Spelling suggestions: "subject:"feminist"" "subject:"eminist""
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The feminist theology and womanist theology, a comparative studyNchabeleng, Solomon Pitsadi January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D. (Systematic Theology and Theological Ethics)) -- University of the North, 2000 / Refer to document
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SEARCHING FOR WONDER WOMEN: EXAMINING WOMEN'S NON-VIOLENT POWER IN FEMINIST SCIENCE FICTIONDeRose, Maria D. 28 March 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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What happens when a feminist falls in love? Romantic relationship ideals and feminist identityWilson, Elizabeth Ann 05 December 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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How evangelical Christian women negotiate discourses in the construction of self: A poststructural feminist analysisHewitt, Kimberly Kappler 08 December 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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CRITICAL VALUES: FEMINIST PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE AND THE COMPUTING SCIENCESSHERRON, CATHERINE ELIZABETH 01 July 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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BLURRING BOUNDARIES: ISSUES OF GENDER, MADNESS, AND IDENTITY IN LIBBY LARSEN'S OPERA 'MRS. DALLOWAY'HOLLAND, ANYA B. 28 September 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Forwarding New Forms in Transitional Housing for Women: Feminist Architecture Creates Potentialities after Partner AbusePaulin, Theresa M. January 2010 (has links)
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Building a Feminist Philosophy of Cognitive NeuroscienceBentley, Vanessa A. January 2015 (has links)
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Culture's not so great expectations: does feminist identity moderate women's experiences with sexism and body image dissatisfaction?Linnebach, Daniela 29 September 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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The Cultural Politics of Youth, Health and Lifestyle in the Aftermath of the Childhood Obesity “Epidemic”Stoneman, Scott 10 1900 (has links)
<p>In this dissertation I argue that the currency of the childhood obesity “epidemic” as a health crisis is derived largely from processes of representation and reproduction through which fatness has been re-calibrated as something pathogenic. I develop the position that the “childhood obesity epidemic”—influenced as it is by neoliberal notions of what constitutes a healthy individual and a vital body politic—risks exacerbating, rather than mitigating, the vulnerability of children.</p> <p>The methodology of this project uses the example of lifestyle to illustrate how consensus about the presence of an “obesity epidemic” has been built, the concept of lifestyle being read as representative of how particular constellations of anxiety regulate what counts as true in the developing body of social knowledge concerning childhood obesity. I contend that the problem of lifestyle captures the complexities of the “childhood obesity epidemic” because children are presupposed, in obesity discourses, to be more vulnerable to the sweeping set of social trends brought under the rubric of the “obesity epidemic” than adults.</p> <p>In what follows, I investigate the rationale for anti-obesity through an investigation of a series of analogous clusters, cases of persuasive ideas borne out of the moral panics subtending childhood obesity. I ask what it means that the child’s diminished capacity for autonomous decision-making is considered to be especially critical in the face of popular culture’s media “bombardment.” More broadly, I focus on the delimiting effect that anti-obesity’s politicization of lifestyle has had on recent attempts to think through the articulation of health, consumerism, environment, and the government of risk.</p> / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
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