Inspiration Kantha: Creative Stitchery and Quilting with Asias Ancient Technique
Book
Kanthas, embroidered fabrics traditionally created by the women of northern India and Bangladesh,...
Yinka Shonibare MBE
Book
Born in London and raised in Nigeria, Shonibare employs a diverse range of media - from sculpture,...
Disaster and Crisis Management: Public Management Perspectives
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A wide range of natural hazards pose major risks to the lives and livelihoods of large populations...
Memory is Our Home: Loss and Remembering: Three Generations in Poland and Russia 1917-1960s
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"Memory is Our Home" is a powerful biographical memoir based on the diaries of Roma...
Paradoxes of Green: Landscapes of a City-State
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This innovative multidisciplinary study considers the concept of green from multiple...
Unpacking My Library: Artists and Their Books
Jo Steffens, Matthias Neumann and Marcel Proust
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Taking its inspiration from Walter Benjamin's seminal 1931 essay, the Unpacking My Library series...
Suswatibasu (1703 KP) rated Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind in Books
Nov 20, 2017 (Updated Nov 20, 2017)
What begins as a scientific exploration in to the separation or perhaps merging of the distinct human genuses ie. Homo Sapiens and Neanderthals, quickly becomes a political and social study. As a result, the book begins well but deteriorates as he moves away from a more analytical approach.
As the story moves towards times that we are more familiar with, it's not enough for the writer to tell us what happened, and perhaps share some of his pet theories on the sweep of history. Instead, we get increasingly speculative interpretations of what the author thinks are the big ideas in history. He takes no care to qualify these grand statements of opinion, but instead presents them as facts.
While I agree with his anthropological assertions surrounding religion as a method of homogenising populations and allowing flow of information, many reviews seem to be quite antagonistic towards this point of view and as a result there are definitely two camps of thoughts in regards to this book.
However, his whitewashing of colonialism and imperial rule is disparaging, literally explaining the benefits reaped by colonised countries from such destructive regimes, glossing over partition and genocide. Overall, I think that it is written well, but there are too many opinions and not enough evidence-based arguments.
Aeronautical Telecommunications Network: Advances, Challenges, and Modeling
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Addresses the Challenges of Modern-Day Air Traffic Air traffic control (ATC) directs aircraft in the...
The Brassica Napus Genome
Shengyi Liu, Rod Snowdon and Boulos Chalhoub
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This book describes how the genome sequence contributes to our understanding of allopolyploidisation...


