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"Perfect friendship is the friendship between men who are good and alike in virtue" : Aristotle's view on the friendship between George and Lennie in John Steinbeck's Of Mice and MenRyding, Jacob January 2012 (has links)
The main purpose of this essay is to analyze the relationship between the two main characters George and Lennie in John Steinbecks novella Of Mice and Men (1937) and determine what kind of relationship they share, how their relationship is built and whether they are genuine friends or not. The definition of friendship which will mainly be employed and used is the one defined and created by Aristotle and published in his work Nicomachean Ethics. In order for the analysis to be as precise and proper as possible, the questions of how and why will constantly be asked and answered throughout the analysis in order to operate and act as guidelines for the final conclusion. Besides Aristotle’s definition of friendship, the novella will be examined from a perspective with primary focus on the concept of friendship and it will also to some extent touch the field of interpersonal relationships. The concept will then be applied to the examination of their relationship and will only take the content of the novella itself into account. To assist the theory and provide with an extended view upon friendship, the works of Allan (Kinship and Friendship in Modern Britain: 1996), Lynch (Philosophy and Friendship: 2005), Spencer (Rethinking Friendship: Hidden solidarities today: 2006) and Pahl (On Friendship: 2000) will be applied. The conclusion derived from the analysis shows that it is possible to interpret their relationship differently depending on which aspect of their friendship one decides to highlight, but the aspect of George and Lennie’s unequal stature due to the Lennie’s mental disability is a fact impossible to not take into account. This aspect makes it impossible for them to be genuine friends, as their relationship becomes based on one person having more responsibility than the other, making their friendship non-genuine according to Aristole.
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Friends with nature : Nature and male bonding in Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men" and Kerouac's "On the Road"Johansson, Cecilia January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Män som drabbats av bröstcancer : En litteraturstudie som belyser männens upplevelser / Men affected by breast cancer : A literature review that highlights the men's experiencesFondell, Josefin, Holmberg, Lina January 2012 (has links)
Bakgrund: I Sverige diagnostiseras årligen cirka 40 män med bröstcancer. Det är en sjukdom som ofta associeras med kvinnor vilket resulterar i en okunskap där många inte är medvetna om att även män kan drabbas. Endast ett fåtal kliniska studier är utförda på män vilket leder till att de erbjuds behandling efter samma riktlinjer som kvinnor. Syftet: Syftet var att belysa förekomsten av bröstcancer hos män samt deras upplevelser av att ha sjukdomen. Metod: En allmän litteraturstudie baserad på vetenskapliga artiklar genomfördes. Resultat: Resultatet visade att männen var chockade över att ha fått diagnosen bröstcancer. De uppfattade det som en könsrelaterad sjukdom och ville inte avslöja sin diagnos för omgivningen. Generellt var männen besvikna över informationen som de erhållit då den endast var fokuserad på kvinnor. Deltagarna fick även en förändrad kroppsuppfattning till följd av att de genomgått en mastektomi. De upplevde att deras maskulinitet och sexualitet ifrågasattes. Diskussion: Utifrån resultatets fynd fördes en diskussion kring det kvinnliga fokuset, en förändrad kroppsuppfattning och bristen på kunskap. Slutsats: Denna studie visar att ytterligare forskning krävs för att öka medvetenheten kring bröstcancer hos män. Sjuksköterskan bör ha förståelse och kunskap om hur män upplever sjukdomen. / Background: In Sweden approximately 40 men each year are diagnosed with breast cancer. It is a disease that often is associated with women. Only a few clinical studies are based on men with the result that they are offered treatment following the same guidelines as women. The aim: The aim was to elucidate the incidence of breast cancer in men and their experiences of having the disease. Methods: We conducted a general literature study based on scientific articles. Results: The results showed that the men were shocked at having been diagnosed with breast cancer. They perceived it as a gender-related illness and did not want to disclose their diagnosis to their surroundings. Generally, the men were disappointed with the information made available to them. Participants also had an altered body image due to the mastectomy. They felt that their masculinity and sexuality was questioned. Discussion: Based on the findings in the result there was a discussion on the feminine focus, an altered body image and the lack of knowledge. Conclusion: This study shows that further research is needed to raise awareness of breast cancer in men. The nurse should have an understanding and knowledge of how men experience the disease.
