Image, branding, and logos are obsessions of our age. Iconic images dominate the media. Christ to Coke is the first book to look at all the main types of visual icons. It does so via eleven supreme and mega-famous examples, both historical and contemporary, to see how they arose and how they continue to function. Along the way, we encounter the often weird and wonderful ways that they become transformed in an astonishing variety of ways and contexts. How, for example, has the communist revolutionary Che become a romantic hero for middle-class teenagers? The stock image of Christ's face is the founding icon - literally, since he was the central subject of early icon painting. Some of the icons that follow are general, like the cross, the lion, and the heart-shape. Some are specific, such as the Mona Lisa, Che Guevara, and the famous photograph of the napalmed girl in Vietnam. The American flag, the "Stars and Stripes", does not quite fit into either category. Modern icons come from commerce, led by the Coca-Cola bottle, and from science, most notably the double helix of DNA and Einstein's famous equation E=mc2. The stories, researched using the skills of a leading visual historian, are told in a vivid and personal manner. Some are funny; some are deeply moving; some are highly improbable; some centre on popular fame; others are based on the most profound ideas in science. The diversity is extraordinary. There is no set formula, but do the images share anything in common? So famous are the images that every reader is an expert in their own right and will be entertained and challenged by the narratives that Martin Kemp skilfully weaves around them.
When an ex-girlfriend vanishes, a documentary-in-progress disappears, and the screenwriter working on it overdoses, Kinky Friedman takes on the case
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.
A history of the Mormon faith is a chronological narrative that pre-dates the Creation and focuses on the catalogue of the Latter-day Saint doctrine while journeying through such periods as the life of Christ and the nineteenth-century ...
His book is about teaching leaders how to engage in meaningful work with people, inspire a culture of genuine care, and mobilize everyone around a purpose that not only transcends the everyday work they do but also informs it.
Life doesn't always go as planned.
Jesus' Toolbox is about: FAITH and the leap of it BELIEF and the profit from it TABLOID JOURNALISM and the truth of it ALCOHOL and the resort to it GREED and the surfeit of it ADULTERY and the thrill of it JUSTICE and the poetry of it ...
Back then, one might have said, “Let's go to the drug store to get a Coke,” but then ordered a suicide. Jesus, the eternal ruler, was welcomed at the Coke plant and school classroom, assembly, lunchroom, and playground.
In Her True Worth, Maher and Speer reveal what God intended our identity to be in the beginning, how sin corrupted it, how Christ has redeemed it, and how to live securely in that identity.
No man, deserving to be remembered, has been more completely forgotten." The present book is, in fact, the first documented study of the man ever published.