Sentences with phrase «varied meaning of the book»

This exhibition invited artists, who in turn invited additional participants, to submit work via the postal service, creating a network of communication that reflects the complex and varied meaning of the book, mapping, and social networking in the 21st century.

Not exact matches

Correlations of these and other fourfold typologies presented throughout this book are, however, at best imprecise and at worst diminish the richness of the varied interpretive options that constitute a congregation's web of meanings.
The differences among the books and among the individual authors are due to the varying ways in which these authors understood the meaning of the events and the divine plan, and to the varying circumstances in which they wrote.
For one, characters in high - quality books often represent diverse backgrounds, including varying economic means, different races and ethnicities and unique regions of the country or the world.
For better or worse, I haven't segmented my list, which means it is a split of fans of my three different series, so the number of purchases / downloads I can expect on a launch email varies widely by which series and what type of book, but broadly speaking I can expect 100 purchases on a book announcement on average.
CJ West: I write suspense, but I'll write about any theme that catches my interest, and that means the tones of my books vary pretty widely.
(The process varies according to the length of the book, meaning word count, and whether there are lots of photos and images to be inserted.)
Prices for promotion vary based on the price of the book you're promoting as well as whether you want it to be an «Exclusive» posting, meaning that your book will be in it's own post, rather than having to share a post with other people's books.
While that cost might vary from city to city, booking blindly with your chain of choice is certainly going to mean paying more in the end.
Including prints from Thomas Struth (b. 1954), Andreas Gursky (b. 1955) and Julius Shulman (b. 1910), the book pushes readers to reimagine American structures, recognising how varying depictions and techniques can affect initial perceptions and create new layers of meaning.
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