Almost Completely Baxter

Almost Completely Baxter
Author: Glen Baxter
Publisher: New York Review of Books
Total Pages: 161
Release: 2016-05-24
Genre: Humor
ISBN: 1590179854

Over four decades and a multitude of books, “Colonel” Glen Baxter has built a world and a language all his own—slightly familiar, decidedly abnormal, irresistibly funny. Have you felt the terror of a failed Szechuan dinner? Have you seen what happens at precisely 6:15? Do you know where the beards are stored? Either way, this is the book for you. Baxter’s drawings are a delicious stew of pulp adventure novels, highbrow hjinks, and outright absurdity: lonesome cowboys confront the latest in modern art, brave men tremble before moussaka, schoolgirls hoard hashish, and the world’s fruits are in constant peril. Wimples abound. This new selection of Baxter’s work brings together highlights from the full sweep of his long career, and is sure to enchant both confirmed Baxterians and those in dire need of an introduction. This NYRC edition is a hardcover with printed endpapers, debossed cover design, and extra-thick paper.

100 Years of Fashion Illustration

100 Years of Fashion Illustration
Author: Cally Blackman
Publisher: Laurence King Publishing
Total Pages: 398
Release: 2007-04-19
Genre: Design
ISBN: 9781856694629

Suitable for art and fashion professionals, this book offers an overview of the development of fashion.

The New Yorker

The New Yorker
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 556
Release: 2004
Genre: American wit and humor, Pictorial
ISBN:

Loomings Over the Suet

Loomings Over the Suet
Author: Glen Baxter
Publisher: Bloomsbury Press
Total Pages: 188
Release: 2004
Genre: English wit and humor
ISBN: 9780747575245

Flickering shadows snake eerily over Eric Huntley as he struggles to regain possession of the forbidden whisk. The bursar watches all this from the relative safety of his lair high above the pump room. Towering columns of suet are swaying in the background, yet Mrs Hambleton pays them no heed. She continues to pound the edge of Eric's neck with a renewed vigour. Outside, the first flecks of snow are falling on the charred remains of the flagpole as Janet nervously skirts the perimeter fence. Spring has returned once again to the Cotswolds.

Cult Fiction

Cult Fiction
Author: Paul Gravett
Publisher: Hayward Gallery Publishing
Total Pages: 98
Release: 2007
Genre: Art
ISBN:

Published to accompany the Hayward Gallery Touring Exhibition, held at New Art Gallery, Wallsall, 4 May - 1 July 2007, Nottingham Castle, 14 July - 16 September 2007, Leeds City Art Gallery, 21 September - 11 November 2007, Aberystwyth Art Gallery, 17 November 2007 - 13 January 2008 and Tullie House, Carlisle, 19 January - 16 March 2008.

Freed Slaves and Roman Imperial Culture

Freed Slaves and Roman Imperial Culture
Author: Rose MacLean
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 222
Release: 2018-05-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 1108631835

During the transition from Republic to Empire, the Roman aristocracy adapted traditional values to accommodate the advent of monarchy. Freed Slaves and Roman Imperial Culture examines the ways in which members of the elite appropriated strategies from freed slaves to negotiate their relationship to the princeps and to redefine measures of individual progress. Primarily through the medium of inscribed burial monuments, Roman freedmen entered a broader conversation about power, honor, virtue, memory, and the nature of the human life course. Through this process, former slaves exerted a profound influence on the transformation of aristocratic values at a critical moment in Roman history.

Constructing Autocracy

Constructing Autocracy
Author: Matthew B. Roller
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 331
Release: 2016-05-31
Genre: History
ISBN: 0691171416

Rome's transition from a republican system of government to an imperial regime comprised more than a century of civil upheaval and rapid institutional change. Yet the establishment of a ruling dynasty, centered around a single leader, came as a cultural and political shock to Rome's aristocracy, who had shared power in the previous political order. How did the imperial regime manage to establish itself and how did the Roman elites from the time of Julius Caesar to Nero make sense of it? In this compelling book, Matthew Roller reveals a "dialogical" process at work, in which writers and philosophers vigorously negotiated and contested the nature and scope of the emperor’s authority, despite the consensus that he was the ultimate authority figure in Roman society. Roller seeks evidence for this "thinking out" of the new order in a wide range of republican and imperial authors, with an emphasis on Lucan and Seneca the Younger. He shows how elites assessed the impact of the imperial system on traditional aristocratic ethics and examines how several longstanding authority relationships in Roman society--those of master to slave, father to son, and gift-creditor to gift-debtor--became competing models for how the emperor did or should relate to his aristocratic subjects. By revealing this ideological activity to be not merely reactive but also constitutive of the new order, Roller contributes to ongoing debates about the character of the Roman imperial system and about the "politics" of literature.