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41. SWITZERLAND: LANDSCAPE, ART, CULTURE
$73.43
42. Geneva Zurich Basel: History,
 
$30.00
43. Switzerland an inside view: Politics,
 
$8.90
44. GERMANY, AUSTRIA, SWITZERLAND:
 
45. The Pearls of Switzerland. New
 
$31.95
46. Visions of Utopia in Switzerland
 
47. Cultural policy in Switzerland:
 
48. Culture For Missionaries - West
$15.84
49. Madame Prosecutor: Confrontations
$60.49
50. Richard Wagner's Zurich: The Muse
$100.43
51. Liturgy Wars: Ritual Theory and
 
$22.80
52. Heinrich Burkhart (Studies in
 
$72.95
53. Shared Languages, Shared Identities,
 
$21.80
54. Political Culture and Judicial
 
$41.80
55. Culture of the Abbey of St. Gall:
$70.00
56. Theater, Culture, and Community
$3.59
57. Xenophobe's Guide to the Swiss
58. Le quotidien des Rukuba: Collections
$41.99
59. Creative Industries Switzerland
$7.69
60. Asterix in Switzerland

41. SWITZERLAND: LANDSCAPE, ART, CULTURE AND HISTORY: A VADE-MECUM FOR TOURISTS
by Swiss National Tourist Office
 Hardcover: Pages (1955-01-01)

Asin: B001IVYGR8
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42. Geneva Zurich Basel: History, Culture, & National Identity
by Nicolas Bouvier, Gordon A. Craig, Lionel Gossman
Hardcover: 120 Pages (1994-06)
list price: US$18.95 -- used & new: US$73.43
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Asin: 0691036187
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Recognized by historians and politicians as a model for European unity, Switzerland is nonetheless a difficult country to understand as a whole. Whereas individual Swiss cities have strong identities in the international political, cultural, and economic arenas, the country itself seems to be less than the sum of its parts. To capture the elusive spirit of Switzerland, four eminent writers explore the roots of its political unity and cultural diversity in a series of urban portraits. Their observations make for both good storytelling and insightful social commentary.Nicolas Bouvier offers a quick-paced history of Geneva--the city John Calvin had envisioned as a radiating center of godliness, international in its scope and legal in its methods--the home of the Red Cross and the League of Nations and, since 1945, the location of numerous disarmament and diplomatic conferences. Gordon Craig examines Zurich, the city of the militant religious reformer Huldrych Zwingli, whose centralizing political zeal was harnessed by subsequent generations of Zurichers to lead Switzerland in its modernization. Today's economically powerful Zurich is analyzed in terms of its liberal past as a refuge for political activists and artists, and in terms of its current generational divisions on moral and cultural questions. Finally, Lionel Gossman explores the conciliatory Basel of Erasmus, showing how vigorous independence, resourcefulness, and remembrance of its humanist traditions shaped the city's culture and economy. Tying together important themes in the histories of these cities, Carl Schorske focuses his introduction on how Switzerland has capitalized on their cultural differences and refined the art of political negotiation to serve a wide range of civic interests. ... Read more


43. Switzerland an inside view: Politics, economy, culture, society, nature
 Unknown Binding: 271 Pages (1992)
-- used & new: US$30.00
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Asin: 3905080192
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (1)

4-0 out of 5 stars explaining Switzerland to foreigners
Various aspects of Swiss society in the early 90s are explained. The book is pitched to foreigners; perhaps to disabuse any misconceptions about the nation. For example, there is a discussion about Swiss banks and banking secrecy. Including how it arose in the 1930s to protect the identities of refugees. There are photos of gold bars in a bank cellar.

But the book endeavours to go beyond such stereotypes. By invoking topics like the patent system, which is very popular internationally. Well regarded for the amount of protection it gives inventors. Closely related to this is the amount of research and development conducted by multinationals inside Switzerland. Especially by drug companies, but also by such luminaries like IBM. ... Read more


44. GERMANY, AUSTRIA, SWITZERLAND: An entry from Charles Scribner's Sons' <i>Encyclopedia of Food and Culture</i>
by William Woys Weaver, Hans-Jurgen Teuteberg
 Digital: 11 Pages (2003)
list price: US$8.90 -- used & new: US$8.90
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Asin: B001S58VVG
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Product Description
This digital document is an article from Encyclopedia of Food and Culture, brought to you by Gale®, a part of Cengage Learning, a world leader in e-research and educational publishing for libraries, schools and businesses.The length of the article is 6056 words.The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase.You can view it with any web browser.Intended to provide a comprehensive description of the enterprise of education both within the United States and throughout the world. Articles offer a view of the institutions, people, processes, and products found in educational practice. ... Read more


