Tom Normand was born in Aberdour in Fife. He was educated in Dunfermline, and subsequently took a degree in Sociology and Politics at Glasgow College. His doctoral thesis, in the Sociology of Culture, was taken at Durham University. He has taught at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art in Dundee, and lectures in the History of Art at the University of St Andrews. He has published widely in the history of British art. He has lectured, both nationally and internationally, on Scottish art, culture and society.
Binding | EAN | ISBN-10 | Pub Date | PAGES | Language | Size | Price |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hardcover | 9781908373526 | 1908373520 | 2014-11-25 | 128 | English | 0.00 x 6.72 x 8.53 in | $33.95 |
The early years of the 21st century have erupted into a spectacular period of seismic political unrest which challenges our sense of purpose, shreds our certainties, and questions our path to progress. Volatile and angry citizens are contesting social democracy and progressive politics...
read moreThe unexpected outcome of the 2017 UK general election means that the UK Government lacks a clear mandate on Brexit and also that the Scottish Government lacks a clear mandate on holding a second Independence Referendum consequent to the material change in circumstance which will be brought about by Brexit...
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read moreNuclear weapons are too important to be left to politicians and generals. They need to be discussed in the pub, at the school gates and over the kitchen sink so that people are aware of the issues involved and have had the opportunity to think them through...
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read moreSebastian and Emma live in Manhattan. She’s a musician and he works in Artificial Intelligence, researching human features to make his company’s mask-bots more realistic. But his enquiry turns personal, and he is forced to ask whether his own life is an artificial mask...
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read morePlay up Scotland!
Scottish Rugby: Game by Game provides a detailed history of Scotland’s international rugby union and a record of over 600 matches played by the Scottish rugby team since their first match in 1871.
This is the most comprehensive book about Scottish rugby ever published...
Imagine that you are a raindrop about to land on Scotland. Your destiny, dear raindrop, is that when you do touch-down, you will start on a journey, by bog, burn and river, before finally emptying into either the Atlantic Ocean or the North Sea. Which it is to be will depend upon which side of the spine of the country – the Watershed, or water divide – you have first landed...
read moreScotland’s ancient and fascinating history is infused with practical information for the Japanese visitor to Scotland in the sole Scottish guidebook in Japanese by professional STGA guides.
From the merits of pub crawls and Irn-Bru to the less desirable flat sausage and customer service, this guidebook covers it all whilst expertly bridging the gap between the two cultures...
To earn the name artist it seems clear that one must create something, must make something, be a ‘makar’.
In 1939, Scottish artist and sculptor J.D. Fergusson was commissioned to write a fully illustrated book on modern Scottish painting...
Baffies’ Easy Munro Guide to the Cairngorms is the third volume in Ralph Storer’s inspirational series of guidebooks dedicated to finding the easiest way up Scotland’s highest mountains. This volume covers the Cairngorms National Park with hand-picked routes that will guide you to the summits of 25 rewarding Munros in all corners of the Cairngorms Range...
read moreWhat was the biggest challenge to Perth becoming a city again? Why was Perth once more important than Edinburgh? How exactly did Perth execute its successful campaign for city status?All of this and more is revealed in John Hulbert’s account of how Perth became a city once again...
read moreA landmark publication in 1993, this study of Glasgow immigration was used in all schools throughout the city. Now thoroughly revised and updated with a new chapter, this timely publication is an essential insight into the historical background of Glasgow's migrant groups and their interactions with the indigenous population.
read morePoems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect, was Robert Burns’ first published collection of poetry. This collection includes 44 of Burns’ best known poems including ‘To a Louse’, ‘The Cotter’s Saturday Night’, ‘To a Mouse’, ‘The Twa Dogs’ and ‘To a Mountain Daisy’...
read moreA nippy sweetie, he was always moaning, but that is often the sign of a great player -- a real determination to succeed and a refusal to settle for second best. PAT STANTONI used to flinch when Studs wound up for a challenge and he feared no one as he sometimes threw his whole body into a tackle. That meant we also spent too much time together in the treatment room...
read moreLive Well. Eat Well. Be Well. will revolutionise the way you think about your health – and your illnesses.This essential guide to the Nature Cure as the foundation for healthy living and disease prevention is based on 50 years’ experience at the Kingston Clinic in Edinburgh...
read moreBy delving into the lives and backgrounds of an entire network of avid supporters, We are Hibernian explores how people become so involved in football, and is it the binding of tradition, memories and experiences off the pitch that make them believe their first choice was the right one? There are stories here from men and women who were taken to the football grounds as youngsters and now take...
read moreSince its establishment in 1922 the BBC has continually asserted itself as one of the great British institutions at home and abroad. David Pat Walker offers an in-depth analysis of the history of BBC Scotland from its creation in 1923 through to its 50th anniversary in the seventies...
read moreHow do we think differently about the Scottish economy, wealth and progress, and the world of work? What would a different kind of economy look like, and what implications would it have? And how do we begin to reframe the ideas of work and economy away from the grotesque assumptions of ‘bubble Britain?’ Experts in their fields, Trebeck, Kerevan and Boyd come together to analyse the positives...
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read moreThis is an extensive collection of traditional Scots nursery rhymes, including some which are extremely old and rare, organised into a beautifully illustrated volume.
read moreWinner of the 2016 Donald Meek Award.This collection, covering 500 years of transgressive Gaelic poetry with new English translations, breaks the mould for anthologies of Gaelic verse. It offers poems that are erotic, rude, seditious and transgressive; that deal with love, sex, the body, politics and violent passion; and that are by turns humorous, disturbing, shocking and enlightening...
read moreAlasdair Hutton recalls his time as the voice of the Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo from when he first started in 1992. The book compiles his personal memories and pays tribute to the talented host of people he worked with along the way.
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