Educating for True Love
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Rahm Uaf 0006E 10262.Pdf
Deconstructing the western worldview: toward the repatriation and indigenization of wellness Item Type Thesis Authors Rahm, Jacqueline Marie Download date 23/09/2021 13:22:54 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/11122/4821 DECONSTRUCTING THE WESTERN WORLDVIEW: TOWARD THE REPATRIATION AND INDIGENIZATION OF WELLNESS A THESIS Presented to the Faculty of the University of Alaska Fairbanks in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY By Jacqueline Marie Rahm, B.A., M.A. Fairbanks, Alaska December 2014 Abstract As Indigenous peoples and scholars advance Native histories, cultures, and languages, there is a critical need to support these efforts by deconstructing the western worldview in a concerted effort to learn from indigenous knowledge and ways of knowing for humanity’s future wellbeing. Toward that imperative, this research brings together and examines pieces of the western story as they intersect with Indigenous peoples of the lands that now comprise the United States of America. Through indigenous frameworks and methodologies, it explores a forgotten epistemology of the pre-Socratic and Pythagorean Archaic and Classical Greek eras that is far more similar to indigenous worldviews than it is to the western paradigm today. It traces how the West left behind this timeless wisdom for the “new learning” and the European colonial settlers arrived in the old “New World” with a fragmented, materialistic, and dualistic worldview that was the antithesis to those of Indigenous peoples. An imbalanced and privileged worldview not only justified an unacknowledged genocide in world history, it is characteristic of a psycho-spiritual disease that plays out across our global society. -
Session Seven Materials (562-KB)
PENDLE HILL PAMPHLET 2 A Religious Solution To The Social Problem Howard H. Brinton PENDLE HILL PUBLICATIONS WALLINGFORD, PENNSYLVANIA HOWARD H. BRINTON 2 A Religious Solution To The Social Problem ABOUT THE AUTHOR Howard H.Brinton, Ph.D., Professor of Religion, Mills College; Acting Director, Pendle Hill, 1934-35. Published 1934 by Pendle Hill Republished electronically © 2004 by Pendle Hill http://www.pendlehill.org/pendle_hill_pamphlets.htm email: [email protected] HOWARD H. BRINTON 3 A Religious Solution To The Social Problem A religious solution to the social problem involves an answer to two preliminary questions — what social problem are we attempting to solve and what religion do we offer as a solution? Since religion has assumed a wide variety of forms it will be necessary, if we are to simplify and clarify our approach, to adopt at the outset a definite religious viewpoint. To define our premises as those of Christianity in general is not sufficiently explicit because historic Christianity has itself assumed a wide variety of forms. For the purpose of the present undertaking I shall approach our problem from the original point of view of the Society of Friends, which, in many ways, resembled that of early Christianity. Such an approach need not imply a narrow sectarian view. Early Quakerism exhibited certain characteristics common to many religious movements in their initial creative periods. Later Quakerism has shared the fate of other movements in failing to carry on the ideals of the founders. As for the social problem for which we seek a solution, it is the fundamental dilemma out of which most present-day social problems arise. -
Papéis Normativos E Práticas Sociais
Agnes Ayres (1898-194): Rodolfo Valentino e Agnes Ayres em “The Sheik” (1921) The Donovan Affair (1929) The Affairs of Anatol (1921) The Rubaiyat of a Scotch Highball Broken Hearted (1929) Cappy Ricks (1921) (1918) Bye, Bye, Buddy (1929) Too Much Speed (1921) Their Godson (1918) Into the Night (1928) The Love Special (1921) Sweets of the Sour (1918) The Lady of Victories (1928) Forbidden Fruit (1921) Coals for the Fire (1918) Eve's Love Letters (1927) The Furnace (1920) Their Anniversary Feast (1918) The Son of the Sheik (1926) Held by the Enemy (1920) A Four Cornered Triangle (1918) Morals for Men (1925) Go and Get It (1920) Seeking an Oversoul (1918) The Awful Truth (1925) The Inner Voice (1920) A Little Ouija Work (1918) Her Market Value (1925) A Modern Salome (1920) The Purple Dress (1918) Tomorrow's Love (1925) The Ghost of a Chance (1919) His Wife's Hero (1917) Worldly Goods (1924) Sacred Silence (1919) His Wife Got All the Credit (1917) The Story Without a Name (1924) The Gamblers (1919) He Had to Camouflage (1917) Detained (1924) In Honor's Web (1919) Paging Page Two (1917) The Guilty One (1924) The Buried Treasure (1919) A Family Flivver (1917) Bluff (1924) The Guardian of the Accolade (1919) The Renaissance at Charleroi (1917) When a Girl Loves (1924) A Stitch in Time (1919) The Bottom of the Well (1917) Don't Call It Love (1923) Shocks of Doom (1919) The Furnished Room (1917) The Ten Commandments (1923) The Girl Problem (1919) The Defeat of the City (1917) The Marriage Maker (1923) Transients in Arcadia (1918) Richard the Brazen (1917) Racing Hearts (1923) A Bird of Bagdad (1918) The Dazzling Miss Davison (1917) The Heart Raider (1923) Springtime à la Carte (1918) The Mirror (1917) A Daughter of Luxury (1922) Mammon and the Archer (1918) Hedda Gabler (1917) Clarence (1922) One Thousand Dollars (1918) The Debt (1917) Borderland (1922) The Girl and the Graft (1918) Mrs. -
Love Stories That Touched My Heart
RAVINDER SINGH LO VE S TO RI ES THAT TO UCHED MY HEART Contents About the Author Also by Ravinder Singh The Girl Behind the Counter Omkar Khandekar A Train to My Marriage Vandana Sharma A Love Story in Reverse! Sujir Pavithra Nayak Flirting Vinayak Nadkarni The Divine Union K. Balakumaran Just Because I Made Love to You Doesn’t Mean I Love You Anjali Khurana One Night Stand in Hariharapuram Mohan Raghavan May God Bless You, Dear Yamini Vijendran Cheers to Love Renu Bhutoria Sethi Synchronicity Jyoti Singh Visvanath Love Is Also a Compromise Manjula Pal A Village Love Story Haseeb Peer Never Forget Me Renuka Vishwanathan A Tale of Two Strangers Swagata Pradhan Bittersweet Symphony Jennifer Ashraf Kashmi Heartstrings Dr Roshan Radhakrishnan The Most Handsome Kaviya Kamaraj A Pair of Shoes Manaswita Ghosh The Smiling Stranger Lalit Kundalia The Last Note Amrit Sinha The Uncertainties of Life Arpita Ghosh Another Time, Another Place Sowmya Aji Clumsy Cupid Reuben Kumar Lalwani Here’s How It Goes Arka Datta Love, Beyond Conditions Asma Ferdoes Editor’s Note Notes on Contributors Follow Penguin Copyright PENGUIN METRO READS LOVE STORIES THAT TOUCHED MY HEART Ravinder Singh is a bestselling author. I Too Had a Love Story, his debut novel, is his own story that has touched millions of hearts. Can Love Happen Twice? is Ravinder’s second novel. After spending most of his life in Burla, a very small town in western Orissa, Ravinder has finally settled down in Chandigarh. He is an MBA from the renowned India School of Business and is presently working with a prominent multinational company. -
Alien Love- Passing, Race, and the Ethics of the Neighbor in Postwar
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Alien Love: Passing, Race, and the Ethics of the Neighbor in Postwar African American Novels, 1945-1956 A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the Requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy In English By Hannah Wonkyung Nahm 2021 © Copyright by Hannah Wonkyung Nahm 2021 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Alien Love: Passing, Race, and the Ethics of the Neighbor in Postwar African American Novels, 1945-1956 by Hannah Wonkyung Nahm Doctor of Philosophy in English University of California, Los Angeles, 2021 Professor King-Kok Cheung, Co-Chair Professor Richard Yarborough, Co-Chair This dissertation examines Black-authored novels featuring White (or White-passing) protagonists in the post-World War II decade (1945-1956). Published during the fraught postwar political climate of agitation for integration and the continual systematic racism, many novels by Black authors addressed the urgent topic of interracial relationality, probing the tabooed question of whether Black and White can abide in love and kinship. One of the prominent—and controversial—literary strategies sundry Black novelists used in this decade was casting seemingly raceless or ambiguously-raced characters. Collectively, these novels generated a mixture of critical approval and dismissal in their time and up until recently, marginalized from the African American literary tradition. Even more critically overlooked than the ostensibly raceless project was the strategic mobilization of the trope of passing by some midcentury Black ii writers to imagine the racial divide and possible reconciliation. This dissertation intersects passing with postwar Black fiction that features either racially-anomalous or biracial central characters. Examining three novels from this historical period as my case studies, I argue that one of the ways in which Black writers of this decade have imagined the possibility of interracial love—with all its political pitfalls and ethical imperatives —is through the trope of passing. -
