Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker utgitt av Triarchy Press

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  • av Daniel Christian Wahl
    356,-

    "This book is a treasure for everyone who is looking for a guide to more sustainable living and a roadmap for re-designing our societies, regenerating our communities, cities and societies in harmony with natural systems and our home planet." Hazel Henderson

  • - Design Paradigms for Our Planetary Emergency
    av Sarah Ichioka
    343,-

    Proposes regenerative principles with potential to transform how we design, make and manage our buildings, infrastructure and communities

  • - Framing Through Other Patterns
    av Nora Bateson
    254,-

    "This is an important first collection of essays, reflections and poems by Nora Bateson, the noted research designer, film-maker, writer and lecturer"--Publisher's Web site.

  • av Nora Bateson
    369,-

    This is the long-awaited second collection of essays, reflections, poems and artwork by Nora Bateson. The book is an embodiment of her recent work on Warm Data and offers a radical ecological approach to many of the key issues of our time: climate change, political upheaval, education, health, food and relationships.

  • av Bill Sharpe
    178,-

    A practical framework for thinking about the future - and an exploration of 'future consciousness' and how to develop it. Three Horizons is a simple and intuitive framework for thinking about the future. The framework explains how people often manage to disagree so violently about their visions of the future and how to achieve them - and it offers a practical way to begin constructive conversations about the future at home, in organisations and in society at large. The three horizons are about much, much more than simply stretching our thinking to embrace the short, medium and long term. They offer a co-ordinated way of managing innovation, a way of creating transformational change that has a chance of succeeding, a way of dealing with uncertainty and a way of seeing the future in the present. In this beautifully illustrated book, Bill Sharpe introduces the Three Horizons framework as a prompt for developing a 'future consciousness' - a rich and multi-faceted awareness of the future potential of the present moment - and explores how to put that awareness to work to create the futures we aspire to.

  • - Being more advice for aspiring academic and research leaders
    av Geoff Garrett & Sir Graeme Davies
    292,-

    Garrett and Davies combine their experience of leading international academic/research institutions with the wisdom of 50 senior colleagues worldwide. They deal with leadership themes like making tough strategic choices, leading change, dealing with bureaucracy, allocating resources, managing budgets and ensuring effective implementation.

  • - Being Advice to Aspiring Leaders in the Professions
    av Geoffrey Garrett & Graeme John Davies
    304,-

    Herding Professional Cats offers advice and insights to leaders in the professions about tackling the classic 'cats' dilemma: how to manage intelligent, opinionated, independent and frequently difficult people without losing the competitive edge a professionalised workforce can bring.

  • av William Tate
    783,-

  • av Patricia Lustig
    260,-

    This is a practical guide to improved medium-term decision-making for business leaders. The Possibility Wheel gathers the latest global evidence - so you can explore more opportunities, develop resilient choices leading to more robust decisions and enjoy better outcomes.

  • av Andy Hines
    341,-

  • av Linda Hartley
    334,-

    Brings together the wisdom and learning from nearly five decades of study, practice and teaching at the forefront of somatic movement, embodied awareness, somatic and transpersonal psychotherapy, and spiritual disciplines.

  • av Simon O'Sullivan
    207,-

    ''A novel about the ' fiction of the self' and performance as a device. Develops an idea of ' myth-work' . Shows how narrative and imaginary landscapes/figures can work as a form of repair.

  • av Sheila Ryan
    170,-

    A collection of essays on movement, migration, relationships, trauma, aging and change.

  • av Claire Loussouarn
    228,-

    Challenges our preconceived notions of how our body should move. Uses a series of practices and reflections to disrupt our usual shape and movement and our beliefs about our place in the natural world. 91 movement practices that any reader can use to question and come to understand our conditioning and our biases.

