You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Para se investigar e refletir sobre temas relacionados à educação escolar é preciso ter em mente, não apenas os determinantes históricos, sociais e demandas legais, mas, sobretudo, o devido e necessário tratamento dado a ela, antes, durante ou após a uma pandemia. Por isso, os autores da presente obra têm a intenção de trazer ideias interdisciplinares e questionamentos que estimulem o debate a respeito do ensino, da aprendizagem e das políticas educacionais. A obra é um convite ao pensamento reflexivo, holístico e contextual em torno da necessidade real de análise de aspectos da educação.
The second installment in Tavares's acclaimed "Kingdom" series.
The final installment in Gon'alo M. Tavares's "Kingdom" cycle to be translated into English, "Klaus Klump: A Man" is a harrowing portrait of a man without values, making his way through a world almost as immoral. Klaus takes care of the family business; he doesn't feel fear, hunger, or love. Klaus plays a game, and this game and its object consist of one thing: making money. No matter who you are, Klaus thinks, there is only one thing of importance: to win rather than lose.
Continuing Tavare's award-winning Kingdom series, Joseph Walser's machine recounts a life of bizarre habits and patterns. Routine humiliation at a factory; routine maintenance of the world's most esoteric collection; and the most important routine of all: the operation of a mysterious machine on the factory floor. Yet Joseph's life is violently disrupted when his city is occupied by an invading army, leaving him faced with poitical intrigues, marital discord, and finally, one last, catastrophic confrontation with his beloved machine. -- Cover.
The Poor (Os Pobres, 1906), by Portuguese author Raúl Brandão is a powerful tribute to the underclasses. Innovative thematically and stylistically, the novel consists of loosely connected vignettes on two narrative levels: the lives of prostitutes, where the inexorable need for love is transformed into a means for survival; and the life of Gebo, a seemingly slovenly man, with neither sentiment nor intelligence. Instead, as he searches tirelessly for work -- and loves his daughter and wife with tenderness and constancy -- he is revealed as a victim of the economic situation in Portugal. With prescience, Brandão emphasizes the interdependence between nature and humankind by intertwining descriptions of the physical and human surroundings, while his depictions of desperation, sorrow and violence prefigure the works of contemporary Portuguese writers.
Samuel Usque, an exile from the expulsion of the Jews from Spain and Portugal, offers an answer to the question, "Does suffering have any purpose?" Translated from the Portuguese with an Introduction by Martin A. Cohen.
"Mariano, who has lived in the city from an early age, is summoned back to his village to attend his grandfather's funeral. But when he arrives, he discovers two things: firstly, that he has been nominated by his grandfather to take over the running of the family affairs, secondly that his grandfather has not died completely, but is in that frontier space between life and death. In traditional belief, he has died 'badly', and something must happen in order for him to be laid to rest." "Mariano starts to receive letters supposedly written by his grandfather, telling him about the family. Through this strange relationship, he discovers the true secret of his own birth, while also cleansing his grandfather's conscience."--BOOK JACKET.