The Ephesian Church © 1999 by Morris Mcdonald
The Ephesian Church © 1999 by Morris McDonald Published by Far Eastern Bible College Press 9A Gilstead Road, Singapore 309063 Republic of Singapore ISBN: 981-04-1723-3 Cover Design by Charles Seet. 2 The Ephesian Church Contents The Ephesian Church .........................................................................4 The Ephesian Church — Its Formation A Church Chosen, Acts 18, 19 .....................................................7 The Ephesian Church — Its Foundation A Church Chosen, Acts 20 .........................................................22 The Ephesian Church — Its Fulness A Church Challenged, Ephesians 1-3.........................................40 The Ephesian Church — Its Focus A Church Challenged, Ephesians 4, 5 ........................................58 The Ephesian Church — Its Focus A Church Challenged, Ephesus 6 ...............................................76 The Ephesian Church — Its Failing A Church Chastened, Revelation 2:1-7 ......................................93 Contents 3 The Ephesian Church The Ephesian Church is unique in the treatment it receives in the New Testament as three inspired writers record God’s evaluation of the work there. Luke wrote of its formation, Acts 18,19, then of its foundation, Acts 20. Paul recorded its fulness in Ephesians 1-3, then its focus in Ephesians 4-6. John was inspired to point to the Ephesian church’s failing in Revelation 2:1-7. Paul wrote to the church at Corinth, before committing to a visit there, saying, I will tarry at Ephesus until Pentecost. For a great door and effectual is opened unto me, and there are many adversaries, I Corinthians 16:8,9. Three things may be observed about the great missionary apostle here. First, he was a man who followed plans in doing the work of the Lord, second, he always viewed his ministry in terms of opportunity to do a work for God, and third, he thrived on opposition. -
ABSTRACT Augustinian Auden: the Influence of Augustine of Hippo on W. H. Auden Stephen J. Schuler, Ph.D. Mentor: Richard Rankin
ABSTRACT Augustinian Auden: The Influence of Augustine of Hippo on W. H. Auden Stephen J. Schuler, Ph.D. Mentor: Richard Rankin Russell, Ph.D. It is widely acknowledged that W. H. Auden became a Christian in about 1940, but relatively little critical attention has been paid to Auden‟s theology, much less to the particular theological sources of Auden‟s faith. Auden read widely in theology, and one of his earliest and most important theological influences on his poetry and prose is Saint Augustine of Hippo. This dissertation explains the Augustinian origin of several crucial but often misunderstood features of Auden‟s work. They are, briefly, the nature of evil as privation of good; the affirmation of all existence, and especially the physical world and the human body, as intrinsically good; the difficult aspiration to the fusion of eros and agape in the concept of Christian charity; and the status of poetry as subject to both aesthetic and moral criteria. Auden had already been attracted to similar ideas in Lawrence, Blake, Freud, and Marx, but those thinkers‟ common insistence on the importance of physical existence took on new significance with Auden‟s acceptance of the Incarnation as an historical reality. For both Auden and Augustine, the Incarnation was proof that the physical world is redeemable. Auden recognized that if neither the physical world nor the human body are intrinsically evil, then the physical desires of the body, such as eros, the self-interested survival instinct, cannot in themselves be intrinsically evil. The conflict between eros and agape, or altruistic love, is not a Manichean struggle of darkness against light, but a struggle for appropriate placement in a hierarchy of values, and Auden derived several ideas about Christian charity from Augustine. -
CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION This Chapter Presents Background of the Problem, Identification of the Problem, Limitation of the Problem
