Reclaiming Eden

Reclaiming Eden
Author: David S.-K. Ting
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 305
Release: 2024-06-07
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1040086500

Life on Earth is both challenging and beautiful. Reclaiming Eden is about responsible living, engineering and architectures, aiming to mitigate environmental deterioration by reclaiming land around the world to an ecologically sustainable stage. These endeavors will enable us to pass forward a beautiful tomorrow for our grandchildren in the long run, and our children and ourselves in the immediate future. Eco-friendliness is key, and this includes waste reduction, sustainable development, furthering renewables, nature and biomimicry, and coral reef restoration. This book stands as a latest update on these fronts in beautifying tomorrow.

Reclaiming Eden

Reclaiming Eden
Author: Jennifer Dean-Hill
Publisher:
Total Pages: 242
Release: 2020-08-31
Genre:
ISBN: 9781949021905

When men and women lead and live collaboratively, it accurately represents God's heart and harkens back to those perfect garden days before the fall, before the introduction of fear, death, and gender division. In Reclaiming Eden, Dr. Jennifer Dean-Hill offers revolutionary concepts on how to address the lack of gender parity in many US churches, while addressing the negative impact on modern marriages. She provides practical steps for couples and churches longing for relationships and communities in which: - inclusivity is instinctual and natural - equity is established, and - good character produces unity By cleaning out the old beliefs and practices-and by creating a new way of operating-Jennifer believes we can achieve a new and improved, complete version of ourselves as men and women empowered to grow, serve, and lead together harmoniously.

Reclaiming Nostalgia

Reclaiming Nostalgia
Author: Jennifer K. Ladino
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Total Pages: 456
Release: 2012
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 081393334X

Often thought of as the quintessential home or the Eden from which humanity has fallen, the natural world has long been a popular object of nostalgic narratives. In Reclaiming Nostalgia, Jennifer Ladino assesses the ideological effects of this phenomenon by tracing its dominant forms in American literature and culture since the closing of the frontier in 1890. While referencing nostalgia for pastoral communities and for untamed and often violent frontiers, she also highlights the ways in which nostalgia for nature has served as a mechanism for social change, a model for ethical relationships, and a motivating force for social and environmental justice.

Reclaiming Eden

Reclaiming Eden
Author: Ampaw Bernard (author)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1901
Genre:
ISBN: 9781838126728

Reinventing Eden

Reinventing Eden
Author: Carolyn Merchant
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2013-03-12
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 1136161244

This revised edition of Carolyn Merchant’s classic Reinventing Eden has been updated with a new foreword and afterword. Visionary quests to return to the Garden of Eden have shaped Western Culture. This book traces the idea of rebuilding the primeval garden from its origins to its latest incarnations and offers a bold new way to think about the earth.

Orange Empire

Orange Empire
Author: Doug Sackman
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 404
Release: 2005-02-07
Genre: History
ISBN: 052094089X

This innovative history of California opens up new vistas on the interrelationship among culture, nature, and society by focusing on the state's signature export—the orange. From the 1870s onward, California oranges were packaged in crates bearing colorful images of an Edenic landscape. This book demystifies those lush images, revealing the orange as a manufactured product of the state's orange industry. Orange Empire brings together for the first time the full story of the orange industry—how growers, scientists, and workers transformed the natural and social landscape of California, turning it into a factory for the production of millions of oranges. That industry put up billboards in cities across the nation and placed enticing pictures of sun-kissed fruits into nearly every American's home. It convinced Americans that oranges could be consumed as embodiments of pure nature and talismans of good health. But, as this book shows, the tables were turned during the Great Depression when Upton Sinclair, Carey McWilliams, Dorothea Lange, and John Steinbeck made the Orange Empire into a symbol of what was wrong with America's relationship to nature.

The A.S.M.R.

The A.S.M.R.
Author: Asheru Romancha
Publisher: Page Publishing Inc
Total Pages: 230
Release: 2024-02-12
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN: 1662480407

This book shows the automatic, spontaneous, intelligent design from a feedback loop between the right hemisphere matching by form and the resulting sacred fractal geometry of self-similar sexual mimicry in the four-dimensional human body. He shows how this is done through the ASMR and thrill intelligence. The "missing link" is no longer missing! His book is a magnum opus on the alchemy of this subject.

The Last Love Song

The Last Love Song
Author: Tracy Daugherty
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 753
Release: 2015-08-25
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1250010020

Biography of the American novelist, Joan Didion (1934).

Reclaiming the Don

Reclaiming the Don
Author: Jennifer L. Bonnell
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 312
Release: 2014-01-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1442612258

With Reclaiming the Don, Jennifer L. Bonnell unearths the missing story of the relationship between the river, the valley, and the city, from the establishment of the town of York in the 1790s to the construction of the Don Valley Parkway in the 1960s.

Atomic Bomb Cinema

Atomic Bomb Cinema
Author: Jerome F. Shapiro
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 407
Release: 2013-05-13
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1135350124

Unfathomably merciless and powerful, the atomic bomb has left its indelible mark on film. In Atomic Bomb Cinema, Jerome F. Shapiro unearths the unspoken legacy of the bombing of Nagasaki and Hiroshima and its complex aftermath in American and Japanese cinema. According to Shapiro, a "Bomb film" is never simply an exercise in ideology or paranoia. He examines hundreds of films like Godzilla, Dr. Strangelove, and The Terminator as a body of work held together by ancient narrative and symbolic traditions that extol survival under devastating conditions. Drawing extensively on both English-language and Japanese-language sources, Shapiro argues that such films not only grapple with our nuclear anxieties, but also offer signs of hope that humanity is capable of repairing a damaged and divided world. www.atomicbombcinema.com