Trebizond, that “long-anticipated city of the Komnenians with its soft and melodious name” to quote Jakob Fallmerayer, has long lured […]
Annika Asp-Talwar, Antony Eastmond, Barbara Roggema, 111,11 TLByzantium’s Other Empire
Trebizond
This book is the Turkish translation of Seeing Power: Art and Activism in the Twenty-first Century, originally published by Melville House. […]
Nato Thompson, 80 TLSeeing Power
Art and Activism in the Twenty-first Century
How would Constantinople, the last largest urban settlement of the Greco-Roman World become the largest city of Medieval Christian Europe? […]
Paul Magdalino, 90 TLMedieval Constantinople
Studies on the History and Topography of Byzantine Constantinople
This book is the turkish translation of Austerity: The History of a Dangerous Idea published by Oxford University Press. From the backcover […]
Mark Blyth, 95 TLAusterity
The History of a Dangerous Idea
This book is the Turkish translation of The Emperor’s New Mind: Concerning Computers, Minds, and the Laws of Physics, Oxford, 2002. […]
Roger Penrose, 120 TLThe Emperor’s New Mind
Concerning Computers, Minds, and the Laws of Physics
The essays, imagining and recalling the cadences of Said’s conversation, take various forms, including elaborations on his ideas, applications of […]
Homi Bhabha, William J.T. Mitchell, 20 TLEdward Said
Continuing the Conversation
This title is Turkish translation of The Republic of Love: Cultural Intimacy in Turkish Popular Music , University of Chicago […]
Martin Stokes, 28 TLThe Republic of Love
Cultural Intimacy in Turkish Popular Music
Unemployment or living in fear of job loss on a daily basis threatens the health of individuals and their family […]
Mehmet Harma, Nebi Sümer, Nevin Solak, 20 TLLife Without Work
The Effects of Unemployment and Job Insecurity on the Individual and Family
Critical Reflections in Migration Research: Views from the North and the South is an attempt to critically approach the epistemology […]
24 TLCritical Reflections in Migration Research
Views from the North and the South