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Learning to Decolonize and Travel Responsibly in Hawai i
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100 celebrities leverage star power in fight to save B C s old-growth forests | iNFOnews
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Credit: University of Chichester
A NEW series of books on the novelist and philosopher Iris Murdoch has been commissioned by major academic publisher Palgrave Macmillan.
The series, Iris Murdoch Today, will be led by Dr Miles Leeson, Director of the Iris Murdoch Research Centre, and Deputy Director and Visiting Fellow Dr Frances White.
The aim is to produce two books a year from September 2022 which will include monographs and edited collections, and will showcase work from the Centre s members alongside writers and academics worldwide.
Dr Leeson, a Senior Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Chichester, where the centre is located, said: We re delighted to be working with Palgrave on the first ever series focusing on Iris Murdoch. Palgrave have an excellent backlist of works on Murdoch, and their commitment to women s fiction makes the series a natural home for new work on this author.
two movies about the White House being overtaken by terrorists. Unfortunately, the overly serious
Olympus Has Fallen spawned a trilogy and the goofy, fun
White House Down did not.
It’s our loss, really. Only one of these movies has scenes where Channing Tatum pulls a gun on a squirrel, does donuts on the White House Lawn, and has a plucky daughter that saves the day in a scene too ridiculous to spoil here. It’s a ’90s throwback from the king of ’90s disaster schlock himself, Roland Emmerich and at the same time, weirdly prescient. Because the bad guys in White House Down aren’t foreign, but domestic. It, as they say, makes you think.
Brendan George Ko/Penguin Random House
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Suzanne Simard is a professor of forest ecology at the University of British Columbia. Her own medical journey inspired her research into, among other things, the way yew trees communicate chemically with neighboring trees for their mutual defense. Brendan George Ko/Penguin Random House
Trees are social creatures that communicate with each other in cooperative ways that hold lessons for humans, too, ecologist Suzanne Simard says.
Simard grew up in Canadian forests as a descendant of loggers before becoming a forestry ecologist. She s now a professor of forest ecology at the University of British Columbia.
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