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Stari reklamni privezak `TUPPERWARE` USA iz 60-tih godina,u dobrom je stanju.

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Veliki enciklipedijski format francuski jezik ilustrovani recepti 92 strane kvalitetna štampa

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No Touching A Moving Story Of Liberation That Shatters Tired Prejudices About Womanhood, Sex And Society Josephine teaches in a high school in a suburb of Paris. Her life is a balancing act between Xanax and Tupperware lunches in the staff room until she walks into a Champs-Elysee's strip club. There she learns a secret nocturnal code of conduct; she discovers camaraderie and the joys of female company, and she thrills at the sensation of men's desire directed toward her. Josephine, a teacher by day, begins to lead a secret existence by night that ultimately allows her to regain control of her life. This delicate balance is shattered one evening by an unexpected visitor to the club where she dances. A heartrending reflection on a woman's image of herself, and the way others see her, Ketty Rouf's extraordinary debut novel No Touching won the prestigious French literary prize Prix du Premier Roman 2020 (First Novel award)

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All-American Ads of the 60s With the consumerist euphoria of the fifties still going strong and the race to the moon at its height, the mood of advertising in the sixties was cheerful, optimistic, and at times, revolutionary. The decade’s ads touted perceived progress―such as tang and instant omelets - "just add water"―while striving to reinforce good old American values. Stars like Sean Connery, Woody Allen, Salvador Dalí, and Sammy Davis Jr. endorsed everything from bourbon to handmade suits in an attempt by Madison Avenue to urge Americans to open their wallets and participate in one giant consumer binge. Social change at the end of the era brought psychedelic swirls and liberated women and minorities to a newly conscious public. Keep an eye out for some of the more surprising and controversial ads―such as Tupperware billing its storage container as a "wifesaver." From forgotten cars, to cigarettes to food and much more, this colorful collection of print ads explores the wide, wonderful world of 60s Americana.

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All-American Ads of the 60s / Ed. Jim Heimann, Steven Heller Izdavač: TASCHEN Keln, Nemačka 2022. Tvrd povez, zaštitni omot, bogato ilustrovano, engleski jezik, format 20×26 cm, 640 strana. Knjiga je nekorišćena - još uvek je u celofanu. America of the 1960s exuded optimism and a bright economic future. Advertisers seduced Americans to indulge in a giant consumer binge. This collection of ads features stars such as Sean Connery, Woody Allen, Salvador Dalí, and Sammy Davis Jr. endorsing everything from bourbon to suits in an era known for extremes. “Anyone who approaches with questions about how people lived, ate, felt and consumed in earlier decades will find the TASCHEN ad books an excellent investment.” ― The Toronto Star “Closest thing to time travel.” ― The Spokesman “A rose-tinted trip back to the golden age of advertising.” ― ShortList Product Description With the consumerist euphoria of the fifties still going strong and the race to the moon at its height, the mood of advertising in the sixties was cheerful, optimistic, and at times, revolutionary. The decade’s ads touted perceived progress―such as tang and instant omelets - `just add water`―while striving to reinforce good old American values. Stars like Sean Connery, Woody Allen, Salvador Dalí, and Sammy Davis Jr. endorsed everything from bourbon to handmade suits in an attempt by Madison Avenue to urge Americans to open their wallets and participate in one giant consumer binge. Social change at the end of the era brought psychedelic swirls and liberated women and minorities to a newly conscious public. Keep an eye out for some of the more surprising and controversial ads―such as Tupperware billing its storage container as a `wifesaver.` From forgotten cars, to cigarettes to food and much more, this colorful collection of print ads explores the wide, wonderful world of 60s Americana. About the Author Steven Heller has produced over 200 books on visual communication and published countless articles in international design magazines. Currently he is cofounder and cochair of the MFA Design program at the School of Visual Arts, New York. Jim Heimann is the Executive Editor for TASCHEN America. A cultural anthropologist, historian, and an avid collector, he has authored numerous titles on architecture, pop culture, and the history of Los Angeles and Hollywood, including TASCHEN’s Surfing, Los Angeles. Portrait of a City, California Crazy, and the All-American Ads series.