1 CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION This chapter presents background of the problem, identification of the problem, limitation of the problem, formulation of the problem, purposes of the research, hypothesis of the research, significance of the research, assumptions of the research, limitation of the research, and key terms definition of the research. A. Background of the Problem Pouring ideas out on a piece of paper is done as an expression of feelings and thoughts of students if they consider it is naturally done as a way to communicate to others beside sharing them orally. When writing students play a role as writers. They write what they want to share to readers appropriately. However not all students can do it perfectly or in a good way. Moreover when students are asked to summarize what previous writers have written down. Many of them tend to summarize by using the writers’ own language so that it is often the result of their writing is almost same with the writers’ words style. This can give a negative impact for them when teachers read their writing result and categorize that it is plagiarism. Of course plagiarism is not allowed for the beginner writers like them, and whoever. To anticipate a similar case, reading and writing as two of skills in language are taught in English department of IKIP Gunungsitoli. 2 In English department, teaching-learning process is run as normally like other departments. A lecturer teaches Reading and Writing to students of the third semester as a part of lectures. In a syllabus or program of lecturing run there is stated that competence standard hopes that improving the students’ reading skills, understanding what inference, figures of speech, diction, juxtaposition, selected texts of non- fiction; cohesion, unity, summarizing text types and short stories so that they are able to interpret the content of texts what the author tells about as well as arranging organization and development ideas based on chronological order. -
Theorising the Quantified Self and Posthumanist Agency Self-Knowledge and Posthumanist Agency in Contemporary US-American Literature
Theorising the Quantified Self and Posthumanist Agency Self-Knowledge and Posthumanist Agency in Contemporary US-American Literature Stefan Danter, Ulfried Reichardt and Regina Schober Abstract In our paper we will examine the cultural implications of the quan- tified self technology and analyse how contemporary US-American novels reflect and comment on the qualitative changes of the human condition against the backdrop of an interpretive dominance held by the natural and social sciences as well as the changes effected by quantitative methods. Moreover, we will investigate some his- torical and cultural continuities of the quantified self within US- American culture. We claim that, although the quantified self is a global phenomenon, it has emerged from a model of subjectivity which has been deeply engrained in American culture at least since Benjamin Franklin’s Autobiography (1791) and which emphasises individualism, economic self-optimisation, and a techno-euphoric belief in progress, self-control, and self-possession. In this context, the quantified self can be connected to theoretical discourses of 1) economy-driven subjectivity, 2) posthumanism and 3) knowledge cultures of the information age. Drawing on Gary Shteyngart’s recent novel Super Sad True Love Story (2010), we will map forms and functions of literary engagements with various manifestations of the quantified self in relation to the cross-dependencies between distributed agency, potentials and the limits of knowledge systems, and economic mechanisms. As critical systems of second-order observation, fictional texts reflect on the repercussions of practices related to numerical self-description. At the same time, they consti- tute epistemological counter models to the relational, modular, and combinatory logic of the database (Manovich 2001; Hayles 1999), by focusing on the qualitative dimension of human experience and thus (re-)inscribing human agency into these “technologies of the self” (Foucault 1984). -
Medina County Board of Developmental Disabilities
