored two books exploring apologetics: Why Trust the Bible and But is it Real?
The bulk of the book is devoted to exploring how the energy present in otherwise empty space, together with the laws of physics, might have given rise to the universe as it exists today.
Yoder sympathetically explored these questions in his When War Is Unjust: Being Honest in Just War Thinking (revised edition, Orbis, 1996), and as far as we know no advocate of just war reflection has responded to the challenges Yoder presented in that book.
We will be exploring these themes in the weeks to come with the help of Rabbi Rachel, who after the current Jewish holidays are over (Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur), will share with us more about what the book of Esther means to her as a Jewish woman.
Tilden Edwards, an Episcopal priest who has explored this practice in real life as well as in a book, urges contemporary Christians to be flexible, embracing not a renewed Sabbatarianism as much as a pattern of «Sabbath time.»
The point of the book is to explore why we pick and choose, and «how to do this in a way that honors God and embraces the Bible as God's Word for all times.»
A former Chicago truck driver, Ray could certainly find his way around, but when he called me with an invitation to explore the world of North Carolina barbecue as part of the research for his third book, Dr. BBQ's Barbecue Road Trip, how could I refuse?
So rather than focus on the many issues — sex, marriage, infidelity, drugs and alcohol, unemployment, nonmarital childbirth etc. — the book addresses, I want to explore the idea of community as a force of good (and sometimes bad).
-LSB-...] year as part of the Virtual Book Club for Kids we explored the book If you give a mouse a cookie by Laura Numeroff with a Maths game, this months featured author is again Laura Numeroff and of the -LSB-Book Club for Kids we explored the book If you give a mouse a cookie by Laura Numeroff with a Maths game, this months featured author is again Laura Numeroff and of the -LSB-book If you give a mouse a cookie by Laura Numeroff with a Maths game, this months featured author is again Laura Numeroff and of the -LSB-...]
2 Children's Books about Jamaica - Explore Jamaica with these two picture books and a recipe is included as Books about Jamaica - Explore Jamaica with these two picture books and a recipe is included as books and a recipe is included as well!
As I explored in my book, father's rights are not uniformly recognized and respected.
So much to consider and so much to still explore, but reading about these schools really did add a lot to those discussions in the woods, even if it was just me quoting from the book to anyone who was nearby - «Did you know that today's college graduate will have as many as seven career paths over the course of their working years?»
They adore each other, as well as books, dresses, small figures, and every playground they can explore.
As the author of her book, «The Travel Mamas» Guide,» she teaches parents not only how to survive a trip with children, but also how to love exploring the world with their offspring.
With lots to explore on every page and hidden surprises throughout, this book is sure to delight both baby and adult as they share it together.
Of course, there were plenty of science text books available, as well as CD - Roms and the Internet, but my sons liked to ask questions around the topics they're learning, to extend their knowledge and explore in greater depth.
One topic that is explored in depth in the book is the idea that mothers from poorer countries who work as nannies in other countries take their love away or redirect it from their own children and give it to the children in their care in the rich country.
Based on Peter Selg's book «The Essence of Waldorf Education ``, we will be exploring questions such as:
This is also the age to introduce books with fun textures and flaps — children love to explore with their fingers and mouths as well as their eyes.
Last month in the book club we explored what it means to be an introvert and how to engage introversion as a power instead of see it as a negative quality.
This fun resources is an introduction to the theme of Presidents as explored by the Poppins Book Nook.
This is the version explored by Richards in a stimulating book appearing at the same time as his excellent Radio 4 series on the Brown years.
«We condemn this act of barbarism in no uncertain terms, and, therefore, implore government as a matter of urgency to explore all legal and legitimate means to bring the perpetuators to book as soon as possible,» the Minority said.
One thing I like about the book is that Nicco's no techno - utopian: he's quite aware that disruption doesn't always end well, and he's as likely to explore the negative implications of «the end of big» for society at large as the positive.
Cuomo yesterday described the book as a «private book» that will explore both his experiences in government and in his personal life.
The «definitive book of the 20th century» (The Guardian) is re-examined in a radical new staging exploring surveillance, identity and why Orwell's vision of the future is as relevant now as ever.
A landmark volume in science writing by one of the great minds of our time, Stephen Hawking's book explores such profound questions as: How did the universe begin — and what made its start possible?
In exploring the paradoxical status of the United States as a both a leader and an outlier in human rights, the book proposes a renovation of the Constitution in light of changing international norms on human rights.
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