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David McNally

    Nawet orły potrzebują impetu
    Monsters of the Market
    Mark of an Eagle: How Your Life Changes the World
    Be your own brand : a breakthrough for standing out from the crowd
    Blood and Money
    Bodies of Meaning
    • 2022

      This book is about how you will leave your mark on the world. It is about discovering the purpose for which you were created, and how to fulfill that purpose. It is about the vision you have for your life, and how to bring that vision into reality. It is about building relationships that are rich and enduring. It is about the courage to rise above adversity in the pursuit of your dreams. It is about connecting to your creative and transcendent spirit. Most of all, it is about taking charge of your one precious life, spreading your wings, and soaring to new realms of possibility.

      Mark of an Eagle: How Your Life Changes the World
    • 2020

      Blood and Money

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading
      4.2(102)Add rating

      Blood and Money tells the story of money as a history of violence and human bondage.

      Blood and Money
    • 2012

      Monsters of the Market

      • 296 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Everywhere the Market goes it spawns monsters in its wake. From Frankenstein, to Zombies, McNally analyzes these creatures of Capitalism.

      Monsters of the Market
    • 2003

      This guide shows readers how to achieve as much career success as they personally desire, while at the same time "holding on to their souls". It uses the proven business axiom of brand equity as a basis to show the importance of relationships to drive personal success.

      Be your own brand : a breakthrough for standing out from the crowd
    • 2000

      Bodies of Meaning

      Studies on Language, Labor, and Liberation

      • 277 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      Challenging postmodernist theories, this work emphasizes the connection between language and human bodies, arguing against the separation of language from material practices. It revisits the concept of 'historical bodies' as proposed by Marx, Darwin, and Freud, while offering a fresh perspective on language through the insights of Mikhail Bakhtin, Walter Benjamin, and contemporary materialist feminism. This approach highlights the significance of bodily experiences in understanding language and politics.

      Bodies of Meaning