The Night Is What It Eats Dr André FanouMagical realist poems, odes to nature and natural forces, and elegies to animals loved and unloved. Danielle Hanson's latest collection of poems, The Night Is What It Eats, explores several interlacing themes: saints complaining about their Heaven, body parts disassembled and put to use in a surrealistic bending of reality, elegies to animals loved and unloved. These magical realist poems and odes to nature and natural forces address the world we live
and much like her husband at war
This book provides a complete guide for any institution looking to build or maintain a cultural heritage web presence
but also projects the everlasting nature of Chinese art
by renowned Egyptologist Aidan Dodson
Sima Qian's writings have influenced the Chinese for over 2
The unity that was the empire's highest goal avoided collapse back into the original chaos of nondistinction only by preserving within itself the very divisions on the basis of family or region that it claimed to transcend
arguing that there is no chasm between Foucault's archaeological writings and his genealogies
In this collection of short stories
Cuban Intersections of Literary and Urban Spaces examines Havana as a center where urban and literary spaces often come together
The Disturbing Charm (1919) is a romance novel by Berta Ruck
Is there a philosophically sophisticated way to claim that the survival of consciousness after physical death is not only possible but likely
re-presenting his project in terms of an emerging body of understanding