51 - 60 of 83 results

TURBULENT, SEDITIOUS AND FACTIOUS PEOPLE

Book number: 93505 Product format: Paperback Author: CHRISTOPHER HILL

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£5.00


Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress is one of the great classics of English Literature, arising out of the Puritan religion that was at the heart of England's Civil War and Oliver Cromwell's Commonwealth. Christopher Hill was a leading historian of the 17th century and this biography of Bunyan aims to "set Bunyan against the history of his own turbulent times". Bunyan joined Cromwell's Parliamentary army in 1644 and was discharged in 1647. The following years led to his conversion and are described in his autobiographical account Grace Abounding. Bunyan was well-versed in the Bible but had a strong sense of his own sin, and came to oppose the popular movements led by Ranters and Quakers because they did not give him assurance of salvation. For Bunyan, conversion was not a once and for all event but had constantly to be renewed, and the story of the Pilgrim's Progress is one in which the hero, Christian, has to overcome recurring temptations and soldier on in spite of the ravages of Despair. In common with most Puritans, Bunyan regarded preaching as the chief means of salvation, and his work as a popular preacher led in 1660 to his being imprisoned for 12 years for seditious activity. His wife and five children struggled to support themselves, and prison conditions were often harsh, but he was able to receive visitors and also to write Part I of The Pilgrim's Progress. At the Palace Beautiful, signifying the congregation of the faithful, the pilgrim is given a sword and armour, and this reflects the liberation experienced by the New Model Army, where ordinary working people like Bunyan were supplied with arms. A fascinating study combining history, theology and literary analysis. 394pp, paperback, footnotes.

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Author CHRISTOPHER HILL
Product Format Paperback
ISBN 9781784786861
Published Price £14.99

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VANGUARD OF THE REVOLUTION

Book number: 93506 Product format: Hardback Author: A. JAMES MCADAMS

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£8.00


The communist manifesto of 1848 outlined the beginnings of an idea that was to change world history. Although Marx's "spectre haunting Europe" was a revolutionary spirit which is irresistible because it represents the mobilisation of the workers, the manifesto was an ideological document, not a programme for practical action. Yet the history of Communism is one of repression and brutality. This fascinating global study seeks to balance the two driving forces of theory and practice that made Communism a global phenomenon, and finally examines how the party idea degenerated into a tool for personal despotism in the twentieth century. By 1902, as the movement emerged from the 19th century disturbances such as the Paris Commune, Lenin took the lead in creating a centralised body of disciplined professionals to awaken the slumbering proletariat. Bolsheviks and Mensheviks fought for power, with an important staging point being the 1919 Third Comintern, and on Lenin's death in 1924 the dominant ideology was openly named Leninism as Joseph Stalin was designated the new Secretary of the Russian Communist Party. By 1927 Mao Zedong was calling for a different kind of revolution in China, focusing his Hunan Report on the prospect of a peasant uprising, rather than the top-down elitist revolution of Marx and Lenin. In 1943 Stalin dissolved the Comintern, opening the way for unchallenged brutality, and Mao moved towards the bonfires of the Cultural Revolution. Following Stalin's death in 1953, Khrushchev led a plot against his henchman Beria and emerged as a leader who ruled by humiliating his colleagues. Finally the glasnost of Gorbachev briefly opened up the party. In spite of the eastern European modifications of the 1970s, and China's attempt at legitimation in the eighties, the idea of an enlightened Communism started to decline in Russia, China, Cuba, north Korea, Vietnam and Laos. 564pp, photos.

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Author A. JAMES MCADAMS
Product Format Hardback
ISBN 9780691168944
Published Price £30

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BRITISH MUSEUM BUDDHA

Book number: 93376 Product format: Hardback Author: DELIA PEMBERTON

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£2.75


The Egyptologist and lecturer for the British Museum and Victoria & Albert Museum Delia Pemberton has created a beautiful book on the treasures, wisdom and spirituality of Buddhism. Through carefully selected words and pictures she presents the fascinating events of his life, a summary of his teachings, the Cosmic Buddhas, paradise, the afterlife, and the future. Long popular among Western art lovers and collectors, these objects include lacquered wood figures from Japan, painted textiles from Tibet, a Buddhist Stupa in India, a limestone drum slab, gold reliquary set with garnets, huge statues, silk paintings and panels, a huge monk statue in the Prayer Hall in Rangoon, illuminated manuscripts, bronze figures from Java and stones inscribed with Buddhist mantras in Dharamsala, India. 'In the Pure Land, all material needs are met and conditions are perfect for receiving the Dharma teachings continually provided by the presiding Buddha. Those beings fortunate enough to be reborn into a Pure Land are thus guaranteed to attain Enlightenment in the future.' 47 colour illustrations, 96pp.