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Kinflicks (1976) is a novel by American writer Lisa Alther. It was Alther`s first published work, and the `subject of considerable pre-publication hyperbole.`[1] Lisa Alther`s wonderful first novel -- her large, hilarious, serious, and powerfully affecting story of a young American woman`s uproarious tumble through the fads and shocks and `essential` experiences of the 60`s and 70`s -- has created a ground swell of advance excitement and admiration, exemplified by the letter from Doris Lessing on the back of the jacket. Ginny Babcock at twenty-seven, Cast-Out Adulterous Wife and Unfit Mother, is en route to Hullsport, Tennessee, and her own mother`s hospital bed (her father is dead, her family home on the auction block). She`s groggy with two in-flight martinis, huddled next to the DC-7`s emergency exit (`My family has always been into death`)... Her `home movies` -- her uncensored Kinflicks -- unreel: her first Never-Tell padded bra; the first time she made love -- to the hood-about-town, in her parents` bomb shelter (`I feared sperm almost as much as I feared Communists`); the Hullsport High Romance of the Decade: Flag Swinger Ginny and her Little All-American running back, Joe Bob Sparks (he had `a smile in excess of any possible stimulus`); `Do-It` Pruitt, Ginny`s grammar school chum who`d gone `all the way` for all the guys; Ginny hefting a lacquered bouffant like a plastic space helmet; Ginny in the truck of a car, with Joe Bob `twisting one of my nipples as though tuning a radio`; Ginny at her Ivy League college (`a close-fitting coif, wool suits, cameo brooches, low-heeled shoes`), starstruck by Spinoza and his scholarly herald, Miss Head... Ginny abandoning college and The Family and The City, resisting the American Capitalist Imperialist Economy, wearing fatigues and eating `whole grain bread you needed diamond-tipped teeth to chew,` joining a commune (with other `Communists, lesbians, draft-dodgers, atheists, and food stamp recipients`); Ginny, housewife (the handsome husband, the darling baby), in the Tupperware party set; Ginny into Transcendental Sex with her war (resister) hero; Ginny as the Madame Bovary of Stark`s Bog, Vermont... Now: Ginny at the hospital, at her mother`s side (`I have been well and happy, Mother. In between being sick and miserable.`) Ginny helplessly watching her mother besieged by doctors, by nurses, by dying (`Why was she being treated like an idiot child: Whose body was it?`) Ginny nerved for the maternal lecture (`Extramarital sex is vulgar. You must do your duty`), spending whole afternoons with her mother, the two of them absorbed in, protected by, soap operas (`unsurpassed as social realism...almost as tedious as life itself`); Ginny beginning (at last) to perceive her mother`s life as distinct from her own; Ginny coalescing, moving on... Absolutely alive and generous, filled with unconstrained laughter and feeling, KINFLICKS will stand as a novel of major importance about mothers and daughters, about friends and lovers, and about becoming a person in our time. Nobel laureate Doris Lessing wrote of Kinflicks that Alther was `a strong, salty, original talent.`[2] Time called it an `abundantly entertaining progress through the unsettled 60s` and noted that `as exuberant caricature Kinflicks is authentically inspired`; while the novel `teems with cartoon eccentrics mouthing balloonfuls of inflated nonsense[, u]nhappily, Ginny [the protagonist] is equally one dimensional.`[1] More than 30 years after its publication, Katherine Dieckmann, reviewing the author`s 2007 memoir, also commented on Kinflicks, calling it a `raucous novel [that] was all the rage among my high school set for its lurid paperback cover (nude female back, gilt lettering) and its frank talk of erections and lesbian hook-ups. Revisiting the novel 30 years later, it’s clear the packaging sold the contents short: Alther’s best-known book is a witty coming-of-age tale in which a tart-tongued protagonist named Ginny wanders her way through an identity crisis, mostly against a classic counterculture background.`[3] LGBT, FEMINIZAM, lezbejke

