泰晤士报: Eight books to understand the Israel-Palestine conflict 8本书了解巴以冲突 û收藏 46 2 ñ77 评论 o p 同时转发到我的微博 按热度 按时间 正在加载,请稍候... 2023年深圳宝安马拉松 马拉松运动员 Ü 简介: 擦边博主 更多a 微关系 他的关注(70) 微博...
For me personally, I became interested in studying philosophy because I wanted to try and understand some of Being and Nothingness and Sartre’s ideas…You’d be surprised how many philosophers have been inspired by Sartre, even though they’ve gone on to become very different sorts of ...
“The Russo-Ukrainian War is by Serhii Plokhy, a Ukrainian historian at Harvard who looks to history to understand the conflict, seeing it as an ‘old-fashioned imperial war’ with its roots in the 19th and 20th centuries. As he notes in the preface, ‘I take a longue durée approach to...
Woman The Hunterby Mary Zeiss Stange (1997). Exploring how women and men relate to nature and violence, Mary Zeiss Stange demonstrates how false assumptions abut women and about hunting permeate contemporary thought. Her book is a profound critique of our society's evasion of issues that make u...
How To Understand Your Bible: A Philosopher's Interpretation of Obscure and Puzzling Passages Manly P. Hall In spite of human prejudice to the contrary, there is but one religion and one truth, and all the great faiths of the world are parts or fragments of the… more Watcher on the Hi...
After Hurricane Maria devastates Puerto Rico, Elena Vega returns to the island for the first time since her youth to search for her missing father. They've always had a troubled relationship — but with him gone, Elena can piece together clues to understand him in a way she couldn't befor...
It took me a while to understand quite how pioneering a book this is. Because the translation came out in 2014 and because the subject matter feels contemporary (involving a lot of reflection on secondary infertility and female sexuality, including a same-sex love affair), I had assumed the ...
For those of us unfamiliar with Judaism, some of the terms were a little difficult to understand at the start. But I got the hang of them soon enough and I also appreciated learning more about a religion different to my own. The pace of the story is fast and the author’s style is ...
When it was all over, she was crying. He couldn’t tell what these tears meant – pain, pleasure, passion, disgust, or some inscrutable loneliness that she would have been no more able to explain then he would have been to understand. He didn’t know. (p. 81) ...
all of which lead the reader home to Palestine. Through these memories, we learn about the Jewish occupation of Palestine and the hard truths of what this occupation means for Palestinians in their own homeland—an utter lack of control. She tells the story of a Jewish neighbor from her yout...