1 Medina County Board of Developmental Disabilities The Mission of the Medina County Board of Developmental Disabilities is to promote and empower individuals with developmental disabilities to live, learn, work, and socialize as citizens in the community. June 28, 2021 Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, this Board Meeting will be held virtually via Zoom and made available to the public live via the MCBDD YouTube channel or other platform. Check the MCBDD website for details. General Session: 4:30 p.m. Executive Session to follow General Session 2 MEDINA COUNTY BOARD OF DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES Regular Board Meeting Agenda – Zoom June 28, 2021 I. Call to Order (4:30 p.m.) II. General Session (4:30 p.m.) A. Moment of Silence B. Mission Statement Affirmation C. Approval of Minutes 1. Approval of the Minutes from the May 14, 2021 Special Board Meeting 2. Approval of the Minutes from the May 17, 2021 Regular Board Meeting D. Old Business-No Old Business E. Presentation 1. Provider Support - Pam Hunt F. Discussion Items 1. Sunshine Law G. New Business 1. Appropriation Increase – Capital Housing Resolution #19-21 2. State of Ohio/DODD Community Capital Assistance Funds Resolution #20-21 3. Architectural Design/Engineering for Capital Assistance Funds Project Resolution #21-21 4. Loading Dock Repair Resolution #22-21 5. Roof Drain Repairs Resolution #23-21 6. Abolishment and Creation of Positions Resolution #24-21 7. MCH Contract Amendment 2 Resolution #26-21 8. Policy Review and Approval H. Reports Review a. Superintendent’s Report b. Financial Reports: Revenue Expenditures Cash Balance Cash Flow c. -
The Perils of Patriarchy
The Perils of Patriarchy by Ellen O’Neal The Perils of Patriarchy Ellen O'Neal English Honors Thes~ April 29, 2010 Professor Mark Schoenfield ----'-~'--Vl---'P~_7r-__,____ Professor Paul YDUng Professor Jay Clayton Acknowledgments: I would first like to thank Mark Schoenfield for giving me the opportunity to participate in the Honors English program. It has been an incredible experience and I’m so glad I did it. This project couldn’t have been possible without my advisor, Paul Young. Thank you for all of the advice and brainstorming sessions that really brought this thesis together. Finally, my writing studio group, Jennifer, Sarah, Charlotte, and our fearless leader Megan, we did it!! Table of Contents Introduction 1 Notorious 7 North By Northwest 21 Rear Window 34 Introduction When a hero and a heroine meet in a classical Hollywood narrative, it is assumed that they will fall in love and be married by the film’s end. They may go through some bumpy patches along the way, but they will survive and be better for it. As David Bordwell describes in The Classical Hollywood Cinema, “one of these lines of action involves heterosexual romantic love. … Character traits are often assigned along gender lines, giving male and female characters those qualities deemed ‘appropriate’ to their roles in romance” (16). This is how a classical Hollywood plot typically unfolds. When a man and a woman fall in love in an Alfred Hitchcock film, they have to go through extreme trials and tribulations to test the endurance of their relationship and prove they are a lasting couple. -
Emily Dickinson Poems Commentary
Emily Dickinson was twenty on 10 December 1850. There are 5 of her poems surviving from 1850-4. Poem 1 F1 ‘Awake ye muses nine’ In Emily’s youth the feast of St Valentine was celebrated not for one day but for a whole week, during which ‘the notes flew around like snowflakes (L27),’ though one year Emily had to admit to her brother Austin that her friends and younger sister had received scores of them, but his ‘highly accomplished and gifted elderly sister (L22)’ had been entirely overlooked. She sent this Valentine in 1850 to Elbridge Bowdoin, her father’s law partner, who kept it for forty years. It describes the law of life as mating, and in lines 29-30 she suggests six possible mates for Bowdoin, modestly putting herself last as ‘she with curling hair.’ The poem shows her sense of fun and skill as a verbal entertainer. Poem 2 [not in F] ‘There is another sky’ On 7 June 1851 her brother Austin took up a teaching post in Boston. Emily writes him letter after letter, begging for replies and visits home. He has promised to come for the Autumn fair on 22 October, and on 17 October Emily writes to him (L58), saying how gloomy the weather has been in Amherst lately, with frosts on the fields and only a few lingering leaves on the trees, but adds ‘Dont think that the sky will frown so the day when you come home! She will smile and look happy, and be full of sunshine then – and even should she frown upon her child returning…’ and then she follows these words with poem 2, although in the letter they are written in prose, not verse.