Più di un milione di libri, a un clic di distanza!
Bookbot

Bryan Nelson

    Bryan Nelson è stato un ornitologo e attivista ambientale britannico, affermandosi come massima autorità in materia di uccelli marini. Le sue ampie pubblicazioni e il suo lavoro accademico presso l'Università di Aberdeen si sono concentrati su specie come i gabbiani reali e i cormorani. La ricerca pionieristica di Nelson in luoghi remoti come le Isole Galápagos e l'Isola di Natale non solo ha approfondito la nostra comprensione della vita aviana, ma ha anche contribuito alla conservazione di specie in pericolo e dei loro habitat naturali.

    On the Rocks
    Democracy and Defiance
    Galapagos Crusoes
    • The Galapagos Crusoes: a year alone with the birds travel and wildlife narrative - an account of a year spent living on two waterless Galapagos islands in 1964, Tower Island (Genovesa) and Hood (Espanola), including groundbreaking descriptions of Galapagos wildlife, all the adventure of life on a deserted island and a visit from HRH Prince Philip.

      Galapagos Crusoes
    • Democracy and Defiance

      Rancière, Lefort, Abensour and the Antinomies of Politics

      • 240pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      Exploring the works of Jacques Rancière, Claude Lefort, and Miguel Abensour, this book presents a provocative interpretation of democracy as an emancipatory project. It delves into a lesser-known aspect of contemporary French political thought, challenging conventional views on democracy's limits. By connecting these thinkers, the author highlights democracy's transformative potential against domination and inequality, urging a reevaluation of its nature and implications for society and politics. Bryan Nelson, a professor at Humber College, guides this insightful discourse.

      Democracy and Defiance
    • "Seabirds and islands, an addictive mix, have dominated my life. Ailsa Craig and its gannets started the rot more than 60 years ago leading via a tortuous route to the Bass Rock, Christmas Island, Cape Kidnappers and other remote seabird haunts. This journey was eased by a St Andrews University degree in Zoology and Oxford D Phil under Niko Tinbergen and Mike Cullen, which helped my appointment as Lecturer, later Reader, in Zoology at Aberdeen University. I have been very lucky, thanks to gannets. I should mention, also, the Scottish Seabird Centre with which I have been involved as a Director since its inception." Bryan Nelson, who died in 2015 aged 83, pursued a distinguished academic career but also had a passion for communicating with a general audience. At Aberdeen he continued his pioneering work on gannets, especially on their methods of communication, of which he was an adept and entertaining mimic. He was one of the first zoologists to use modern photographic techniques such as fast film to capture bird behaviour, notably gannets diving into the sea at phenomenal speeds. This fascinating memoir is a collaboration with his friend the artist John Busby.

      On the Rocks