45. The Pearls of Switzerland. New International Edition Culture, Business, Tourism
by Theodor Heutschi
 Paperback: Pages (1997)

Isbn: 3952135410
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46. Visions of Utopia in Switzerland (Occasional Papers in Swiss Studies, V. 3)
 Paperback: 113 Pages (2001-03)
list price: US$31.95 -- used & new: US$31.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0820453366
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47. Cultural policy in Switzerland: The present situation (Education & culture)
by Edgar Tripet
 Unknown Binding: 59 Pages (1978)

Asin: B0006E6NMY
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48. Culture For Missionaries - West Germany, Switzerland, Austria
by Unknown
 Paperback: Pages (1984)

Asin: B000WJ1BWK
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49. Madame Prosecutor: Confrontations with Humanity's Worst Criminals and the Culture of Impunity
by Carla Del Ponte, Chuck Sudetic
Hardcover: 448 Pages (2009-01-20)
list price: US$25.95 -- used & new: US$15.84
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1590513029
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Carla Del Ponte won international recognition as Switzerland's attorney general when she pursued cases against the Sicilian mafia. In 1999, she answered the United Nations' call to become the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and for Rwanda. In her new role, Del Ponte confronted genocide and crimes against humanity head-on, struggling to bring to justice the highest-ranking individuals responsible for massive acts of violence in Rwanda, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, and Kosovo.

These tribunals have been unprecedented. They operate along the edge of the divide between national sovereignty and international responsibility, in the gray zone between the judicial and the political, a largely unexplored realm for prosecutors and judges. It is a realm whose native inhabitants–political leaders and diplomats, soldiers and spies–assume that they can commit the big crime without being held culpable. It is a realm crisscrossed by what Del Ponte calls the muro di gomma –"the wall of rubber"– a metaphor referring to the tactics government officials use to hide their unwillingness to confront the culture of impunity that has allowed persons responsible for acts of unspeakable, wholesale violence to escape accountability. Madame Prosecutor is Del Ponte's courageous and startling memoir of her eight years spent striving to serve justice. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (4)

3-0 out of 5 stars Overly detailed but important
After reading "Madame Prosecutor" I am more convinced than ever that the International Criminal Tribunal at the Hague, run by the United Nations and for which Carla Del Ponte was the chief prosecutor for crimes against humanity committed in Rawanda and Yugoslavia, is not the best way or even a very good way to go after war criminals.

The problem is certainly not with Del Ponte--she was a dogged worker, good manager and dedicated prosecutor. She does not come across as a person one would want as a friend but as someone to bring end the culture of impunity enjoyed by mass murderers. I doubt if a anyone could do better given the built-in constraints of the system.

Del Ponte was both ambitious, wanting success for its own sake and to continue her career but also fervent in her desire to get the people ultimately guilty for some of the worst crimes since the end of World War II. She is able to ignore the details of slaughter and refuses to prosecute the low level soldiers and police officers guilty of murder. She wants the monsters who initiated the reign of terror against helpless civilians in central Africa and Southeast Europe.

The biggest problem she faced is the willingness of the United States, France, the United Kingdom and other nations who have tried to seize the moral high ground recently to value diplomacy over justice. Another difficulty is the bureacracy of the UN itself. There are plenty of other reasons why the going has been slow and few of the guilty have been tried.

Spain showed the way when a court there indicted Augusto Pinochet for crimes committed during his term as dictator in Chile. Using the doctorine of universal jurisdiction--that some acts are so egregious that they constitute crimes against humanity and can therefore be prosecuted in any court in the world, they ruled that he was not immune to prosecution in Spain even though he had given amnesty in Chile.

Del Ponte worked for eight years to convict Balkan war lords and military leaders in the International Court of Justice at the Hague. The theme that runs throughtout the book is the constant tension between the need for justice and diplomatic expeniency. While most of Del Ponte's targets were brought to trial, several were found not guilty (or the charges found "not proven" on, in some cases, what later was found to be doctored evidence. The hundreds of years of warfare among Serbs, Croats, Albanians and Macedonians and among Roman Catholics, Orthodox Catholics and Muslims was continued with astonishing and brutality during break-up of the former Yugoslavia and the power and land grabs that followed it.

