Anbieter: Vangsgaards Antikvariat Aps, Copenhagen, Dänemark
Jonathan Cape, London 1971. 351 pages+ ilustrated with plates in b/w. Orig. cloth with gilded lettering to the spine and dust wrappers. With a black top-edge. And a publisher's lable to the flyleaf stating 'Presented to mark the fiftieth anniersary of the founding of the House of Cape January 1971.' Some uneven browning to the wrappers and light edgewear. Ine near fine/near fine- wrapper condition. Inserted is a small red printed note 'With Compliments from Graham C. Greene', the managing director of Jonathan Cape from 1962-1990.
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
EUR 93,57
Anzahl: Mehr als 20 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: New. Über den AutorElisabetta Porcu, Ph.D. (2006), is Associate Professor of Asian Religions at the University of Cape Town. She is the author of Pure Land Buddhism in Modern Japanese Culture (Brill, 2008) and the founding .
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
EUR 224,91
Anzahl: Mehr als 20 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: New. KlappentextThis book looks takes a broad glance at language policy implementation in the SADC region. Authors grapple with issues and challenges pertaining to language in education polices in multilingual southern Africa.
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
Buch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - This volume focuses on the different challenges of language policy in the Southern African Development Community (SADC). Each of the seventeen chapters follows the same structure, ensuring readability and accessibility, and describes the unique aspects of each country. The work as a whole reveals the complex and reciprocal relations between multiple indigenous African languages, Creole languages and former colonial languages and it constitutes an opportunity to notice recurring patterns as well as distinctive characteristics. Therefore, everyone involved in language policy, education, economics and development, geography, development or area studies and African studies will benefit from such a holistic and innovative overview.
Verlag: Immaterial Incorporated Brooklyn, NY, 2001
Anbieter: Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, USA
126 pp.; 24.9 x 19.9 cm.; sewn bound; other special feature[s]; black-and-white & color; edition size unknown; unsigned and unnumbered; offset-printed; Winter 2001 issue of Cabinet Magazine based around the theme of "Evil." Edited by Sina Najafi. Contents include : "The Clean Room," by David Serlin; "Leftovers," by Sara Harris; "Colors," by Frances Richard; "Ingestion," by Allen Weiss; "The Acoustics of War," by Daria Vaisman; "What's in a Name," by David E. Brown; "Raw and Processed Data;" "Walter Pitts," by Keller Easterling; "Imported Nationalism," by Jesse Lerner; "The Pigment Connoisseur," by Gregory Williams; "The Portrait Connection," by Peter Rostovsky; "The Traveling Interview : Part II," by Lucy Lippard and Kathy Vargas; "Two Postcards," by Aris Fioretos; "The Emergence of Social Inequality Among Robots, by Luc Steels; "Brancusi / Koons," by James Dawson-Hollis; "Private Lunar Esp : An Interview with Edgar Mitchell," interviewed by Fia Backström; "Doppelgänger," by Francis Alÿs; "The Practice of Failure," by John Roberts; "On Evil : An Interview with Alain Badiou," interviewed by Christoph Cox and Molly Whalen; "On Evil : An Interview with Alenka Zupancic," by Christoph Cox; "Letter Bombs, 1904 - 1998," by Carl Michael von Hausswolff; "Good Over Evil / Evil Over Good," by Lee Etheredge IV; "Bats and Dancing Bears : An Interview with Eric Zillmer," by Sina Najafi; "Modernist Malice," by Andrea Codrington; "The De-Monization of Evil : Banality, Arendt, Sartre," by Ulrich Baer; "Destroyed : Project and Insert," by David Bunn; "Of Criminals, Degenerates, and Literary Offenders," by Marina van Zuylen; "Live and Die as Eva Braun," by Roee Rosen; "Deuteronomy : A CD-ROM," by Brian Dewan; "Twenty Minutes Under Water," by Carsten Höller; "The Persistence of Goodness," by Sven-Olov Wallenstein; "The Evil Eye : An Interview with Alan Dundes," by Nicholas Frobes-Cross; "Antichrist : An Interview with Bernard McGinn," by Kristofer Widholm; "Victor Houteff," by Harry Steinberg; "The Orthodox Origins of Heterodoxy," by Karen Sullivan; "Unlimited Edition : Evil/Exit," by Vincent Mazeau and "Postcard," by Victor Houteff. Includes contributor biographies. Covers by Francis Cape. Very Good / Fine. Very light rubbing of cover edges and corners. Contents clean and unmarked. Includes slipped-in CD-ROM. Due to large size and weight additional shipping charges will be required for international orders.
London, 1971. 351 pp. Ills. Cloth,d/j. Library-stamps.
Verlag: Green Point Camp Cape Town South Africa 16 August, 1902
Anbieter: Richard M. Ford Ltd, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 118,44
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den Warenkorb1p., 8vo. A mimeographed document duplicating fifty lines of handwriting (that of Ferrar himself?). Embossed government crest at top left. A scarce survival, on aged and heavily-worn paper, with closed tears and slight loss to extremities, repaired with archival tape. Text in eleven sections: 'Duties' ('Field Officer of the day', 'Captain of the day', 'Orderly of the day'), 'Remission of sentence', 'Punishments', 'Strength', 'Furloughs', 'Institutes', 'Correspondence etc', 'Deaths', 'C M Prisoners', 'Courts Martial', 'Divine Service' (parade times for Roman Catholics, Presbyterians and Wesleyans'). The longest section, on 'Courts Martial', gives an impression of the tone: 'No 3222 Pte H Parsons 8 Dorsets was tried by D C M 14th August & sentenced to be imprisoned with Hard Labour for 56 days for Receiving stolen goods knowing them to be stolen No 4058 Pte F Armstrong 2 Dorestes was tried by D C M 14th inst & sentenced to be imprisoned with Hard Labour for 6 Calendar Months for "Committing a civil offence that is to say stealing." Captain Pinwell Liverpools is appointed a member of a D C M ordered to assemble at Wynburg at 10-0 AM on Monday 18th. inst.' The two British prisoner of war camps on the Green Point Common the Green Point Track Camp and the Sky View Camp were established during the war to relieve severe overcrowding at the Simon's Town camp. With the end of the war the role of the camp changed to accommodate POWs being sent to the various districts in the former republics rather than overseas. Gradually the number of POWs were being sent from overseas camps to South Africa fell, and the Green Point camp was closed.