  • av Jim Ewing
    244,-

    Jim Ewing started his professional life as a rocket scientist, but it soon became evident that his real passion was for people. He saw that life is about navigating change - braving uncertainty, living well at our ' learning edge' . He set out to develop a way to support others, " a conversational, casual, no-frills and no-waiting intervention to be a first responder for individuals and for groups when steep change and life redesign come calling" . Over time he grew a successful consulting business, working with companies and organisations innovating through change or tackling ' wicked' problems. He designed a family of maps to support this work - simple frameworks for transformative conversations for use with individuals, groups, communities, organisations. Here Jim introduces the maps and the thinking that lies behind each of them, plus the conversational craft that brings them all to life. For those interested in pursuing the practice further, he points in the final chapter to Executive Arts, the small circle of colleagues and fellow practitioners to whom he entrusted the further development and spread of his work.

  • av Phil Smith
    250,-

    As our relationship with the world around us becomes more fragile, these 3 ecogothic novellas voice the fears and feelings we have about our environment and climate change. They show individuals and societies coming apart at the seams.The toolkit proposes walking and other practices that draw on the novellas and invite reflection and reconnection.

  • av Lucy Neal
    375,-

    Now back in print... This groundbreaking handbook (first published in 2015 by Oberon and now needed more than ever in the face of multiple unfolding crises) is a resource for artists, community activists and anyone wishing to harness their creativity to make change in the world. Playing for Time explores the pivotal role artists play in re-thinking the future; re-inventing and re-imagining our world at a time of systemic change and uncertainty. Playing for Time identifies collaborative arts practices emerging in response to planetary challenges, reclaiming a traditional role for artists in the community as truth-tellers and agents of change. Fifty experienced artists and activists give voice to a new narrative - shifting society's rules and values away from consumerism and commodity towards community and collaboration with imagination, humour, ingenuity, empathy and skill. Inspired by the grass-roots Transition movement, modelling change in communities worldwide, Playing for Time joins the dots between key drivers of change - in energy, finance, climate change, food and community resilience - and 'recipes for action' for readers to take and try.

  • av Gregory Bateson
    296,-

    In 31 posthumously collected lectures and writings, anthropologist, systems thinker and cyberneticist Gregory Bateson (1904-1980) addresses questions of ecology, mind, consciousness, linguistics, evolution and communication. His masterly synthesis stresses the need to re-establish a "sacred unity" between the human mind and the biosphere.

  • av Miranda Tufnell
    344,-

    A moving and inspiring exploration of the field of dance and health. It gathers stories and activities from artists, patients and health practitioners and sets out to inspire rather than to teach, to offer windows into practice, and to convey something of what it is like to work in this field. Previously published by Dance Books.

  • av Miranda Tufnell
    294,-

    When it was first published in 1990, 'Body Space Image' was acclaimed as the first book of its kind - a remarkable guide to improvisation, using a narrative of discovery that " set the mind loose from the rut of everyday perception" . It was groundbreaking in the way it addressed improvised movement, experimental performance and how to create performance settings. Thirty years later, 'Body, Space, Image' still stands out from anything published in the interim - largely because of the way it combines a unique collection of images (from dance, theatre and painting) and statements by working artists. The authors start with the individual's movement itself as the basis of improvisation, then broaden their perspective to include groups working together and the physical setting of performance - space, light, sound and objects. 'Body Space Image' explores ways of working and ways of thinking about performance that have inspired beginners and experienced artists alike. It is a manual intended to stimulate rather than a comprehensive system of working and, in it, word and image combine to celebrate and record one of the most exacting art forms. Previously published by Dance Books, this is a very slightly revised new edition from Triarchy Press

  • av Miranda Tufnell & Chris Crickmay
    344,-

    This is a handbook for working in the creative arts, with an emphasis on imagination and receptivity: to our bodies, surroundings, materials, and to what we create. It puts particular emphasis upon the sensing, feeling, moving body as a basis for any imaginative activity.

  • av Jagdish Rattanani
    194,-

    Much has been written by and about Satish Kumar - peace pilgrim, co-founder of Schumacher College, and longtime editor of Resurgence magazine. A monk at the age of nine, and now a world-renowned environmental activist with Honorary Doctorates from five UK universities, Satish Kumar has been working to realize Mahatma Gandhi's vision of a peaceful, sustainable world for much of his life. This new volume gives readers the chance to listen in on a 30-hour 'longform conversation' with Satish - a conversation where his interviewers draw out his experiences, reflections and insights. They question his political and philosophical thinking, invite him to revisit strongly held positions and, through the conversation, seek to cast new light on the man and his multiple perspectives on the world. Forewords by Charles Eisenstein and Arun Maira place his life and work in context and the conversation challenges him on many aspects of his thinking.