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The 8 Seasons of Parenthood: How the Stages of Parenting Constantly Reshape Our Adult Identities Hardcover – April 25, 2000, by Barbara C. Unell (Author), Jerry Wyckoff (Author) Product details Publisher: ‎ Crown; 1st edition (April 25, 2000) Language: ‎ English Hardcover: ‎ 352 pages Item Weight: ‎ 1.4 pounds Dimensions: ‎ 6.75 x 1.25 x 10 inches Every parent knows that the experience of raising children changes us profoundly, in ways often unforeseen. And yet never before has a book examined how and why the stages of our children`s development affect us so deeply, altering not only our jobs, our lifestyles, and our relationships with our spouses and parents, but the very essence of how we think of ourselves as individuals and adults. For the first time, parenting experts Barbara Unell and Jerry Wyckoff offer a new vision of the family journey -- what it means for us as parents and individuals as we evolve in tandem with every new change brought about by our children`s growth. Like Passages, Gail Sheehy`s groundbreaking study of the stages of adult maturity, this book defines for readers the eight clear stages of an adult parent`s life, illuminating the defining moments, key conflicts, important lessons and signposts of each stage of his or her evolution, from early parenthood to old age. The eight seasons of parenthood are: Celebrity: The self-absorption of impending parenthood Sponge: Surrendering your former identity to the essentials of caring for a baby Family Manager: Organizing and juggling the business of life with toddlers and preschoolers Travel Agent: Stepping back -- and stepping up your role of activities manager -- as your children go through school Volcano Dweller: Exercising damage control in your own life with teenagers Family Remodeler: Reevaluating life as a parent of new adults Plateau Parent: Reliving childhood through grandchildren Rebounder: Accepting and embracing the parent/child role reversal These eight stages are fixed at the birth of every child. Try as we might to fight this law of human nature, we all follow the same predictable, inevitable, universal, and eternal journey of parenthood with each child. Once your baby is born, there`s no turning back. Based on interviews with hundreds of parents from their twenties to their nineties and Dr. Wyckoff`s practice as a family psychologist, The Eight Seasons of Parenthood is a compassionate guide and road map to one of life`s most profound and never ending experiences . . . essential reading for any parent who has ever wondered, `What`s happening to the me I used to know?` Editorial Reviews Amazon.com Review Be it spring, summer, fall, or winter, the start of a new season marks a time of change and growth. In 8 Seasons of Parenthood, co-authors Barbara C. Unell, founder of Twins magazine, and family psychologist Jerry Wyckoff, M.D., explore the very predictable cycles of parenthood, showing how each waxing and waning season shapes individuals and families. Beginning with pregnancy (a time when moms-to-be are the `celebrities` and their husbands are the `roadies`), the authors use familiar examples to describe the physical and psychological changes adults encounter throughout parenthood--be it the new mom who laments her lost waistline and freedom; the father of a teen who suddenly needs to revisit his bygone youth; or the lonely couple who can`t face eating at the family dinner table once their children are off to college. Wykoff and Unell succeed in providing a thorough guide for parents in any stage of the child-rearing game, taking care to share a diversity of circumstances from various socioeconomic sectors as well as the experiences of special-needs families in which a child`s developmental disabilities prevent parents from reaching the final seasons. A final, thought-provoking chapter is dedicated to parents who find themselves in need of being `parented` by their own children. --Liane Thomas From Publishers Weekly Parenthood is truly not about how we raise our kids. Quite the opposite: Parenthood... is about the impact that our children make on us, an impact that gives definition and meaning to our entire adult life cycle.` With this original argument as their foundation, writer and activist Unell and child psychologist Wyckoff offer fulsome definitions of the eight season of parental life based on children`s ages, from `Celebrity` (pregnancy) through `Volcano Dweller` (adolescence), `Plateau Parent` to `Rebounder.` The authors` spirited introduction explains the book`s thesis so crisply and comprehensively that there hardly seems to be a reason to read the ensuing chapters. Sure, there are some nuggets of good advice, case histories of struggling parents and piquant quotes from notables ranging from Bill Cosby to Kierkegaard; however, the text is so laden with cliches and belabored metaphors--`the sentimental journey of this season [Celebrity] takes on the rhythm of someone fitting a big Tupperware container into an already crowded fridge`--as to frequently render the authors` message unintelligible (and make the reader wonder what happened to the editor). Best to skip ahead to the book`s last section, which provides information on starting a `Circles` group of same-season parents, copious notes and a helpful bibliography. (Apr.) Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal Unell, a parent educator, and Wyckoff, a family therapist, give a broad view of parenting from pregnancy until death. The authors believe that children transform their parents` lives from conception, and they identify eight stages through which most parent-child relationships pass: celebrity (pregnancy), sponge (infancy), family manager (preschool), travel agent (elementary school), volcano dweller (teenage years), remodeler (transition to adult relationships), plateau parent (adult children and grandchildren), and rebounder (child becomes parent). These stages develop into three circles of parenthood: young children, adult children, and parents as children. The authors` lifetime approach will help parents come to terms with each stage, see it in a meaningful context, and reflect on their parenthood (or childhood). Examples and observations come mostly from parent discussion groups. By no means a how-to book, this has something to offer readers of nearly all ages. Highly recommended for all libraries. -Kay L. Brodie, Chesapeake Coll., Wye Mills., MD Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. About the Author Barbara C. Unell and Jerry Wyckoff, Ph.d., are the authors of the bestselling Discipline Without Shouting or Spanking, 20 Teachable Virtues, and How to Discipline Your 6-to-12-Year-Old Without Losing Your Mind. Unell, a parent educator, journalist, and former columnist for The Kansas City Star, is a founder of Twins Magazine and the school-based character-education program, `Kindness Is Contagious . . . Catch It.` She and her husband, Robert, are Family Remodelers. Dr. Wyckoff is a family psychologist who, along with his wife, Millie, is a Plateau Parent. MG13

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