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"This book describes the legal and ethical issues surrounding plagiarism, the tools and techniques available to combat the spreading of this problem, and real-life situational examples to further the understanding of the scholars, practitioners, educators, and instructional designers who will find this book an invaluable resource"--Provided by publisher
In Nazi Germany, young Manfred is hardly aware of the influence that draws him into the existing political system. After the War he changes his name and builds up a new career, starting a family, first in the States, later in Britain. While his friends and family have no idea of his activities during the War, his daughter Nora and his grandson Andrew, being interested in recent history, begin to suspect their (grand-) father's dark secret. How far does moral responsibility go? Can really heavy guilt ever be expiated in Dostoyevsky's sense or is there no hope for atonement by later generations? Is it ever too late to learn fundamental lessons from political developments?
The nightmare started, when Hollywood’s leading man R.B. “Arbee” Washington is accused of murdering his publicist and her lover. Although he was found ‘not guilty’ in the initial criminal trial, he lost the subsequent civil case. Rather than accepting the court-imposed penalties, he skipped bail and fled to the Bahamas to visit his hidden money in off-shore banks. Retired Los Angeles police detective Larry Porter picked up the fugitive’s scent after his former partner, still on active duty with the LAPD, provided him with confidential details of the police and INTERPOL investigation. A riveting cat-and-mouse-game leads the two adversaries from the underground world of Soho to their Mafia connections in the Turks and Caicos Islands, and to a mysterious monastery on a mountain-top in the Caribbean. When one of the off-shore bankers robbed and nearly killed Arbee’s partner-incrime and lover Joe-Joe, the actor decides it was time to go on the offensive. After a killing-spree that eliminated most of the people who knew his identity, Arbee decides to remain in the islands and start a new life under an assumed name. But he did not count on Detective Parker’s tenacity ...
Set during the summer of 1941, this is the story of a conspiracy hatched by a cabal of German officers and their American supporters to secretly infect Adolf Hitler with a virus that will render the Nazi dictator comatose for a crucial period of weeks.
At the notorious Buchenwald concentration camp, communist prisoners organized resistance against the SS and even planned an uprising. They helped rescue a three-year-old Jewish boy, Stefan Jerzy Zweig, from certain death in the gas chambers. After the war, his story became a focus for the German Democratic Republic's celebration of its resistance to the Nazis. Now Bill Niven tells the true story of Stefan Zweig: what actually happened to him in Buchenwald, how he was protected, and at what price. He explores the (mis)representation of Zweig's rescue in East Germany and what this reveals about that country's understanding of its Nazi past. Finally he looks at the telling of the Zweig rescue story since German unification: a story told in the GDR to praise communists has become a story used to condemn them. Bill Niven is Professor of Contemporary German History at the Nottingham Trent University, UK.
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The first English-language biography of one of the great literary talents of the twentieth century, written by his award-winning translator"Bernofsky takes us into the heart of an artist's life/work struggles, brilliantly illuminating Walser's exquisite sensibility and uncompromising radical innovations, while deftly tracking how his life gradually came apart at the seams. A tragic and intimate portrait."--Amy Sillman "Robert Walser is the perfect pathetic poet: pithy, awkward, drinks too much, sibling rivalrous, ambitious, broke, and mentally ill. Was he proto queer or trans, this red headed writer who next to Gertrude Stein might be the most influential writer of our moment? Riveting and h...