Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Macromedia Contribute 3 in a Snap 5th Edition




Macromedia Contribute 3 in a Snap by Ned Snell


English | Aug. 8, 2004 | ISBN: 0672325160 | 255 Pages | PDF | 12 MB




Whether you"re a small business owner wanting to update your website to promote a big sale next month, a student assigned to create a website for a class, or you"re curious about web design but you don"t have any HTML experience, Macromedia Contribute 3 In a Snap can help. Organized into short, bite-sized tasks, you will quickly be able to accomplish the steps required to build a website without any HTML code. You will learn how to easily update text and images to existing web pages and create new pages with the use of Macromedia Contribute 3 and more familiar programs such as Microsoft Word and Excel. Use this tool to help you create web pages in a snap!










Border Identifications: Narratives of Religion, Gender, and Class on the U.S.-Mexico Border




Border Identifications: Narratives of Religion, Gender, and Class on the U.S.-Mexico Border (Inter-America Series) by Pablo Vila


English | 1 Aug. 2005 | ISBN: 0292705832, 0292702914 | 314 Pages | PDF | 2 MB




From poets to sociologists, many people who write about life on the U.S.-Mexico border use terms such as "border crossing" and "hybridity" which suggest that a unified culture – neither Mexican nor American, but an amalgamation of both – has arisen in the borderlands.










Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Self/Same/Other: Re-visioning the Subject in Literature and Theology




Heather Walton, Andrew W. Hass, "Self/Same/Other: Re-visioning the Subject in Literature and Theology"


2000 | ISBN-10: 1841270180, 1841270199 | 216 pages | PDF | 11 MB




This collection of essays explores the way our notions of self, other, subjectivity, gender and the sacred text are being re-visioned within contemporary theory. These new ways of conceiving create upheavals and radical shifts that rework our understanding of philosophical, psychological, political, sexual and spiritual identity, allowing us to trace the fault lines, regulatory forces, exclusions and unmarked spaces both within our selves, and within the discourses that attend these selves. As such, revisionings break down borders, and the encounter of literature and theology becomes a crucial focus for these explorations, as the self learns to resituate its own being creatively vis-a-vis others and, ultimately, the Other.