• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 1989
  • 194
  • 184
  • 97
  • 52
  • 43
  • 41
  • 28
  • 28
  • 28
  • 28
  • 28
  • 28
  • 26
  • 26
  • Tagged with
  • 3740
  • 1350
  • 1280
  • 1000
  • 884
  • 690
  • 635
  • 611
  • 515
  • 414
  • 329
  • 325
  • 323
  • 317
  • 295
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
41

The home-makers : needlework, homes and domestic femmininities in middle class, mid-nineteenth century England with particular reference to Elizabeth Gaskell's Cranford

Forster, Zena January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
42

Representations of middle-class single women in the novel from the mid-nineteenth to the early twentieth century

Ross, Fiona January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
43

Embodied contradictions : organisational responses to gender and occupational health interests in the electronics industries of northern Thailand

Theobald, Sally January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
44

The space within : an interdisciplinary study of voluntary groups engaging with AIDS and HIV

Henson, Carolyn January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
45

Women and religious verse in English manuscript culture c1600-1688 : Lady Anne Southwell, Lady Hester Pulter and Katherine Austen

Ross, Sarah C. E. January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
46

The split female self and social change as represented in some novels of Catherine Gore, Geraldine Jewsbury and Mary Braddon

Kaye, Heidi Alyssa January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
47

Perspectival realism : towards a pluralist theory of knowledge

Fricker, Miranda January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
48

The implications of theories of gender for Christian pastoral practice and theological formulation

Graham, Elaine January 1993 (has links)
The influence of feminist theology upon Christian pastoral practice and theological discourse has been growing in significance since the late 1960s. The critical impact of feminism has been to challenge many of the received traditions and conventions as sectional and androcentric; and its reconstructive impetus has exposed neglected areas of pastoral need, generated novel patterns of ministry, and articulated more inclusive models of religious language and theological metaphors. However, such practices and debates are also conducted within a social context of relations between women and men, and concern the experience of inhabiting a culture as a gendered person. Thus theological reflection on pastoral practice cannot pursue its deliberations in isolation from wider debates concerning questions of gender ontogeny, gender relations and the cultural representations of women and men. This thesis, therefore, considers the significance of theories of gender for Christian pastoral practice and theological formulation. It begins by interrogating a comprehensive selection of material from a wide range of disciplines in the human and social sciences. This reveals a model of human nature, agency and self-understanding that is necessarily self-reflexive; gender emerges not as an ontological category, but as the product of human practices by which culture and social relations are constituted. Cultural values relating to the nature of human ontology, epistemology, subjectivity, agency and teleology construct the norms by which such practices are organized. Christian pastoral practices are also embodiments of values and truth-claims. Historical and contemporary writings in pastoral theology exhibit a diversity of sources and norms by which models of pastoral practice have been directed and informed. If human experience as gendered renders the core truth-claims of purposeful human practices as contingent, contextual and provisional, then the articulation and evaluation of the normative principles of purposeful pastoral practice must rest upon forms of practical reasoning generated by the intentional community itself. The work of several social theorists is examined in order to construct critical criteria for a model of phronesis sufficient to reflect the contingency of human experience without collapsing into self-absorption or relativism. By regarding practical knowledge as positional, relational and embodied, communities may affirm the specificity and integrity of their own truth-claims, whilst recognizing the alterity at the heart of human identity. Part Three concludes by proposing a new disciplinary identity for Pastoral Theology; in the light of the preceding engagement with theories of gender, it is to be characterized as a critical phenomenology of pastoral practice. Pastoral practices sensitive to human experience as gendered will aim to build communities which resist the foreclosure of gender hierarchy and ontological difference, and see to realize a community grounded in the shared humanity of women and me. Such practices are theologically disclosive, too, in that a recognition of the 'Other' beyond the boundaries of our own particularity points to the possibilities of a transcendent, divine dimension amidst, and beyond, the immediacy and concretion of the pastoral encounter.
49

Developmental Measures: The Zika Virus, Microcephaly, and Histories of Global Northern State Anxieties

Amital, Eden Noa 01 January 2017 (has links)
This project seeks to understand anxious and fearful responses to the Zika virus and microcephaly that began circulating widely in February, 2016. My project works to uncover racial histories embedded in the contemporary scientific and medical practice of measuring head circumference. By arguing that microcephaly is a racialized metric of civilizational and human development, I show that responses to Zika’s proliferation invoke state security because Global Northern states imagine microcephaly as a developmental, economic, and cultural lag. Dominant scientific and medical characterizations of microcephaly constitute modern, developed states as such by making political conceptions of normalcy and capacity seem natural: microcephaly is marked as “abnormal” in the scientific literature that instructs the measurement, surveillance, and diagnosis developmental and cognitive disabilities. Seemingly disparate contemporary moments and histories–among them the 2016 Rio Olympics, histories of racial purity and contamination, phrenology, and eighteenth-century racialized notions of sexuality—are inextricably linked to ideals and practices of white, bourgeois subjectivity. Like the diagnostic category of microcephaly, these ideals and practices are inherently unstable and insecure: they cannot exist nor materialize without the economic and social exploitation of racialized and disabled populations.
50

Immanence and transcendence : aesthetic responses to 'madness' in women's literature from 1892

Howell, Joanne Elizabeth January 2003 (has links)
No description available.

Page generated in 0.0529 seconds