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A university student with a bright future, Andy Heaton's life is changed forever when he is chosen to be the latest recruit at Blackbird, a secret government organisation operating under the noses of MI6. After being subjected to the latest in mind manipulation techniques, Andy is deployed to the USA, assuming a new identity in a new life, but his old life soon catches up with him in the shape of his former crush. Can she help Andy remember his old self, or will the power of Blackbird be too much even for love?
In his 1978 book Nelson Goodman coined the term “worldmaking.” The new-materialistic approach to the potential for meaning of extra-human materiality and its multidimensional entanglements and the intraconnectedness shifts the concept of world-making into new perspectives of interpretation. In the categories of Karen Barad’s “agential realism,” it applies to practices of knowledge production and to a diffractive (re)configuration of the world’s matter and its meaning. “World-making” gains a further specific expression in Donna Haraway’s concept of “worlding” which shows the intraactive entanglement of matter, substance, meaning, storytelling and thinking on the fundamental level of the polysemic linguistic tissue itself.
Broad-ranging and pluralistically investigative, the essays in Thinking with the Poem document Rachel Blau DuPlessis’s authorial interventions as a poet, scholar, and cultural critic steeped in the linguistic and political frames of her time. The writers included in this volume engage root-level questions at the heart of DuPlessis’s praxis as posed by her in a recent essay: “What is a poem, what is a poet, what is an oeuvre, what is the ‘poetic’?” Inventive and noncanonical, these essays offer substantive responses to these and other questions, providing new routes of inquiry into the poetry and poetics of this preeminent figure of new writing.
Sherry Bevins Darrell, professor emerita of English and director of humanities at the University of Southern Indiana, offers a powerful collection of poems. Darrell's work is influenced by many facets of her life, including her roundup on her cousins' ranch (pictured on the cover), striking landscapes, literature she taught, and people she loves.
The Routledge Companion to Ecopoetics offers comprehensive coverage of the vital and growing movement of ecopoetics. This volume begins with a general introduction to the field, followed by six sections: Perspectives: broad overviews engaging fields such as biosemiosis, kinship praxis, and philosophical approaches Experiments: formal innovations developed by poets in response to planetary crises Earth and Water: explorations of poetic entanglement with planetary chemical and biological systems Waste/Toxicity/Precarity: poetics addressing the effects of pollution and climate change Environmental Justice and Activism: examinations of poetry as an engine of political and cultural change Region ...
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New adventures for Erimem, former companion of Doctor Who. From her new home in 21st Century London, Erimem is keen to explore the universe now that she has acquired technology that can transport she and her friends through space and time. Curiosity drives them to explore the past, the future and far off distant worlds, discovering new friends and new dangers everywhere they go... INTO THE UNKNOWN. A collection of short stories by a mixture of experienced and first-time authors including Jim Mortimore, Ian Farrington, Claire Bartlett, Kaitlin Moore, Iain McLaughlin and Julianne Todd.
This book is the official Journal of the Indiana Conference Proceedings of the Fourth Annual Session held in Indianapolis, Ind., June 7-9, 2012.
John Hale was born in 1754 in Bedford County, Virginia. He served as a soldier in the Revolutionary War. He married Mary Hail 17 August 1793 in Wythe County, Virginia. They had two known children, John T. Hale and Thomas Hale. He died 4 March 1838 in Bledsoe County, Tennessee. Descendants lived in Tennessee, Texas, Alabama, Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma and elsewhere.