Tag: Writing

Scribes Writing Scripture Doublets, Textual Divination, and the Formation of the Book of Jeremiah


Free Download Justus Theodore Ghormley, "Scribes Writing Scripture Doublets, Textual Divination, and the Formation of the Book of Jeremiah "
English | ISBN: 9004472479 | 2021 | 244 pages | PDF | 2 MB
In Scribes Writing Scripture, Justus Theodore Ghormley describes how the ancient Judean scribes who expanded the Book of Jeremiah through duplication functioned as textual diviners akin to the divining scribal scholars of the ancient Near East.

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Plutus Writing reliable smart contracts


Free Download Plutus: Writing reliable smart contracts
English | 2019 | ASIN : B07V46LWTW | 128 Pages | PDF EPUB | 12 MB
This practical ebook is a guide to programming with the Plutus language for highly secure smart contracts on the Cardano blockchain, home of the ada cryptocurrency. Plutus is based on the Haskell functional programming language and comes complete with a full testing environment accessed via GitHub or any browser. The ebook will help you get to grips with using smart contracts on a blockchain by providing real-life examples and functional sample code. Plutus: Writing Reliable Smart Contracts is the first ebook about this new and exciting language and is written by experts from IOHK, the developers of Cardano and ada.

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Writing the Natural Way Turn the Task of Writing into the Joy of Writing, 15th Anniversary Expanded Edition


Free Download Gabriele Lusser Rico, "Writing the Natural Way: Turn the Task of Writing into the Joy of Writing, 15th Anniversary Expanded Edition"
English | 2000 | pages: 278 | ISBN: 0874779618 | PDF | 19,3 mb
Writing the Natural Way, first published fifteen years ago, has shown hundreds of thousands of readers how to turn the task of writing into the joy of writing. Completely revised, newly illustrated, and with a wealth of updated, field-tested exercises, this popular classic will help unlock natural writing styles and storytelling abilities.

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Textures of Time Writing History in South India, 1600-1800


Free Download Textures of Time: Writing History in South India, 1600-1800 By Velcheru Narayana Rao, David Dean Shulman, Sanjay Subrahmanyam
2006 | 296 Pages | ISBN: 8178241730 | PDF | 52 MB
Along with the clock and the railroad, did the British colonists bring the questionable gift of history to India? Is it true that historical consciousness did not exist in India before its conquest by the British at the end of the nineteenth century, and that the more pristine South India in particular was blessed with an organic, holistic, untainted, child-like temporality?Generations of Western writers have claimed this to be true: that Southern Indians in pre-colonial times were indifferent to historical fact, and approached their past unsystematically at best, through myth, legend, and story. Nearly a thousand years ago, the great scholar Al-Biruni complained that, "unfortunately, the Hindus do not pay much attention to the historical order of things. They are very careless in relating the chronological succession of kings, and when pressed for information invariably take to tale-telling." Until now this has been the received wisdom of the West, repeated with little variation by post-colonial historians.Textures of Timesets out not merely to disprove that idea, but to demonstrate through a brilliant blend of storytelling and scholarship the complex forms of history that were produced in South India between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries. Through a nuanced reading of the rich language of folk epic, courtly poetry, and prose narratives, the authors reveal the divide between fact and fiction in South Indian writings and make a clear case for the existence of historical narrative in pre-colonial India.Employing a careful reading of and extensive translations from the relevant texts, the book thus sets out to shake some of the deepest-rooted prejudices that exist in the received wisdom on late medieval and early modern India.

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College Writing Skills with Readings


Free Download College Writing Skills with Readings By John Langan, Zoe Albright
2018 | 816 Pages | ISBN: 1259680932 | PDF | 22 MB
College Writing Skills with Readings 10e highlights the importance of writing with a purpose by focusing on four bases of writing: unity, support, coherence, and sentence skills. The four bases provide students with clear guidance on how to organize their thoughts, structure their main idea into a thesis, provide supporting evidence to their claim, and revise and edit their work into a well complete, composed essay. College Writing Skills with Readings personalizes and grounds students’ writing experience by placing all of its reading, writing, and essay examples within three key realms – personal, academic, and workplace (PAW) – to emphasize the importance of writing in every facet of life.

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Women’s Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century


Free Download Lana Dalley, "Women’s Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century"
English | ISBN: 0367337258 | 2023 | 154 pages | PDF | 2 MB
Women’s Economic Writing in the Nineteenth Century is the first comprehensive collection of women’s economic writing in the long nineteenth century. The four-volume anthology includes writing from women around the world, showcases the wide variety and range of economic writing by women in the period, and establishes a tradition of women’s economic writing; selections include didactic tales, fictional illustrations, poetry, economic theory, social theory, reports, letters, novels, speeches, dialogues, and self-help books. The anthology is divided into eight themed sections: political economy, feminist economics, domestic economics, labor, philanthropy and poverty, consumerism, emigration and empire, and self-help. Each section begins with an introduction that tells a story about women writers’ relationship to the section theme and then provides an overview of the selections contained therein.

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From Notes to Narrative Writing Ethnographies That Everyone Can Read


Free Download From Notes to Narrative: Writing Ethnographies That Everyone Can Read By Kristen Ghodsee
2016 | 150 Pages | ISBN: 022625741X | PDF | 31 MB
Ethnography centers on the culture of everyday life. So it is ironic that most scholars who do research on the intimate experiences of ordinary people write their books in a style that those people cannot understand. In recent years, the ethnographic method has spread from its original home in cultural anthropology to fields such as sociology, marketing, media studies, law, criminology, education, cultural studies, history, geography, and political science. Yet, while more and more students and practitioners are learning how to write ethnographies, there is little or no training on how to write ethnographies well. From Notes to Narrative picks up where methodological training leaves off. Kristen Ghodsee, an award-winning ethnographer, addresses common issues that arise in ethnographic writing. Ghodsee works through sentence-level details, such as word choice and structure. She also tackles bigger-picture elements, such as how to incorporate theory and ethnographic details, how to effectively deploy dialogue, and how to avoid distracting elements such as long block quotations and in-text citations. She includes excerpts and examples from model ethnographies. The book concludes with a bibliography of other useful writing guides and nearly one hundred examples of eminently readable ethnographic books.

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Writing the Past in Twenty-first-century American Fiction


Free Download Writing the Past in Twenty-first-century American Fiction by Alexandra Lawrie
English | September 13, 2022 | ISBN: 1474463444 | 208 pages | PDF | 2.63 Mb
Writing the Past in Twenty-First-Century American Fiction examines contemporary novels profoundly shaped by a sense of historical consciousness. Authors including Ben Lerner, Colson Whitehead, Dana Spiotta, Hari Kunzru and Garth Greenwell each use flashbacks, historical parallels and non-sequential narrative arrangements to emphasise the re-emergence, in a twenty-first-century context, of historical structures and circumstances. This study explores how these frequent moments of temporal slippage amount to a ‘falling out of time’, as characters are forced to confront the past crises which continue to exert pressure on their own contemporary moment.

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