The Pottery of John Ward Miriam Krenzinger AzambujaJohn Ward (b. 1938) has a longstanding reputation as one of Britain's foremost potters, and yet very little has been written about his manifold achievements. Authoritative and enlightening, this will be the first account of Wards life and work, tracing the evolution of his ideas and his practice as a potter and placing them critically within the history of British Studio Pottery. The qualities of Wards best pots are hard to define. As the late
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The book could be used in both intermediate and advanced courses in informal logic
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This chapter reviews the impact of climate change on insect pests
and move on to a public domain where teaching and research can be integrated in scholarly discourse and practice
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The authors critique the taken-for-granted assumption about the place of the arts in liberal or social democratic states and the role of the arts in supporting or opposing the ideological work of government and non-government institutions
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is a theoretically-based explanation or conceptualization of the information obtained from a clinical assessment
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2018 Independent Publisher Book Awards in the US Northeast -Best Regional Non-Fiction Category