Artists Communities
|
|
Artists Communities $18.71 This book is in New – Excellent condition |
|
|
Art in the Lives of Immigrant Communities in the United States $22.95  Art in the Lives of Immigrant Communities in the United States is the first book to provide a comprehensive and lively analysis of the contributions of artists from America’s newest immigrant communities-Africa, the Middle East, China, India, Southeast Asia, Central America, and Mexico. Adding significantly to our understanding of both the arts and immigration, multidisciplinary scholars explore tensions that artists face in forging careers in a new world and navigating between their home communities and the larger society. |
|
|
Brand Communities $79.95 Brand Communities |
|
|
Wissensdynamik in Communities $59.95 Wissensdynamik in Communities |
|
|
Sustainable Communities $89.95 Sustainable Communities |

|
|
Artists Model a Beggar Photo Mugs James Turner a beggar aged 93 who made a lucrative living even posing as an artists model for Sir Joshua Reynolds a Nathaniel Hone at the rate of a shilling an hour….. |
|
|
Cheeky young graffiti artist – Manchester 1967 Photo Mugs A cheeky young boy turns away from his chalk scrawled grafitti on a boarded up window in Manchester. Photograph by Shirley Baker…. |
|
|
Children draw on pavement with chalk Photo Mugs A group of children sit on a pavement in Chortlon-on Medlock, manchester and draw on the paving slabs with white chalk. Photograph by Shirley Baker…. |
|
|
Amazing Grace: The Complete Recordings $12.18 This Rhino re-release of Amazing Grace is at least as much a work of love as of marketing. The sound is beefier and clearer, but most importantly, the two-day church sessions are included. So, there’s much more church (specifically, Reverend James Cleveland’s marvelous orating) on the record, as well as contemporaryisms such as a cool organ rendition of George Harrison’s “My Sweet Lord.” Originall… |
Katy Is One Of The Best Ten Artists With The Greatest-selling Debuts Of The Year
Katy Perry has cemented her position as a very best-promoting pop superstar with her third studio album Teenage Dream, which debuted at No. one on Billboard's Prime 200 Albums chart, scanning 192,222 models in its 1st week of release here's one of her song "Katy Perry Firework mp3 download".
Katy is now one of the top rated 10 artists with the very best-promoting debuts of the year and one of only two pop artists to look on this checklist. Teenage Dream is the two-time Grammy Award nominee's highest album chart bow still. Katy's previous album, A person of the Boys, scanned 46,767 models in its 1st week.
Katy goes back to her household roots in the song California Gurls. The track was the 1st single launched off of Teenage Dream, and thanks to a flawlessly timed release grew to become a shoe-in for 2010's summer anthem. The song is catchy and infectious, but like most of Perry's top rated hits, nothing at all musically skillful or out of the ordinary. Snoop Dogg's guest vocals are toned down to the playful PG rating the pop star's music is identified for. Dogg's most raunchy lyrics are people of "squeezing buns," far from his necessary parental advisory label found on "seo forum". With no the airwaves continually playing the song, it may never have witnessed the time of day from several of its current listeners.
The New York Post declares Teenage Dream "a total success" that "may have the juice to topple Michael Jackson's Negative as the U.S. document holder for most singles launched from one album."
Perry described her music by stating, "Somebody variety of penned it for me the other day, and I've been employing it at any time considering that." According to her, she has "adjusted a good deal among the ages of 15 to 23." Her 1st album dwells on Gospel music that you can found on "Micro Niche Finder". She relevant that her standpoint in music was "a bit enclosed and really strict", and anything she did was church-relevant.Her second album, A person of the Boys, is described as "secular" and "rock," and reflects a departure from her religious musical roots. Perry expects to document far more pop songs for her following album.
|
|
''They imprison the whole population'': U.S. and South African prison literature and the emergence of symbiotic carcerality, 1900--present. $49.99 This dissertation is motivated by the following question: what spatial formation structures the living spaces poor Black people reside in and what effect does it have on their subjectivity? "They imprison the whole population" is a transnational comparative study of the "prisonization" of poor Black communities in the United States and South Africa from the dawn of the twentieth century to present. It seeks to understand the ways prisons affect society beyond focusing on rising incarceration rates. I argue that poor Blacks live under what I call symbiotic carcerality: prison techniques and spatial forms deployed across Black living space. I focus on how people are shaped by the carceral environment in which they live. To illustrate its impact, I examine how gender performance, physical health, body shape, aesthetics, diet, housing, mobility, and citizenship are formed and circumscribed by the symbiont circle between carceral space and the living space of poor Blacks.;I write at the convergence of what Black prison intellectual Assata Shakur called the "minimum security prison on the streets", Michel Foucault's notion of the "carceral", and what human geographers McKittrick and Wood's term "Black geographies". Academic work in Black masculine studies (gender studies), critical prison studies, Marxism, Black cultural studies, and comparative studies of race and ethnicity has contributed much to my theoretical framework, and to the mix of humanities and social science methods I use. My research has uncovered a powerful yet submerged tradition in Black American and Black South African literature that meditates on the ubiquity of prison punishment in the lives of "free" people. Its primary source is the writings of Black prisoners. Through stories, memoirs, poetry, social commentary, and letters, they articulate the entrenchment of carceral punishment in poor Black communities. Black literary artists, activists, and scholars also contribute to theorizing carceral space. |
|
|
''They imprison the whole population'': U.S. and South African prison literature and the emergence of symbiotic carcerality, 1900--present. $49.99 This dissertation is motivated by the following question: what spatial formation structures the living spaces poor Black people reside in and what effect does it have on their subjectivity? "They imprison the whole population" is a transnational comparative study of the "prisonization" of poor Black communities in the United States and South Africa from the dawn of the twentieth century to present. It seeks to understand the ways prisons affect society beyond focusing on rising incarceration rates. I argue that poor Blacks live under what I call symbiotic carcerality: prison techniques and spatial forms deployed across Black living space. I focus on how people are shaped by the carceral environment in which they live. To illustrate its impact, I examine how gender performance, physical health, body shape, aesthetics, diet, housing, mobility, and citizenship are formed and circumscribed by the symbiont circle between carceral space and the living space of poor Blacks.;I write at the convergence of what Black prison intellectual Assata Shakur called the "minimum security prison on the streets", Michel Foucault's notion of the "carceral", and what human geographers McKittrick and Wood's term "Black geographies". Academic work in Black masculine studies (gender studies), critical prison studies, Marxism, Black cultural studies, and comparative studies of race and ethnicity has contributed much to my theoretical framework, and to the mix of humanities and social science methods I use. My research has uncovered a powerful yet submerged tradition in Black American and Black South African literature that meditates on the ubiquity of prison punishment in the lives of "free" people. Its primary source is the writings of Black prisoners. Through stories, memoirs, poetry, social commentary, and letters, they articulate the entrenchment of carceral punishment in poor Black communities. Black literary artists, activists, and scholars also contribute to theorizing carceral space. |