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Author DELIA PEMBERTON
Product Format Hardback
ISBN 9781588860309
Published Price $15.95

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HOW I BECAME A SOCIALIST

Book number: 93395 Product format: Paperback Author: WILLIAM MORRIS

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£3.50


Designer, poet and artist as well as the author of the utopian novel 'News from Nowhere', William Morris (1834-1896) was one of the most original and inspiring socialist intellectuals of his generation. This collection, the first of his political writings to be published for nearly 50 years, reproduces essays and lectures. Morris examines the relationship between art and politics, the possibilities for a socialist society, and the crimes of empire among other subjects, and his writings demonstrate his profound commitment to 19th-century socialism. Other chapters include The Housing of the Poor, Philanthropists, Ireland and Italy: A Warning, Whigs, Democrats and Socialists, Why We Celebrate a Commune of Paris, and Correspondence on Communism and Anarchism among them. Morris was a reader of Marx and a friend of Engels and given how much the Arts and Crafts movement from which Morris emerged developed a reputation for the 'simple life', it is bracing to read Morris on what he regards as 'simplicity'. 'Well, but this demand of the extinction of asceticism bears with it another demand: for the extinction of luxury. Does that seem a paradox to you? It ought not to do so. What brings about luxury but a sickly discontent with the simple joys of the lovely earth?' 215pp, paperback.

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Author WILLIAM MORRIS
Product Format Paperback
ISBN 9781788736916
Published Price £11.99

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NONCONFORMIST REVOLUTION: Religious Dissent,

Book number: 93405 Product format: Hardback Author: AMANDA J. THOMAS

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£7.50


Thomas explored why so many of the greatest thinkers were Nonconformists and the rise of the rejection of orthodox religion and the rise in literacy and role of women in spreading reading are the subjects of her book. She explores the evolution of dissenting thought and how Nonconformity shaped the transformation of England from a rural to an urban, industrialised society. The foundations for the Industrial Revolution were in place from the late Middle Ages when the early development of manufacturing processes and changes in the structure of rural communities began to provide opportunities for economic and social advancement. Successive waves of Huguenot migrants and the influence of Northern European religious ideology also played an important role in this process. The Civil Wars provided a catalyst for the dissemination of new ideas and helped shape the emergence of a new English Protestantism and divergent dissident sects. The persecution which followed strengthened the Nonconformist cause, and for the early Quakers it intensified their unity and resilience, qualities which would prove to be invaluable for business. In the years following the Restoration, Nonconformist ideas fuelled enlightened thought creating an environment for enterprise but also a desire for more radical change. Reformers seized on the plight of a working poor alienated by innovation and frustrated by false promises, the vision which was at first the spark for innovation would ignite revolution. B/w illus. 280 pages.

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Author AMANDA J. THOMAS
Product Format Hardback
ISBN 9781473875678
Published Price £25

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STATE AND REVOLUTION

Book number: 93423 Product format: Paperback Author: VLADIMIR LENIN

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£3.50


Widely considered to be one of his most important works, Lenin's State and Revolution was written in August and September 1917 in Finland, while hiding from Russia's Provisional Government which had put out warrants for his arrest. The charge against him was complicity in the abortive Bolshevik July coup that aimed at seizing power in Petrograd and the rest of post-Tsarist Russia. The literary style is rambling as Lenin exhorts an invisible audience, piling quotation on quotation from Marx and Engels as if the two founders of 'scientific socialism' were the ultimate authorities on every subject. The book's impulse lies in Lenin's boundless political ambition, namely his craving to acquire absolute power in Russia in order to instigate a worldwide revolution. He found support for his position in a remark made by Marx in 1871, following the episode of the Paris commune. The theory was to create a popular civic authority that in Russia's case would be the so-called 'Soviets', councils of workers, peasants and soldiers. And of course Lenin became Russia's dictator and would completely subvert the existing political system with a one-party regime that in time would pay no heed to the wishes of the population. The state would become an obedient instrument of the party, as the party would turn into an obedient instrument of itself-appointed leaders. From the years immediately preceding his death in 1924, his writings are filled with complaints about the size and procrastinations of the Soviet bureaucratic apparatus, which he was incapable of either reducing or restraining. With a new introduction by Richard Pipes, 130pp, paperback.

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Author VLADIMIR LENIN
Product Format Paperback
ISBN 9781596980808
Published Price £13.99

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CATHEDRAL BUILDERS OF THE MIDDLE AGES

Book number: 93694 Product format: Paperback Author: ALAIN ERLANDE-BRANDENBURG

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When cathedrals were bright with paint... colonnettes, gables, pinnacles and statues were rich in colour. Red, blue and yellow helped the viewer to identify the holy figures and to decipher the great book of stone. The largest medieval drawing in existence, measuring more than four metres in height, provides exceptional evidence for this. Dating from c.1360-65, it represents the central part of the façade of Strasbourg Cathedral. Even now the great cathedrals of the Middle Ages overwhelm by their imagination, technical daring and sheer scale. How could such structures be built when cities had only a few thousand inhabitants, and only the most primitive machinery was available? Who initiated them? Who designed them? Who paid for them? All around the world but especially in Italy and in Gaul, each Christian community was driven by a spirit of rivalry to have a more glorious church than the others. Gothic and Romanesque building sites are shown in detail in manuscript illumination. As the Medieval town grew, buildings turned from wood to stone and grew ever higher. Patrons sought master masons, intellectuals became administrators, artists and architects established their independence and rights. Discover tracings on stone such as in the sacristy of the Roslin Chapel in Scotland where construction began in 1450, remarkable drawings from workshops, organised guilds, the octagon of Ely Cathedral 1322 and how metal became an essential material. Fully documented and splendidly illustrated throughout in colour, 176pp, paperback.