  • av Mary Booker
    244,-

    Moving on from her ­ first enquiry into fear and vulnerability (described in her book Nothing Special) Mary Booker here offers a guide to the roots and nature of desire. She draws on her autobiographical writing, movement art, poetry, Buddhist practice and dramatherapy skills to explore the origins, impact, constraints and blossoming of desire in her own life. Amongst the questions she considers: - If desire is for something other, does a sense of lack always accompany it? - Does one desire always point to a deeper desire? - Does desire always lead to suffering, as suggested in Buddhism? - Desire is highly motivating. How can we best access that energy? - Is desire by nature insatiable? Does it always seek more? - Is desire essential to life? - Why do illness and depression remove desire? Are they too absorbing? - What is the relationship between desire and vulnerability? Touching the Flame includes 40 of Mary's poems and has chapters on Needs and Desire; Lack and Longing; Buddhism and Desire; Greco-Roman Views of Desire; Desire and Creativity; Women and Desire; and the Sumerian myth of 'The Descent of Inanna to the Great Below'.

  • av Julian Carlyon
    194,-

    Julian Carlyon seeks to reconcile the apparently conflicting perspectives of western medicine, quantum mechanics, spirituality, psychoanalysis, ancient Chinese wisdom and 'New Age' thinking. He covers quantum entanglement, synchronicity, morphic resonance, similarity, homeopathy, healing, dreams, creativity, choice and somatics.

  • av Bob Chisholm
    241,-

    This book is about psychotherapy. Written as a collection of tales about encounters between a therapist and his clients, it reveals why many people would turn to therapy for help, what they might look for and what they might actually find.For Bob Chisholm, a therapist who draws on Buddhist psychology in dealing with his clients, helping someone find self-insight has less to do with understanding their life diagnostically than it does with appreciating their experience existentially - that is to say, in all its inherent mystery.The idea that uncovering mystery could be a way of freeing someone from their psychological misery may seem almost magical: like consulting a ouija board or gazing into tea leaves. But it is in the details and happenstance of a person's life - in the suspense of the everyday world - that the actual mystery of a person's life is sure to be found. Finding that mystery, and helping people come to terms with it, is what this book is all about.Written for anyone training or practising as a psychotherapist, or considering taking up therapy as a client, 'Uncovering Mystery in Everyday Life' is also for anyone interested in the existential wonder of being human.

  • av Christina Reading
    304,-

    Sooner or later, most of us get stuck. Feel stuck. Our creativity in crisis... lost, blocked, overwhelmed by work, family, illness. How to find or recover that creative edge? How to get unstuck?For the authors, it began with cancer and stretched into the pandemic. One primarily a writer and the other a painter, they decide to walk together, to talk, write, feed back, reflect and repeat, again and again. They explore trust, openness, motherhood, their willingness to take risks and be exposed, and the particular insights they bring as women. Along the way, they walk and map their way back to creative life.This is their story, but more than that - it's a map for anyone who is feeling stuck. Whether or not you have had a creative practice before (writing/painting/making/crafting), this book will help you find your way into creative expression. The authors offer creative tasks and suggestions in each chapter, and ideas and structures to get you going. But most important, they offer warmth, friendship and inspiration from their own shared vulnerability, struggle, setbacks and muddy walking.

  • av Nick Sales
    284,-

    Rock Songs starts as a walk of a few miles between the valley of the river Tywi/Towy and the heights of Y Mynydd Du/Black Mountain in Wales. It takes millions of years, meeting along the way the rocks and water that have formed the land, together with the trees, red kites, and otters who pass through. Humans crowd in as well--saints, drovers, Romans, bikers, and tourists. The great zen monk, Dogen, is also walking and learns that mountains themselves walk, if you know how to look. Rock Songs began as a one-man movement performance of a river by Nick Sales and has become a book of poetry, reflection, ecology, and zen reflection. It's illustrated with extensive photography by Steve Hopkins and beautifully designed by Christopher Binding.

  •  
    316,-

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