Difference between revisions of "Book Bali: A Paradise Created"
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|Publisher=Tuttle Publishing; 2 edition | |Publisher=Tuttle Publishing; 2 edition | ||
|Publication date=April 10, 2012; 1989 (first edition) | |Publication date=April 10, 2012; 1989 (first edition) | ||
+ | |ISBN=978-0804842600 | ||
|Where to buy=Ganesha Bookshops in Ubud and Sanur and at www.ganeshabooksbali.com | |Where to buy=Ganesha Bookshops in Ubud and Sanur and at www.ganeshabooksbali.com | ||
|Information={{Book/Information | |Information={{Book/Information | ||
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|Link=Adams, Kathleen M. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 23, no. 1 (1992): 183-85. http://www.jstor.org/stable/20071428. | |Link=Adams, Kathleen M. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 23, no. 1 (1992): 183-85. http://www.jstor.org/stable/20071428. | ||
}} | }} | ||
+ | |Author=Biography of Adrian Vickers Adrian Vickers, | ||
|Subject=history, anthropology, | |Subject=history, anthropology, | ||
|Description text=... Although Vickers is an Australian scholar of Indonesian history and culture, this book was not written for a scholarly audience. Rather, Vickers’ work is aimed at the educated traveller seeking a more penetrating analysis of Bali than that offered by standard guide books. Given that he is writing for readers interested in scholarly perspectives on Bali but reluctant to wade through detailed academic treatises, Vickers is successful in his enterprise. His book offers extremely readable discussions of prev ious historical, literary and academic writings on Bali, with references available in the end- notes for those who wish to go on to the original sources. Indeed, its theoretical argument aside, Vickers* book has value as a source book for novices interested in Baliology. Vickers supplements his discussion of Bali’s shifting imagery with a modest selection of visual images, including several sketches of Balinese daily life drawn from the books of Miguel Covarrubias and Louise Koke, and thirty riveting black-and-white historic photographs and reproductions of Balinese paintings.... | |Description text=... Although Vickers is an Australian scholar of Indonesian history and culture, this book was not written for a scholarly audience. Rather, Vickers’ work is aimed at the educated traveller seeking a more penetrating analysis of Bali than that offered by standard guide books. Given that he is writing for readers interested in scholarly perspectives on Bali but reluctant to wade through detailed academic treatises, Vickers is successful in his enterprise. His book offers extremely readable discussions of prev ious historical, literary and academic writings on Bali, with references available in the end- notes for those who wish to go on to the original sources. Indeed, its theoretical argument aside, Vickers* book has value as a source book for novices interested in Baliology. Vickers supplements his discussion of Bali’s shifting imagery with a modest selection of visual images, including several sketches of Balinese daily life drawn from the books of Miguel Covarrubias and Louise Koke, and thirty riveting black-and-white historic photographs and reproductions of Balinese paintings.... |
Revision as of 06:49, 20 September 2019
- Title
- Bali - A Paradise Created
- Original language
- Author(s)
- Illustrator(s)
- Publisher
- Tuttle Publishing; 2 edition
- ISBN
- 978-0804842600
- Publication date
- April 10, 2012; 1989 (first edition)
- Subjects
- history
- anthropology
- Find Book
- Ganesha Bookshops in Ubud and Sanur and at www.ganeshabooksbali.com
- Related Env. Initiatives
- Related Places
- Related Biographies
- Related Children's Books
- Related Holidays
- Related Folktales
- Related Comics
- Related Lontar
- Linked words
Description(s)
Although Vickers is an Australian scholar of Indonesian history and culture, this book was not written for a scholarly audience. Rather, Vickers’ work is aimed at the educated traveller seeking a more penetrating analysis of Bali than that offered by standard guide books. Given that he is writing for readers interested in scholarly perspectives on Bali but reluctant to wade through detailed academic treatises, Vickers is successful in his enterprise. His book offers extremely readable discussions of prev ious historical, literary and academic writings on Bali, with references available in the end- notes for those who wish to go on to the original sources. Indeed, its theoretical argument aside, Vickers* book has value as a source book for novices interested in Baliology. Vickers supplements his discussion of Bali’s shifting imagery with a modest selection of visual images, including several sketches of Balinese daily life drawn from the books of Miguel Covarrubias and Louise Koke, and thirty riveting black-and-white historic photographs and reproductions of Balinese paintings....
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