Livro do Lula: a verdade vencerá

O ebook do livro do Lula pode ser baixado gratuitamente aqui.

Luiz Inácio LULA da Silva, A verdade vencerá: O povo sabe por que me condenam. 2. ed. São Paulo: Boitempo, 2019, 256 p. – ISBN 9788575597446.

Luiz Inácio LULA da Silva, A verdade vencerá: O povo sabe por que me condenam. São Paulo: Boitempo, 2018, 216 p.

Diz o blog da editora Boitempo em 06/04/2018:

Diante de uma perseguição política sem precedentes, Lula lança livro para contar a sua versão da história. A Boitempo disponibiliza o e-book para download gratuito e livro físico em dobro no site!

Um livro necessário, uma leitura urgente. Diante de uma perseguição política sem precedentes, Lula lança livro para contar a sua versão da história.

Está disponível para download gratuito o e-book completo do livro A verdade vencerá: o povo sabe por que me condenam, do ex-presidente Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

O coração da obra são as 124 páginas, de um total de 216, que apresentam um retrato fiel do ex-presidente no presente contexto em formato de uma longa entrevista concedida aos jornalistas Juca Kfouri e Maria Inês Nassif, ao professor de relações internacionais Gilberto Maringoni e à editora Ivana Jinkings, fundadora e diretora da editora Boitempo. Foram horas de conversa aberta e sem temas proibidos, divididas em três rodadas, que aconteceram no Instituto Lula, em São Paulo, nos dias 7, 15 e 28 de fevereiro.

Entre os principais temas discutidos, ganha destaque a análise inédita do ex-presidente sobre os bastidores políticos dos últimos anos e o que levou o Partido dos Trabalhadores a perder o poder após a reeleição de Dilma Rousseff. Lula também fala sobre as eleições de 2018 e suas perspectivas e esperanças para o País.

Organizada por Ivana Jinkings, com a colaboração de Gilberto Maringoni, Juca Kfouri e Maria Inês Nassif – e edição de Mauro Lopes –, a obra traz ainda textos de Eric Nepomuceno, Luis Fernando Verissimo, Luis Felipe Miguel e Rafael Valim. Além disso, a edição é acrescida de uma cronologia da vida de Lula, organizada pelo jornalista Camilo Vannuchi, texto de capa do historiador Luiz Felipe de Alencastro e dois cadernos com fotos históricas, dos tempos no sindicato à presidência, passando pelas recentes caravanas e manifestações de rua.

Para conhecer a história da antiga Palestina

WHITELAM, K. W. Revealing the History of Ancient Palestine: Changing Perspectives 8. Abingdon: Routledge, 2018, 416 p. – ISBN  9780815365914.

WHITELAM, K. W. Revealing the History of Ancient Palestine: Changing Perspectives 8. Abingdon: Routledge, 2018, 416 p.

This volume is part of the Changing Perspectives sub-series, which is constituted by anthologies of articles by world-renowned biblical scholars and historians that have made an impact on the field and changed its course during the last decades. This volume offers a collection of seminal essays by Keith Whitelam on the early history of ancient Palestine and the origins and emergence of Israel. Collected together in one volume for the first time, and featuring one unpublished article, this volume will be of interest to biblical and ancient Near Eastern scholars interested in the politics of historical representation but also on critical ways of constructing the history of ancient Palestine.

Table of Contents

Introduction, by Emanuel Pfoh

1. Recreating the History of Israel

2. The Emergence of Israel: Social Transformation and State Formation following the Decline in Late Bronze Age Trade (with R.B. Coote)

3. Israel’s Traditions of Origin: Reclaiming the Land

4. Between History and Literature: The Social Production of Israel’s Traditions of Origin

5. The Identity of Early Israel: The Realignment and Transformation of Late Bronze-Iron Age Palestine

6. Sociology or History: Towards a (Human) History of Ancient Palestine?

7. The Search for Early Israel: Historical Perspective

8. ‘Israel Is Laid Waste; His Seed Is No More’: What If Merneptah’s Scribes Were Telling the Truth?

9. Palestine during the Iron Age

10. The Poetics of the History of Israel: Shaping Palestinian History

11. Representing Minimalism: The Rhetoric and Reality of Revisionism

12. Transcending the Boundaries: Expanding the Limits

13. Imagining Jerusalem

14. Interested Parties: History and Ideology at the End of the Century

15. Resisting the Past: Ancient Israel in Western Memory

16. The Death of Biblical History

17. Architectures of Enmity

Index

 

Keith W. Whitelam

Keith W. Whitelam was previously Professor and Head of the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Stirling, UK, and later Professor and Head of the Department of Biblical Studies at the University of Sheffield, UK. He is also the founder and director for Sheffield Phoenix Press, specialising in the publication of research in biblical studies. His previous books include The Invention of Ancient Israel: The Silencing of Palestinian History (Routledge 1996), and The Emergence of Early Israel in Historical Perspective (with Robert B. Coote, 2010).

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A Strange Drawing Found in Sinai Could Undermine Our Entire Idea of Judaism

Is that a 3,000-year-old picture of god, his penis and his wife depicted by early Jews at Kuntillet Ajrud?

By Nir Hasson – Haaretz: Apr 04, 2018

 

Em Kuntillet 'Ajrud: Iahweh e Asherá?

More than four decades after its excavation wound down, a small hill in the Sinai Desert continues to bedevil archaeologists. The extraordinary discoveries made at Kuntillet Ajrud, an otherwise nondescript slope in the northern Sinai, seem to undermine one of the foundations of Judaism as we know it.

Then, it seems, “the Lord our God” wasn’t “one God.” He may have even had a wife, going by the completely unique “portrait” of the Jewish deity that archaeologists found at the site, which may well be the only existing depiction of YHWH.

Kuntillet Ajrud got its name, meaning “the isolated hill of the water sources,” from wells at the foot of the hill. It is a remote spot in the heart of the desert, far from any town or or trade route. But for a short time around 3,000 years ago, it served as a small way station.

Dozens of drawings and inscriptions, resembling nothing whatever found anywhere else in our region, survived from that period, which seems to have lasted no longer than two or three decades. Egypt gained the artifacts with the peace treaty with Israel 25 years ago, but the release of the report on the excavation six years ago and a book about the site two years ago have kept the argument over the exceptional findings from the hill in Sinai alive.