The Book of Tea Prof Donald SmithThe Book of Tea (1906) is a book length essay by Okakura Kakuz. Connected to the authors overall project of celebrating Japanese culture and emphasizing the role of the East in creating the modern world, The Book of Tea is considered a classic work on the subject. His description of chad, or teaism, remains incredibly influential in England and around the Western world. [Teaism] insulates purity and harmony, the mystery of mutual charity, the
but even more surprising is the relationship that the desert dwellers continue to have with the plant life in their habitat
Explores the many ways in which people utilised communication
Is his daughter Izabel an imperial sympathizer
the theory explains how persons become and remain addicts and how they may eventually give up addictive behavior
If Creation Is a Gift both contributes to the ongoing debate on the gift and provides a fresh philosophical and theological consideration of the environmental crisis
working class writing and publishing in local communities rapidly proliferated into a national movement
It had not then acquired that modern air which is now beginning to pervade it
In Mindfulness as Sustainability
Can reading novels make us better citizens of a liberal democratic society
This unique study discusses concepts of slowness
of a previously unpublished sixteenth-century Persian chronicle
as well as jewels of the Greek geographical area