There is a lot of information--too much--on the bureaucratic battles Del Ponte had to fight. While it is important to understand how the ICJ itself, which seems more committed more to legalism, establishing its authority and creating precedent and procedure than to bringing war criminals to justice, the amount of detail and the meeting by meeting accounts of her frustration becomes frustrating reading.

She was, however, totally committed to her task. Del Ponte was one of the few figures who unifed southeastern Europe--everyone there hated her. She was addressed in official, for the record memos from Croatian political leaders as "Dear Madame Whore". She was villified in the press throughout the area and ignored by her targets whenever they could. Far from detering her, these attacks simply showed her that she was doing the right thing and going after the right people.

I would hate to have her after me. She is an indefatigable pursuer, a constant thorn in the side of slow moving officials and a dedicated, creative prosecutor. The end of the book is downbeat but not surprising--she had an arbitrary deadline and many of her targets knew that if they avoided her until her appointment expired they would be safe. By her standards she failed--the final words are "the simple fact of failure is the simple fact of failure" but it was a noble and necessary effort.

"Madame Prosecutor" is slow going at times--Del Ponte recounts some of her battles to have Serbian, Albanian and Croatian war ciminals arrested almost memo by memo and airport by airport--but it is generally well written and very timely.

3-0 out of 5 stars PERFECT FOR CLASSROOM STUDY
This book gets burdened by too many statistics, which is great for that class credit that you need for graduatation.But for the average reader, it can overwhelm & boggle the mind.In between all the statistics, the numbers & the basis of where she retrieved the fact finding, you catch just a brief glimpse of personal stories that are heart wrenching (war crimes committed, genocide, abuse of women, etc.).She definitely did her research as this is a very informative source for this topic.I would have wanted to know that the stories by individuals are sprinkled sparsely throughout all of the statistics.So one really has to digest quite of bit of overwhelming information on many pages, before hitting a kernal of a personal story, which is why I purchased the book initially (for the personal stories). Once again, great for your classroom work and thesis, bad for the average reader.

5-0 out of 5 stars Exceeds memoir expectations
Today's news report explains the gist of this book the best.

--

Serbia fully committed to cooperation with ICTY

President of the National Council for Cooperation with the ICTY Rasim Ljajic met today with ICTY President Patrick Robinson. This is Robinson's first official visit to Belgrade.

According to a statement issued by the National Council, Ljajic informed Robinson about Serbia's efforts and commitment in cooperating with the tribunal.

Ljajic also told Robinson about current activities for apprehending the remaining two Hague indictees, Ratko Mladic and Goran Hadzic.

Robinson said that he is aware of the changes in Serbia's overall political climate and of the commitment of the Serbian authorities to fully cooperate with the tribunal, adding that he thinks that this is extremely important for confronting the past, for reconciliation to take place in the region and for strengthening the rule of law.

Serbia's initiative to create conditions for Hague indictees found guilty to serve their prison terms in their respective countries was also discussed at the meeting.

Robinson stressed that the ICTY has received several such demands from Slovenia and Croatia, adding that this is the right moment to consider the issue and it is possible that the Security Council will make a final decision regarding this matter within the foreseeable future.

The issue of providing medical aid to indictees in detention was also discussed. It was stated that Serbian doctors should be more involved in this process.

--

Carla Del Ponte goes into juicy and fascinating -- in a terrifying sense -- detail to expose the pretense from the above news clipping. You'll get a behind the scenes look into the dirty world of international politics that shows that law and justice are not that close together. She lifts the vail off some of the key players from the past years which gives us a lot of insight into today's key players (e.g. Rasim Ljajic and Patrick Robinson in the news clipping). I agree with the previous reviewer that it reads like a thriller rather than a memoir. Was there a lot of details that could bore some readers? Yes. I think the details are what make this book so interesting and at times frustrating. You'll feel her frustration as she fights to bring justice and some sort of piece of mind to the victims' families from Rwandan and Srebrenica genocides. Whether reading about the war crimes in Rwanda or former Yugoslavia you'll see that the overall picture is the same with the exception of maybe geography.

