Narrative painting in nineteenth-century Europe Christine van RuymbekeHow do pictures tell stories? This ground breaking book analyses visual narrative in nineteenth century history and genre paintings across Europe. It reveals how artists constructed plots via objects, managing the tension between narrative and style and prompting viewers to weave their own tales.
This collection continues the successful Design for Business series
The present text follows the first Spanish edition published by Destino
Contributions give insight on the interactive role of the cultural and religious ‘other’
This book offers fresh perspectives on the history of humanitarianism and its impact on domestic and international politics in the era of the Great War
Australian Film Theory and Criticism interrogates not only the origins of Australian film theory but also its relationships to adjacent disciplines and institutions
poised between tedium and crisis – a life endlessly theatrical
how its significance has evolved over time and how contemporary systems for participation shape the places around us
He has travelled around the world
and comments on recent reconfigurations of the city and its inhabitants in the wake of global forces
the recent rediscoveries of Tepa’s Ivar Kreuger and Jeanne de la Motte allow a fascinating glimpse into a rich and vital period of Polish literary culture unfamiliar to most English readers and scholars
Jake Morris-Campbell sets out on a pilgrimage from Lindisfarne to Durham Cathedral
Neither a top down history