Textbooks

Browse or search textbooks or find out more about the publications' authors. Download the ebook for free or buy a print-on-demand copy.

Displaying results 1371 to 1380 of 2630.

The Book of Luelen »

Publication date: 1977
Luelen Bernart, a member of a prominent Ponapean family, was highly regarded for his wealth of traditional knowledge. He wrote this version of his island's history for his relatives and children, but the style of the text reflects the education he received at the Protestant mission school at Ohwa (Oa). 'The Book of Luelen' is the fullest account of Ponape's history that has ever been written by a native of that island. Luelen Bernart gives a comprehensive account of Ponape from the time of its creation to the first European contact. Myths and legends interwoven with history and botanical lore provide a rich source of information about this island. Luelen Bernart died near the end of World War II, but the record that he leaves behind gives an insider's view of Ponapean history that will delight all those interested in the Pacific and its people.

The impact of Port Botany »

Publication date: 1976
Published Press Archives http://press.anu.edu.au/node/3837 1885_114840.jpg ANU Press The impact of Port Botany Wednesday, 18 August, 1976 Not available Archive Scholarly Information Services

Sydney's environmental amenity, 1970-1975: a study of the system of waste management and pollution control »

Publication date: 1976
Published Press Archives http://press.anu.edu.au/node/3803 1885_114867.jpg ANU Press Sydney's environmental amenity, 1970-1975: a study of the system of waste management and pollution control Wednesday, 18 August, 1976 Not available Archive Scholarly Information Services

Dream and disillusion: a search for Australian cultural identity »

Publication date: 1976
Works of literature are not created in isolation. They are formed by the interplay between personal and national identity, between the background of the writer and the ethos of his time. This book explores, through the lives and works of four writers and their friends in Melbourne in the first forty years of this century - Vance Palmer, Frank Wilmot, Louis Esson and Frederick Sinclaire - the struggle to identify what was unique and valuable in Australian life. Palmer and his associates sought to realise an Australian literary nationalism. The book shows how the ferment of ideals and aspirations floundered inexorably into war, the violent social upheavals of conscription, and disillusion. The author examines the ideals of his leading figures, and the ideas which informed their literary nationalism - identity with radical causes, an idealised bush life, robust masculinity; but he is also aware of the shortcomings of their Australianism and suggests that these ideas were more inhibiting than their adherents believed. Drawing on a rich array of private papers, articles, novels, and interviews to capture the flavour of this period, Dr Walker explores a vital area of Australian culture. The result is a fresh and persuasive account of the writers and their world.

Sino-Soviet diplomatic relations, 1917-1926 »

Publication date: 1976
Published Press Archives http://press.anu.edu.au/node/3483 1885_114714.jpg ANU Press Sino-Soviet diplomatic relations, 1917-1926 Wednesday, 18 August, 1976 Not available Archive Scholarly Information Services Leong, Sow-Theng

Marists and Melanesians: a history of Catholic missions in the Solomon Islands »

Publication date: 1976
Published Press Archives http://press.anu.edu.au/node/3559 1885_114791.jpg ANU Press Marists and Melanesians: a history of Catholic missions in the Solomon Islands Wednesday, 18 August, 1976 Not available Archive Scholarly Information Services Laracy, Hugh

Knowledge & power: lectures »

Publication date: 1976
In mid-1975, Professor F R Jevons visited The Australian National University under the auspices of the ANU Advisory Committee on Science and Technology Policy Research. The purpose of his visit was to stimulate interest in the study of science and technology policy issues. During his stay Professor Jevons gave a number of lectures covering the relationship of basic scientific research to techno logical innovation in industry, the organisation of scientific research, the nature of knowledge, and science in literature. The lectures and other material, edited by Dr C E West, are now made available to the wide range of people interested in the relationships of science, technology and society.

Greek children in Sydney »

Publication date: 1976
In many o f the inner city Sydney schools the often numerous Greek pupils are usually seen by their teachers as problems. They are said to be unpunctual and immature; their levels of achievement are low. Their parents ignore notes from the school and do not insist that homework is done. They shift house frequently, so that the children are forever changing schools. The children do not mix with Australian children any more than necessary in school, and they mix only with other Greek children out of school. These Greek pupils reach only low standards and, as they are usually older than the class average, leave school without having mastered basic skills. In this unusual book we find explanations for these characteristics. The children and their parents speak for themselves about what it is like to grow up in Australia w ith in a family that attempts, against serious odds, to preserve traditional Greek ways of life in spite of the influences of schools and the parents' jobs . Their voices are heard with little interruption, comment or interpretation - they are vivid, instructive and often movinq.

Portents of protest in the Later Han dynasty: the memorials of Hsiang K'ai to Emperor Huan »

Publication date: 1976
Among the chief reasons for the weakness and ultimate collapse of the imperial system of Han were the social and political divisions which arose between the emperor and the scholar-officials who served him. Portents of Protest, which forms part of a continuing study of the reigns of the Emperors Huan and Ling, the last effective rulers of Han, discusses the criticisms that were made of imperial policies and the philosophical background to the debate. It studies in some detail the means by which critics of the imperial government sought to urge their case by reference to supernatural or unusual phenomena as warnings to the throne.

Studies in the eighteenth century III: papers presented at the Third David Nichol Smith Memorial Seminar, Canberra 1973 »

Publication date: 1976
This volume of essays, from the Third David Nichol Smith Memorial Seminar, continues the valuable and lively tradition established in the two earlier seminars and volumes. The essays, by distinguished international scholars, range over many of the topics that make the eighteenth century a rich area of study: the burgeoning of ideas about man and his place in the world, social history, philosophy and literature, literary criticism and traditions, the poetry and prose of the giants of the age. For all students of eighteenth-century studies this book will be vital reading.