5-0 out of 5 stars A Mandatory Lecture for Balkan Studies
Since I live in Slovenia, the northernmost republic of the former Yugoslavia, I will discuss only the chase of the Yugoslav war criminals to which about 80 % of the book is devoted. The rest deals with Rwanda, where I did not watch the crimes as closely as those in my immediate vicinity.

By reading Carla Del Ponte's book one understands, why the former Yugoslavia went into pieces. The (Orthodox) Serbs and their "brothers" Montenegrins considered themselves as being a super-race, as the defendant Biljana Plavsic, attempted to imply as she explained to the Attorney General Del Ponte. According to their actions, it appears that the (Catholic) Croats meant to be just the same. The development of events had (as already many times previously) confirmed that it is impossible for two super-races to exist in a peaceful coexistence indefinitely. The Muslims in Bosnia and Kosovo considered themselves being the "true believers" against the "nonbelievers", the Serbs, Montenegrins and Croats. The more remote (predominantly Catholic) Slovenes did not belong to any of these feuding groups, so we were the first ones to withdraw from the common State Yugoslavia, felt here more like a cage than as a homeland. As a result of the "ten-days-war" (in the summer 1991) when the so-called Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) attempted to impose the Serbian rule on Slovenia, the death toll in this struggle was "only" 39 JNA troops, 8 Slovenian troops and policemen, 5 civilians and 10 foreigners (journalists and truck drivers). The southernmost republic, Macedonia, withdrew from the Yugoslav turmoil in an even more fortunate way. As a result these republics were not the subject of the prosecution by the International Criminal Tribunal of the former Yugoslavia (ICTFY).

Contrary to the Slovenian "trifle", the death toll in Croatia, Bosnia & Herzegovina (B&H), and Kosovo has exceeded many thousands; roughly two millions citizens of these republics and of the district Kosovo were forced to leave their homes and run for their lives. Alone in the vicinity of the Bosnian town of Srebrenica, the Serbian military and paramilitary units systematically shot roughly 7000 civilians, mostly disarmed men, and boys. In these struggles, Serbia and Croatia attempted to take "their" part of B&H by force, horrible crimes, robberies, rapping and arsons were being committed. After three and half years, when on the 14th of December 1995, the Dayton Agreement was signed between Tudjman, Milosevic and the Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic, the hostilities ceased. But soon afterwards, the Serbs increased their ethnic cleansing in Kosovo, which was culminated in the first quarter of 1999. This aggression was stopped in the late spring the same year, after NATO planes bombed Serbia continuously for 74 days.

In order to punish this extensive ethnic cleansing and genocide, which happened in the middle of Europe of 20th century, the UN established the ICTFY in The Hague. Its task is to enforce the arrests and punish all those Serbs, Montenegrins, Croats, Bosnians and Kosovars, who committed crimes against humanity and war crimes. By pursuing these objectives, Del Ponte must visit the capitals of the former Yugoslav republics: Zagreb (Croatia), Belgrade (Serbia), Sarajevo (B&H), Pristina (Kosovo, then the district of Serbia), and Podgorica (Montenegro) to demand the charging documents and make the arrests of the culprits. The majority of these culprits include: The Croat President, Franjo Tudjman; his General, Ante Gotovina; the Bosnian Croat leader, Tihomir Blaksic; the Serbian President, Slobodan Milosevic; his General, Ratko Mladic; and the Bosnian Serbs' leader, Radovan Karadjic.

In her pursuit of the documents and culprits Del Ponte has collided with the "muro di gomma" (the rubber wall, which was the original title of her Italian manuscript) - many words and promises but few, if any deeds. Everybody was pointing to the others, who were doing them injustice, just to dilute the discussion and spend time. The opinions in the EU, UN, NATO, USA, and even at The Hague Tribunal proper were not always in favor of either of the immediate arrest of the culprits, or for a harder demand to get the relevant documents. Del Ponte describes numerous suggestions from the officials of these institutions - depending on the political climate in Russia, USA, Serbia, etc. It appears that the crimes suddenly became less important because of the immediate situations in Russia, the approaching elections in Serbia, as well as the attempts as to what the United States was just planning to do, etc... The worst examples were the Kosovars, who honor their medieval clan and tribal ties much more than the law and order of the western democracies.

