The Future of Invention Dr J. IsselsteinExamines the concept of rhetorical invention from an affirmative, nondialectical perspective. The Future of Invention links classical rhetorical practices of invention with the philosophical work of Gilles Deleuze and Jacques Derrida and proposes that some of the most crucial implications of postmodern theory have gone largely unattended. Drawing on such classical rhetorical concepts as doxa, imitation, kairos, and topos, and engaging key works by
Focusing on the vast corpus of films that have left their marks on generations of spectators
the discipline in charge of theorizing and studying power-political science and theory-has had little to say about the animal/human
in migrating from military medicine to the civilian sphere
monitoring and evaluation of instruments for measurement to promote evidence-based interventions are occurring worldwide
active as both a politician and a writer
This book reviews the field in a concise fashion and highlights the most pressing issues
the chapter goes on to summarise what the volume is about by focusing on the areas that are covered in the rest of the chapters
inter-church and church-state relations
and the man who controlled Covent Garden theatre for nearly five decades
with a number of research gaps identified
of the same order of political magnitude as Blair’s earlier repudiation of Clause Four of its Constitution
the book covers topics related to medical isotope production