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How to Read Hitler by Neil Gregor
19.99 AUD
Category: Culture Ideas Politics | Series: How to Read
Incoherent, obsessive and violent, Hitler's ideas nonetheless found an audience of millions and led to one of the most horrific and devastating conflicts of the 20th century. Taking two of Hitler's texts as his starting point, Neil Gregor discusses 'this second-rate mind of great power' and helps the re ...Show more
How to Read Nietzsche by Keith Ansell-Pearson; Simon Critchley
15.95 AUD
Category: No Category | Series: How to Read Ser.
Nietzsche's thinking revolves around a new and striking concept of humanity--a humanity that has come to terms with the death of God and practices the art and science of living well, free of the need for metaphysical certainties and moral absolutes. How, then, are we to live? And what do we love?Keith A ...Show more
How to Read Paris: A Crash Course in Parisian Architecture by Chris Rogers
19.99 AUD
Category: Architecture | Series: How to Read Ser.
How to Read Paris is a pocket-sized guide to understanding and appreciating the architecture of Paris. Packed with detailed drawings, plans and photographs, and covering squares, bridges, streets and monuments as well as buildings, it is both a fascinating architectural history and an effective I-spy gu ...Show more
How to Read Shakespeare by Nicholas Royle
19.99 AUD
Category: Culture Ideas Politics | Series: How to Read
Shakespeare's legacy is all around us - in our books and our films, in our politics and in our everyday speech. With his words he has formed our world, and his influence has been greater than that of any other writer. So what makes Shakespeare's plays so powerful? Taking a single word from each of the s ...Show more
How to Read Skyscrapers - A Crash Course in High-Rise Architecture by Edward Denison; Tom Kitch (Editor)
19.99 AUD
Category: Architecture | Series: How to Read Ser.
Throughout history, the story of the skyscraper has been defined by our desire for ascendance--politically, militarily, economically, religiously, culturally, and, of course, physically. These spectacular superstructures epitomise more than architectural aspiration, they excite the imagination and inspi ...Show more
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