In spite of these difficulties, Del Ponte may claim great success by bringing into custody the majority of the accused, even though the Serbian President, Milosevic, and the police and military leader of the Serbs in Croatia, Milan Babic, have committed suicide in the Scheveningen prison, and have avoided their verdict. (Milosevic did not take the prescribed drugs for his heart regularly, but kept accumulating them to be taken all at once, costing him his life). Two Croatian candidates for The Hague, the Defense Minister, Gojko Susak, and the President, Franjo Tudjman, died on cancer in May 1998 and December 1999 respectively, before enough evidence for their arrest has been collected; while the much sought General Ante Gotovina, eventually found his place in the Scheveningen custody. Until the end of March, 2009 (when these lines were written) the Serbian "capo dei capi", General Ratko Mladic has still "not been found", because most Serbs keep protecting their "hero", no matter what the cost. On the other hand, their leader in Bosnia, Radovan Karadjic has been arrested and sent to The Hague, after Del Ponte has completed her book.

The entire book reads like a thriller, for Del Ponte is an excellent narrator. In one part she writes of a movie, which has been shown on the court as the evidence against Milosevic, who claimed the infamous Serbian paramilitary unit, "Red Berets" had nothing in common with the massacres in Bosnia. In the first part the movie shows the aging Serbian Patriarch, Pavle, blessing this unit and their flag. In the second part, it shows four boys of Srebrenica descended from a truck, being forced to go to the edge of the mass grave, to be shot in head by the same "Red Berets". Heartbreaking evidence was narrated by a truck driver, who described how from a mass grave of the people just shot (near Srebrenica), a boy of about four years old emerged from the pile of dead, approaching the executioners. Since they had lowered their machine guns, the commander urged them to "finish" the child. However, they refused, claiming that the commander has his pistol too, so he should shoot the boy. Then the commander ordered that the child should be sent back by the truck to be "finished" with the next batch of people to come. Since the panic-stricken boy resisted entering the truck, the driver has switched on the light and radio in the cabin and in a friendly manner invited the child to come there. Eventually the child responded to this only kind soul, in that orgy of cruelty, by entering the truck's cab. He has laid his little hand into driver's palm, addressing him as "baabo" (daddy)... Despite the copious evidence of such kind and "...Away from the killing fields, many Serbs were dumbfounded at how the entire world seemed to have turned against them.Sadly, some of them, and even some of their leaders, are still lost in a miasma of self pity...(page 37)".

One outstanding feature of this book is also the correct spelling of ALL Yugoslav names, which I can not afford to type correctly on my computer keyboard (where I have the correct fonts), because of the unusual and meaningless fonts, instead of the correct ones, would appear in the amazon.com review. It seems that Times New Roman Central
Europe fonts are very unusual on the other side of the Atlantic - except for the Other Press, New York, where this book has been published.

P.S. On the page 4, Del Ponte mentions also"...the officers who ordered the deaths of those thousands of forcibly repatriated Yugoslav prisoners in 1945..." Just recently one of the nearly 600 so far discovered mass graves of those, mostly innocent people, who were killed by the Yugoslav communist troops after WWII, has been opened in the abandoned mine "Barbarin Rov" at Lasko, Slovenia. The estimated total of these victims in Slovenia is 100,000 minimum to 200,000 maximum, thus being comparable to all those killed in Bosnia, Croatia, Serbia and Kosovo when Yugoslavia felt apart. Tragically these, so far unpunished terrible crimes against humanity by some bastards, are not on the agenda of ICTFY!
... Read more


50. Richard Wagner's Zurich: The Muse of Place (Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture)
by Chris Walton
Hardcover: 288 Pages (2007-09-01)
list price: US$65.00 -- used & new: US$60.49
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Asin: 1571133313
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When the people of Dresden rose up against their king in May 1849, Richard Wagner went from Royal Kapellmeister to republican revolutionary overnight. He gambled everything, but the rebellion failed, and he lost all. Now a wanted man in Germany, he fled to Zurich. Years later, he wrote that the city was "devoid of any public art form" and full of "simple people who knew nothing of my work as an artist." But he lied: Zurich boasted arguably the world's greatest concentration of radical intellectuals and a vibrant music scene. Wagner was accepted with open arms. This book investigates Wagner's effect on the musical life of the city and the city's impact on him. Mathilde Wesendonck emerges not as Wagner's passive muse but as a self-assured woman who exploited gender expectations to her own benefit. In 1858, Wagner had to flee Zurich after again gambling everything -- this time on Mathilde -- and again losing. But it was in Zurich that Wagner wrote his major theoretical works; composed Das Rheingold, Die Walküre, and parts of Siegfried and Tristan und Isolde; first planned Parsifal; held the first festival of his music; and conceived of a theater to stage his own works. If Wagner had been free in 1849 to choose a city in which to seek heightened intellectual stimulation among the like-minded and the similarly gifted, he could have come to no more perfect place. ... Read more


