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Author: Gene Mittler
Genre: Art History
Art in Focus takes you across time and space to discover the origins of art, explore artworks and the artists who create those works, and to examine ways that art influences society and cultures.
  • English
  • Pages: 657
  • FREE
Author: Jonathan Harris
Genre: Art
This book is designed specifically for use by students and scholars of art history and visual culture. It is intended as a reference source for those involved in teaching and learning (on either side of the fence, as teacher or pupil) and as an aid for those carrying out research activities.
  • English
  • Pages: 361
  • FREE
Author: Arnold Hauser
Genre: Art
This book is concerned with the methodology of art history, and so with questions about historical thinking; it enquires what scientific history of art can accomplish, what are its means and its limitations.
  • English
  • Pages: 435
  • FREE
Author: Prof. dr. A. D. Graafland.
Genre: Architecture
This contribution deals with contemporary ideas on urban mapping. The growth of the first generation metropolises like New York, Paris, or London, is in no way comparable to the growth of Asian cities.
  • English
  • Pages: 113
  • FREE
Author: Clive Gamble
Genre: Archaeology
This invaluable resource provides an up-to-date and comprehensive survey of key ideas in archaeology and their impact on archaeological thinking and method.
  • English
  • Pages: 246
  • FREE
Author: Michel Foucault
Genre: Archaeology
For many years now historians have preferred to turn their attention to long periods, as if, beneath the shifts and changes of political events, they were trying to reveal the stable, almost indestructible system of checks.
  • English
  • Pages: 254
  • FREE
Authors: Jim Grant, Sam Gorin and Neil Fleming
Genre: Archaeology
The Archaeology Coursebook is a guide for students studying archaeology for the first time. It is not another introduction to archaeology, neither is it a specialist guide to archaeological methods.
  • English
  • Pages: 353
  • FREE
Authors: Zerihun Doda, M.A., Social Anthropology
Genre: Anthropology
Anthropology is a social science, which studies mankind in its entirety. The term in its literal sense means, “study of mankind”, as it is a combination of two Greek words, namely, anthropos and logos.
  • English
  • Pages: 236
  • FREE
Author: Sarah Etheredge
Genre: Anthropology
Anthropology is the study of what makes us human. Anthropologists take a broad approach to understanding the many different aspects of the human experience, which we call holism.
  • English
  • Pages: 224
  • FREE
Author: Peter Metcalf
Genre: Anthropology
Anthropology is an adventure. It offers you the opportunity to explore other worlds, where lives unfold according to different understandings of the natural order of things.
  • English
  • Pages: 225
  • FREE
Author: James P. Allen
Genre: Chemistry
Astronauts in orbit above the Earth have a unique and special perspective. The problems and issues concerning the world from this broad perspective may seem to be much different than those concerning the average person, especially a student studying physical chemistry.
  • English
  • Pages: 511
  • FREE
Author: FHSST Authors
Genre: Chemistry
All the objects that we see in the world around us, are made of matter. Matter makes up the air we breathe, the ground we walk on, the food we eat and the animals and plants that live around us. Even our own human bodies are made of matter!
  • English
  • Pages: 486
  • FREE
Author: Ira N. Levine
Genre: Chemistry
Physical chemistry is the study of the underlying physical principles that govern the properties and behavior of chemical systems.
  • English
  • Pages: 1013
  • FREE
Author: Ira N. Levine
Genre: Chemistry
Physical chemistry is the study of the underlying physical principles that govern the properties and behavior of chemical systems.
  • English
  • Pages: 1013
  • FREE
Author: Theodore L. Brown
Genre: Chemistry
Chemistry: The Central Science has been the leader in general chemistry for decades. Now, its unrivaled problems, scientific accuracy, and clarity have been upheld and are woven seamlessly with each new feature.
  • English
  • Pages: 1195
  • FREE
Author: Raymond CHANG
Genre: Chemistry
General chemistry is commonly perceived to be more difficult than most other subjects. There is some justifica- tion for this perception. For one thing, chemistry has a very specialized vocabulary.
  • English
  • Pages: 836
  • FREE
Authors: Leo J.Malone,Theodore Dolter
Genre: Chemistry
Basic Concepts of Chemistry was originally written in 1981 to address the needs of students planning to take the general chemistry course, but with little or no background in chemistry.
  • English
  • Pages: 726
  • FREE
Author: Raymond CHANG
Genre: Chemistry
General chemistry is commonly perceived to be more difficult than most other subjects. There is some justification for this perception. For one thing, chemistry has a very specialized vocabulary. At first, studying chemistry is like learning a new language.
  • English
  • Pages: 836
  • FREE
Author: Raymond CHANG
Genre: Chemistry
General chemistry is commonly perceived to be more difficult than most other subjects. There is some justification for this perception. For one thing, chemistry has a very specialized vocabulary.
  • English
  • Pages: 836
  • FREE
Authors: R. Thomas Myers ,Keith B. Oldham
Genre: Chemistry
Do you think of chemistry as just another subject to be studied in school? Or maybe you feel it is important only to people working in labs? The effects of chemistry reach far beyond schools and labs. It plays a vital role in your daily life and in the complex workings of your world.
  • English
  • Pages: 928
  • FREE
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