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Author ALAIN ERLANDE-BRANDENBURG
Product Format Paperback
ISBN 9780500300527
Published Price £7.95

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ART OF RHETORIC

Book number: 94121 Product format: Paperback Author: ARISTOTLE

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The Ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle had a huge influence on the development of Western philosophy. Born in northern Greece in 384BCE, his father was the physician to the King of Macedonia, and although much of his early life remains a mystery, we know that he went to Athens when he was 17 to study in Plato's Academy where he spent more than two decades under his tutelage. He left the peaceful environment of Assos after a request from King Philip II of Macedon to tutor his son Alexander, later better known as Alexander the Great. When this task came to an end, Aristotle returned to Athens and created his own institution of learning, the Lyceum, where he encouraged his students not only in philosophy but in astronomy, biology, mathematics, medicine, music and rhetoric, and it was there he gave regular lectures and wrote many treatises including Nicomachean Ethics and this book. Public speaking was a critical skill in Ancient Greece whether for politicians or ordinary citizens putting forward their case in courts of law. Aristotle set out to create a guide to help students argue persuasively and at the same time it is a comprehensive study of human emotions and character with rhetoric one of the three branches of philosophy along with logic and dialectic. Brilliantly explained and carefully reasoned, Aristotle created essential guidelines for argument and a prose style that would influence writers for more than two millennia. 252pp in new full price paperback.

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Author ARISTOTLE
Product Format Paperback
ISBN 9781838575670

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ART OF WORLDLY WISDOM

Book number: 94122 Product format: Paperback Author: BALTASAR GRACIAN

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£6.00


Sub-titled 'Classic Advice on How to Live Well' the book was written by the 17th century Spanish Jesuit scholar Baltasar Gracián and is considered a classic text for those seeking a philosophy for life. The 300 maxims with accompanying commentary provide a world view that encourages ethical behaviour when seeking worldly success. It covers luck, never exaggerating, know how to withdraw, know your strongest point, thinking things over, keeping the imagination under control, know how to take a hint, vary the mode of action, cultivate those who can teach you, fortune and fame, character and intellect and more. This Jospeh Jacobs translation has used the text of the first Madrid edition of 1653, the earliest in the British Museum with the Schopenhauer version by the translator's side. 'I have endeavoured to reproduce Gracián's laconism and cultismo in my version, and even tried to retain as many paronomasias and jingles of similar sound.' And wherever possible he has replaced Spanish proverbs with English ones. He advises to dip into up to 50 maxims a day for everyday insight. 128pp, new full price paperback.

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Author BALTASAR GRACIAN
Product Format Paperback
ISBN 9781398827707

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ARISTOTLE: From Antiquity to The Modern Era

Book number: 93893 Product format: Hardback Author: BARBARA SCALVINI, M. J. GROSS

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£12.00


Aristotle towers over Western philosophy and science and as they have come down to us, his works comprise a veritable encyclopaedia of philosophy and invented the field of formal logic, the physical and natural sciences, ethics and politics. He created a basis for a great deal of today's scientific knowledge, such as the classification of organisms and objects. Although he has been studied continuously for more than 2000 years, his individual works were dispersed, lost, recovered, and very gradually reunited. The physical transmission of the Aristotelian corpus was a long, complicated, uncoordinated process. From the Roman Empire, through the mediation of Arab and Jewish scholars, to the western Middle Ages and scholasticism and up to the cusp of modernity in the late 15th century, Aristotle's works were copied and recopied by scribes in Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, and Latin before finally becoming available again in their original Greek. The volume focuses on one crucial, extended moment when, thanks to the invention of printing, Aristotle's works became widely available in Latin, Greek, and even in vernacular languages in the late 15th and 16th centuries. At that moment, Aristotle's authority comes under increasing scrutiny as the new science and philosophy of early modern Europe chart different courses for the future. The extraordinary books and manuscripts in this volume, selected from the collection of the Martin J. Gross Foundation, demonstrate just how intellectuals have received and wrestled with Aristotle. Through commentaries, treatises, lecture courses in schools, and above all in the written marginalia of books, the volume reveals the extent of the age's engagement with Aristotle. Many of these books and manuscripts have never before been studied and many colour images show them in their magnificence. Colour plates, 20.96 x 28.58cm, 128 pages.

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Author BARBARA SCALVINI, M. J. GROSS
Product Format Hardback
ISBN 9781911282754
Published Price £30

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51 - 60 of 83 results