 | John Docker - Philosophy - 1994 - 313 pages
In this provocative study, John Docker takes his readers on an intellectual adventure. The journey includes a guided tour of the history of modernism, consideration of the ... | |
 | Helen Lenskyj - Science - 2000 - 216 pages
In a startling expose of the Olympic industry, Helen Jefferson Lenskyj goes beyond the media hype of international goodwill and spirited competition to uncover a darker side of ... | |
 | Gretchen Poiner - Social Science - 1990 - 204 pages
This study of the rural community of Marulan in the southern highlands of New South Wales avoids the traditional male focus of such studies to concentrate on the social ... | |
 | Rae Frances - Business & Economics - 1993 - 267 pages
This book focuses on the workplace in Australia to look at how and why the nature of work changed during the period from the late-nineteenth century to World War II. | |
 | David Neal - Law - 2002 - 284 pages
Dr Neal shows how the courts served as a de facto parliament in early New South Wales. | |
 | Julia Bush - History - 2000 - 242 pages
Bush (arts and social sciences, Nene University College, Northampton) analyzes aristocratic and upper-middle-class women's involvement in imperialist associations, and ... | |
 | John Pilger - Biography & Autobiography - 2001 - 633 pages
Collects the author's writings on the Vietnam War, United States' politics, Palestine, and the role of committed journalism. | |
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