51. Liturgy Wars: Ritual Theory and Protestant Reform in Nineteenth-Century Zurich (Religion in History, Society and Culture)
by Theodore M. Vial
Hardcover: 192 Pages (2003-12-01)
list price: US$103.00 -- used & new: US$100.43
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Asin: 0415966981
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The nineteenth century was a period of intense religious conflict across Europe, as people confronted the major changes brought by modernity. In Zurich, one phase of this religious conflict was played out in a struggle over revisions to the ritual of baptism. In its analysis of the Zurich conflict, Liturgy Wars offers a strategy for understanding the links between theology, ritual, and socio-politics. Theodore M. Vial offers a new perspective on contemporary ritual studies - and critiques the cognivist approaches of Lawson and McCauley, as well as Catherine Bell's analysis of power and the body - by reintergrating the imporatance of speech acts into considerations of ritual. ... Read more


52. Heinrich Burkhart (Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture)
by Therese von Bacheracht
 Hardcover: 136 Pages (1998-01-22)
list price: US$60.00 -- used & new: US$22.80
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Asin: 1571130853
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This highly topical work is the most interesting of Bacheracht's novels, since it was inspired by the problems causing social and political unrest in the 1840s. When banished from his domicile in Germany, Heinrich Burkhart chooses to go to Switzerland (the asylum of many German political refugees), and here he establishes a flourishing commune where workers and their families are cared for from cradle to maturity. This novel is one of the first to point to the emergence of the technician toward the middle of the nineteenth century. The romance chronicled in the novel does not overshadow the political and social aspects of the work, but rather contributes to them by juxtaposing the submissive middle-class daughter and the cultured self-emancipated woman. ... Read more


53. Shared Languages, Shared Identities, Shared Stories: A Qualitative Study of Life Stories by Immigrants from German-speaking Switzerland in Australia (Variolingua. Nonstandard - Standard - Substandard)
by Doris Schupbach
 Paperback: 331 Pages (2008-11-10)
list price: US$81.95 -- used & new: US$72.95
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Asin: 3631579470
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54. Political Culture and Judicial Behavior: Subcultural Analysis of Judicial Behavior : A Direct Observational Study
by Glendon Schubert
 Paperback: Pages (1985-10)
list price: US$29.50 -- used & new: US$21.80
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Asin: 0819145025
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55. Culture of the Abbey of St. Gall: An Overview
 Hardcover: 252 Pages (1991-12)
list price: US$50.00 -- used & new: US$41.80
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Asin: 3763012214
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56. Theater, Culture, and Community in Reformation Bern, 1523-1555 (Studies in Medieval and Reformation Traditions)
by Glenn Ehrstine
Hardcover: 346 Pages (2002-03-01)
list price: US$147.00 -- used & new: US$70.00
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Asin: 9004123539
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This study examines the sociocultural context of ten plays, including 15 song texts, performed during the formative years of the Bernese Reformation. It treats not only three pre-reform carnival plays by Niklaus Manuel, but also six newly edited works by local court secretary Hans von Rute. ... Read more


57. Xenophobe's Guide to the Swiss
by Paul Bilton
Paperback: 92 Pages (2008-08-01)
list price: US$7.95 -- used & new: US$3.59
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Asin: 1906042500
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Product Description

Mountain mentality

Swiss farmers are tough, independent, hard-working, resilient, well-prepared for every kind of natural disaster, and above all staunchly conservative. These characteristics have been passed on to Swiss town-dwellers, who go about their day as if they too were farming a lonely mountain cliff.

 

We can do better

The Swiss stubbornly refuse to believe they are doing well and will even dispute the figures that prove it. So, like the poor donkey chasing the carrot, they pull their collective cart along ever faster, chasing the goal they passed years ago.

 

Peak performers

The perceptions of the Swiss being dull, staid, and boring while at the same time displaying a talent for ruthless efficiency and a limitless capacity for hard work are uncomfortably close to the truth. Likewise the clichéd impressions of high mountains, watches, cheese, chocolate bars, and gold bars are genuine.

