for at udvide
kategorilisten.
Søgning på underkategorier- og emner:
Biografier giver dig adgang til ægte livsfortællinger og skæbner, der har sat deres præg på verden. Her finder du bøger om både nulevende og historiske personer - fra de magtfulde til de misforståede, fra kendte navne til hverdagens helte. Vores udvalg rummer inspirerende historier om mod, passion og vilje, hvor virkelighedens stemmer får plads. Uanset om du søger en biografi med indhold til samlingen, en rørende gave eller blot ønsker at læse om mennesker, der har ændret verden, er der masser at vælge imellem. Find din næste biografi hos WilliamDam.dk og oplev fortællinger, der berører og sætter sig fast.
Drenge skriver først bøger når de er mænd er Tomas Lagermand Lundmes ærlige beretning om at fremkalde motiver – for sit indre blik, på papiret og for... Læs mere
"Orwells litterære analyser er små mesterværker." – Per Stig Møller i forordet George Orwell var en af sin tids mest fremtrædende forfattere med sine verdensberømte romaner... Læs mere
This collection makes a critical and creative intervention into ongoing debates about the relationship between poetry and autobiography. Drawing on recent theories of life... Læs mere
Using a multimodal discourse analysis approach, this dynamic collection examines various discourses, modes and media in circulation during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, and how these have impacted our daily lives in terms of the various meanings they express.
This book depicts that autofictional texts often make use of humour and play in a productive and meaningful way, tackling issues like... Læs mere
This book illustrates not only how surveillance debates play out in and through mediated discourses, but also how practices of surveillance inform the... Læs mere
The tender memoir of a writing life from the bestselling author of A Series of Unfortunate Events.
A screenwriter, novelist, labor leader, Hollywood insider, and feminist, Mary C. McCall Jr. was one of the film industry’s most powerful figures in the 1940s and early 1950s. J. E. Smyth tells McCall’s remarkable story for the first time.
It is not often that an author and his editor strike up a relationship which survives forty years of epistolary exchanges and intellectual sparring.