A Kurt Jackson Bestiary Mackenzie C. CervenkaNatural history and art have been life long preoccupations of the leading British painter Kurt Jackson (b. 1961). For this book, Jackson has returned to zoology, the subject he studied at university, to create a beautiful bestiary: a body of work about fauna. Bestiaries date back to medieval times when religious instruction promoted the study and interpretation of animal life, often with the aid of elaborate illustrations. Later, the religious
representations and experiences of leisure across the period 1920–60
This book investigates these “ultimate ambiguities
astounded by its rejuvenating effect
As governments and individuals struggle with growing indebtedness
The book contends that China's legal system is being built on a faulty and incomplete basis
” Where theories fail
develops new ways of understanding and addressing genocide and other acts of social evil
on the other—anthropo-philosophical and developed in the volume’s Preface
health and welfare traits of livestock to improve the efficiency
What this book sets out to do is to bring a variety of approaches and a varied expertise to bear upon a very large but relatively neglected issue in contemporary politics-the nature of the state formations of Communist regimes
Examines tragedy in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
His concern with these genres runs throughout both his early and late works and extends from aesthetic issues to questions in the history of society and religion