 

Degrees of unease

The diversity of the Swiss is apparent in the degree to which they worry. The German-speakers do little else. The French-speaking Swiss are great visionaries and philosophers with noble thoughts and global dreams. They worry that their Swiss-German compatriots do not share these dreams. The Italian-speaking Swiss are less interested in the solid values of work and have a terrible tendency not to worry nearly enough.

... Read more

Customer Reviews (10)

5-0 out of 5 stars Excellent reading
I've purchased 6 countries so far on these Xenophobes Guide books. It's the most unique, time saving way to understand any culture. All the research has been done for you and condensed in a neat little book that you can travel with. Quick to read, extremely informative, unbiased and very funny reading. I plan to have the entire collection. Highly recommended.

2-0 out of 5 stars Excessive cost for little information
I purchased this book seeking insight regarding life trends/interest of the Swiss.In return I received a very small booklet with little useful information.The prices for this booklet is outrageous.Stop by Barnes and Noble, grab a cup to Joe and by the time your cup is empty you would have read this complete booklet.You would of had a few laughs but nothing worth taking home or even buying for others.Save your monies and look deeper for a book with more substance.

4-0 out of 5 stars Funny and insulting at the same time...
I bought this book because my husband is Swiss and I thought it would be fun to read together.While reading it, I laughed out loud because some of the cultural differences are pretty accurate and also funny... especially if you are married to someone with a difference of opinion about saving versus spending money.Well, my husband was not so amused and found it all very insulting.I guess this book is good for those who just need to know there are other people out there who notice the peculiarities of the Swiss and need to commiserate.:-)

5-0 out of 5 stars I am Swiss and I think this is a great book for a good laugh, XENO
This is a short simple to read book about the Swiss.I am Swiss, born there, but did not grow up in this very clean state.My wife who is a U.S. citizen bought me the book for my birthday.Because of my rowing career we traveled to Switzerland a fair bit and I observed the Swiss way through the eyes of my wife.I think this book is great for Swiss who live abroad because it reminds them why they miss Switzerland and why they don't.This book is great for Swiss who live in Switzerland and need motivation to go see other corners of the world.Since we have friends of different nationalities, Swede, Dutch, and German, we offered them their respective Xenophobe's Guide.They all loved their new booklet.
Happy reading, XENO www gorow com

4-0 out of 5 stars A funny tongue "firmly" in cheek little gem...
This book is laugh out loud funny and has many truths, though the Swiss may not want to admit it. All countries have their quirks and Switzerland is not immune either. A a Swiss dual national married to a Swiss, I heard about all these little quirks that all cultures and countries have and always teased my spouse that he was exaggerating regarding Switzerland. Then I spent time in the country and just recently I experienced the "self sustaining bureacracy" at work when the Swiss Govt. charged me $50 for a very fancy piece of paper to tell me what my address is, the state in the US I was born, the date when I got married and who my parents are-that's it, no really that's all it says-nothing more. I am convinced that the $50 was to pay for the fancy paper-that's how fancy it really is. So as the author himself notes on this very subject of family papers...I guess it's in case I forget these facts about myself. Needless to say I howled over this.

Read this book with humor and take into account that it isn't a traditional travel book nor an ultra accurate account on Swiss manufacturing and tourism or the countries stats. But there are some real truths here relayed with great wit. The author himself is Brit married to a Swiss and has made some genuinely funny observations on Swiss culture. I finished reading this book thinking the author genuinely loves and respects his adopted country, but gosh they do some funny things sometimes. A little joshing and humor never hurt anyone-even the staunch Swiss. We should always be able to laugh at ourselves and that's what this book sets out to do, and to my thinking, it succeeded. ... Read more


58. Le quotidien des Rukuba: Collections du Nigeria (Collections du Musee d'ethnographie de Neuchatel) (French Edition)
by Switzerland) Musee d'ethnographie (Neuchatel
Paperback: 192 Pages (1994)

Isbn: 2880780187
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

59. Creative Industries Switzerland
by Christoph Weckerle
Hardcover: 158 Pages (2003-10-18)
list price: US$69.95 -- used & new: US$41.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 3764379731
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description

Policy makers at all levels are discovering the notion of creative industries: the music industry, literature and book market, art market, film and television industries, performing arts, design, architecture, advertising, software / computer games - from economic and innovation strategies to education policy and urban development, the creative industries are being described as a model for success. However, strategies for real, practical implementation remain vague.

