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"Champions of Collingwoodis the ultimate collection of the best players ever to have pulled on the black-and-white jumper. With over 600 stunning photographs, many of them never before published, as well as rare archival material, the book is a magnificent celebration of the club's 125th anniversary, and a must-have item for every Magpies fan. Early legends and larrikins sit side by side with current-day characters and champions in a full-colour book to savour and treasure- the definitive portrait of the players whose blood, sweat and tears made Collingwood the most famous sporting club in Australia. Champions of Collingwoodfeatures the very best of the more than 1200 men who have played senior football for the Magpies since 1892. From heroes such as Bob Rose, Nathan Buckley, the Coventrys and the Shaws to fan favourites Peter Daicos, Dane Swan, Darren Millane and Scott Pendlebury, these are the champions who have shaped football's greatest club."
Not what the Americans call soccer, nor what the Brits call football: Australian Rules footy holds a fascination for most Aussies that few outsiders can understand. But nothing compares to the Greek tragedy of being a Collingwood supporter - those unfortunate souls bound by love and duty to the Collingwood Magpies AFL Team. From the age of seven, James Gilchrist was consumed by one of the most dangerous and masochistic addictions known to humanity. More self-destructive than smoking, drinking or methamphetamines: Collingwood. Tortured Tales of Collingwood Tragic is the story of one boy’s struggle to become a man despite the pain of drawn Grand-Finals, boundary-line incidents, the schoolyard taunts of Carlton-loving scumbags and even the awkwardness of coming to terms with his own fellow supporters. This updated third edition culminates in the gripping climax of the 2023 Grand Final. Could redemption - for James, and for his beloved Magpies - be possible?
Admiral Lord Collingwood, the eldest son of a Newcastle merchant, went to sea in 1761 at the age of thirteen. In his nearly fifty years in the Navy he rose to become a fine seaman, a master of gunnery, a battle commander the equal of his friend – and rival in love – Nelson. He was also an accomplished writer and wit, a doting father, inveterate gossip and consummate diplomat and strategist. Collingwood's service took him to Boston, where he lived and fought during the American War of Independence; to Antigua, where he and Nelson both fell in love with Mary Moutray; to Corsica; Sicily; and Menorca, where he began as a young midshipman and ended his career as the effective viceroy of the Mediterranean. ADMIRAL COLLINGWOOD is an intimate portrait of a forgotten British naval hero and a thrilling portrait of the glory years of the age of sail.
Giuseppina D'Oro explores Collingwood's work in epistemology and metaphysics, uncovering his importance beyond his better known work in philosophy of history and aesthetics. This major contribution to our understanding of one of the most important figures in history of philosophy will be essential reading for scholars of Collingwood and all students of metaphysics and the history of philosophy.
I do not think of aesthetic theory as an attempt to investigate and expound eternal verities concerning the nature of an eternal object called Art, but as an attempt to reach, by thinking, the solution of certain problems arising out of the situation in which artists find themselves here and now. Everything written in this book has been written in the belief that it has a practical bearing, direct or indirect, upon the condition of art in England in 1937, and in the hope that artists primarily, and secondarily persons whose interest in art is lively and sympathetic, will find it of some use to them. Hardly any space is devoted to criticizing other people’s aesthetic doctrines; not because ...
Why should modern philosophers read the works of R. G. Collingwood? His ideas are often thought difficult to locate in the main lines of development taken by twentieth-century philosophy. Some have read Collingwood as anticipating the later Wittgenstein, others have concentrated exclusively on the internal coherence of his thought. This work aims to introduce Collingwood to contemporary students of philosophy through direct engagement with his arguments. It is a conversation with Collingwood that takes as its subject matter the topics that interested him 'philosophy and method, philosophy of mind, language and logic, the historical imagination, art and expression, action, metaphysics and life' and which still preoccupy us today. --the first introductory book on this major modern philosopher --includes critical investigation of his thought --there is no similar work available
"With 'The nature of metaphysical study'; 'Function of metaphysics in civilizsation'; 'Notes for an Essay on logic.'"
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