This introductory text presents an overview of the liberal arts--literature, art, music, philosophy, and history--with a particular emphasis on literature. The unique selection of works from each culture provides students with a global understanding of the humanities. Several pedagogical features of the Seventh Edition, such as chapter objectives, key terms, art images, and summary questions, help students understand the major concepts of the text. Each volume begins with a "Chronicle of Events" that provides a timetable of key events in world history. "Continuities" sections focus on the lasting contributions of each society.
与海豚共舞: 中英双语
A new cover look for this exciting adventure in the bestselling Animal Ark series.
Provides instructions for a variety of art projects that support topics in the geography and social studies classroom.
Geography, History and Civics: Standard Eight
should appear to act , exploiting accepted forms of conduct for the advancement and protection of his own power : MACHIAVELLI The Prince Of the qualities in respect of which men , and most of all Princes , are praised or blamed ...
He realized the risk : the kind of ruler ruthless enough to establish order was not likely to be the kind of prince willing to train the people in self - government . But in a peninsula divided into fifty to a hundred power centers ...
work of art , the creation of the prince who skillfully imposed a form of political order on the people , who served as the matter for his work . This kind of imagery indeed reflects the Renaissance preoccupation with defining the ...
Cornish , Samuel E. , 160 , 179 Correspondence ( Douglass ) , 201 Cortes , Hernan , 46 , 56 Corven , Philip , 79 Council of the Indies , 51 Covenants ( Pennington ) , 194 Craft , Ellen , 244 , 252 Craft , William , 244 , 252 Craft ...
Hughes, Thomas L. “Foreign Policy: Men or Measure?” Atlantic Monthly 234. (October, 1974): 53. Isaacson, Walter. Kissinger: A Biography. New York: Simmon and Schuster, 1992. Kalb, Marvin and Bernard Kalb. Kissinger.
In this rendering of Conrad's classic, we join colonial trader Marlow as he recounts his journey into the heart of Africa.