This publication provides a greatly needed overview of the concepts and specific characteristics of this sector. It analyzes the international discourse, presents up-to-date empirical-statistical Europe-wide analyses, derives models and draws conclusions for the current debate in Switzerland, and places special emphasis on the innovative potential of the creative scene and its dynamics for the entire creative industry.

... Read more

60. Asterix in Switzerland
by Rene Goscinny
Hardcover: 48 Pages (2004-09-01)
list price: US$12.95 -- used & new: US$7.69
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0752866346
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description

The governor of Gaul has always been a “creative” accountant. Now he’s under investigation by Vexatius Sinusititis—or he was, until someone poisons the investigator. In order to heal Vexatius, Asterix and Obelix set off to locate a special flower that grows only in Helvetia.
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Customer Reviews (9)

5-0 out of 5 stars Another great Asterix book.
Another great story! For those Asterix amateurs, this is one more piece for the collection.

5-0 out of 5 stars Cleaning mania, holes in cheese and big Cuckoo!
Originally done as a comic in a french childrens' magazine, the Adventures of Asterix the Gaul have grown beyond that small framework and can be enjoyed by peoples around the world. The idea is that in the world of 55BC all Gaul has been conquored by the Romans, except for one small village which holds out against the invaders. The source of their survival is a magic potion brewed by the village Druid which gives the drinker superhuman strength. The Gauls are not waging a war with the Romans, they just go about their lives and after being thumped a few times, the local Romans are more than happy to let them do it.

This is one of my favorites in the Asterix series. In a rare case of helping a Roman, Gettafix is asked to aid a Roman investogator who has been poisoned by the corrupt officials he is auditing. To save his life Asterix must recover a tiny flower known only to grow in Helivita.

The rest is a fun romp through Switzerland pushing all the steroetypes of banks and neutrality and above all cleanliness. This is a particular point of horror to the Romans who like dirty orgies. There are comments on cooking, medical health and depravity, just for good measure.

Along the way potions are drunk, Romans as bashed and friends are made.

4-0 out of 5 stars Good Asterix adventure
One of the finest Asterix books, this one has the unusual feature of having a Roman as one of the good guys. He is a tax collector (of all jobs) who is poisoned by a corrupt Governor, fond of embezzling Rome when not setting up decadent orgies. The ailing taxman, fearing for his life at the hand of the inept Roman doctors, call our indomitable Gauls. Panoramix realizes that in order to save him, he needs a particular flower that grows in the Alps for the antidote. So, Asterix and Obelix have to go to Helvetia (modern day Switzerland) in order to find said flower. As usual in Asterix books, national stereotypes as well as anachronisms abound: the Swiss are fanatical about cleanliness, they already dominate banking, they engage in yodeling, and so forth. It's a fun book, and the fact that Asterix and Obelix are willing to save a nominal enemy, highlights their noblesse.

3-0 out of 5 stars One-trick pony, but at least it's a funny trick.
Rene Goscinny, Asterix in Switzerland (Dargaud, 1970)

A corrupt Roman official poisons a tax collector, and Getafix is called in to cure him (since the Roman doctors are unable to do anything). Getafix requires an Edelweiss blossom for the antidote, and thus sends Asterix and Obelix off to Switzerland to get it. Another of the books where Goscinny actually tries to fulfill the original idea of using the Asterix books to teach something (geography always was Asterix and Obelix's best subject); it's quite fun in places, but the contrast of the slovenliness of the charges under the jurisdiction of the corrupt Roman and the orderliness of the Swiss tends to wear a little thin. ***

4-0 out of 5 stars Magic Fondue?
"Asterix in Switzerland" is the sixteenth Asterix comic, first published in France in 1970. It's a fairly good one, and I liked it.

The Governor of Condatum loves his Roman orgies, and has been taking the taxes for the Roman Empire and putting them in his own savings. A Quaestor from Rome comes to investigate, and the Governor poisons him. Dying, the Quaestor sends for Getafix, who has a reputation for medicine out in Gaul. He, and his friends Asterix and Obelix come to visit him in bed. Getafix can heal the man, but he needs the Edelweiss flower, and the best specimens come from the mountains in Helvetia, so Asterix and Obelix are sent to find it...

It's worth a look for Asterix fans. ... Read more


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