Study Of Omens


Download Study Of Omens PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Study Of Omens book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

Study of Omens


Study of Omens

Author: Dr. Bhojraj Dwivedi

language: en

Publisher: Diamond Pocket Books (P) Ltd.

Release Date:


DOWNLOAD





Religions of the Ancient World


Religions of the Ancient World

Author: Sarah Iles Johnston

language: en

Publisher: Harvard University Press

Release Date: 2004-11-30


DOWNLOAD





This groundbreaking, first basic reference work on ancient religious beliefs collects and organizes available information on ten ancient cultures and traditions, including Greece, Rome, and Mesopotamia, and offers an expansive, comparative perspective on each one.

Omens of Adversity


Omens of Adversity

Author: David Scott

language: en

Publisher: Duke University Press

Release Date: 2013-12-18


DOWNLOAD





Omens of Adversity is a profound critique of the experience of postcolonial, postsocialist temporality. The case study at its core is the demise of the Grenada Revolution (1979–1983), and the repercussions of its collapse. In the Anglophone Caribbean, the Grenada Revolution represented both the possibility of a break from colonial and neocolonial oppression, and hope for egalitarian change and social and political justice. The Revolution's collapse in 1983 was devastating to a revolutionary generation. In hindsight, its demise signaled the end of an era of revolutionary socialist possibility. Omens of Adversity is not a history of the Revolution or its fallout. Instead, by examining related texts and phenomena, David Scott engages with broader, enduring issues of political action and tragedy, generations and memory, liberalism and transitional justice, and the possibility of forgiveness. Ultimately, Scott argues that the palpable sense of the neoliberal present as time stalled, without hope for emancipatory futures, has had far-reaching effects on how we think about the nature of political action and justice.