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Reclaiming Blackness: (Counter) Narratives of Racial Kinship in Black Gay Men‘s Sexual StoriesChambers, Christopher Scott 2011 May 1900 (has links)
Black gay male identities and their place within the social hierarchy are organized by interlocking systems of race, sexuality, gender and class. This produces the social marginality of black gay men in seemingly neutral ways. Prominent features of this systemic oppression are stock stories of black gay life that construct black gay men as pathological, dangerous, conflicted, inauthentically black, emasculated, and heretical within public and academic discourses. In order to better understand these dynamics and add to the empirical literature on race/sexuality intersections, fifty-two men identifying themselves as black/African American and as having relationships with other men, participated in semi-structured one-on-one interviews which explored their accounts of the structural arrangements, social interactions, and cultural meaning systems that defined the experience of being both black and gay in America. These interviews revealed that black gay men construct rich and complex counter narratives which not only expose the complex structural arrangements, cultural practices and racial ideologies that produce their marginality, but also remediate black gay manhood as part of the black diaspora. These narrative challenges illuminated discursive, performative and cultural practices, as well as social interactions occurring in three areas of the men‘s lives. First, were strategic uses of a hegemonic masculine form I call the "Super Black Man" (SBM) by which the men counteract the heteronormative, and hypermasculine prerequisites of respectable black masculinity, and represent themselves as racially-conscious and respectable black men. Participants also constructed narrative challenges to those cultural repertoires produced by the black church which organize the dominant scripts of black, Christian identity. These accounts were distinguished by the academic resources they utilized to re-theorize the relationship between Christian faith and the black body, confront the white racial framing and heteronormative assumptions embedded in church doctrine, and transform their outsider status within these communities. Finally participants‘ narratives also illustrate multiple dimensions by which a black racial framing organizes their experiences as black gay men, and their connection to black communities. These negotiations suggest the need to theorize race/sexuality intersections as having both structural and interpretative dimensions and to see the intersection of race and culture as complicating the manifestation of racial inequality.
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The Era of Men¡¦s Looks: The Construction of Stylish Masculinity and Consumer Culture in Men¡¦s Fashion Magazine.Yuan, Tzu-hsiang 24 March 2007 (has links)
In recent years, men¡¦s fashion magazines have become a new media genre that attracts lots of attention. The sales, advertisements, and publications of the men¡¦s fashion magazines have reached a remarkable performance. Media is an important social institution to shape gender images. Thus, this study aims to explore what kind of masculinity that men¡¦s fashion magazines in Taiwan represents? How to achieve the masculinity through consumption? Are there any differences in masculinity between transnational and local men¡¦s fashion magazines? What is the variation in men¡¦s fashion magazines in different periods? This study expects to describe the masculinity represented in men¡¦s fashion magazines of Taiwan to enrich the media and men¡¦s research resources.
This study drawn on the masculinity theory based on the sociologist R.W. Connell¡¦s, and applied a methodology of quantitative content analysis. The subjects were the international Chinese edition of men¡¦s fashion magazine GQ and the local men¡¦s fashion magazine men¡¦s uno. The reason to focus the analysis on GQ and men¡¦s uno is due to the fact that they are the most popular and long-running men¡¦s fashion magazines in Taiwan respectively. By means of analyzing these two magazines published during 1997 to 2006, this research tries to understand the masculinity styles represented on the magazines¡¦ cover.
The major finding revealed that the large numbers of men represented in men¡¦s fashion magazines of Taiwan were young men who aged between 18 and 35 (with 74.8% appearing in the ¡§cover figure¡¨ category and 71.2% in the ¡§featured people¡¨ category). Most of the men in the magazines were entertainment workers with appealing looks (with 90.1% appearing in the ¡§cover figure¡¨ category and 81.9% in the ¡§featured people¡¨ category). As for men¡¦s appearance types, the Trendy Cool type (43.2%) was the majority, the next types were Gentle (14.4%), Tough/Strong (11.7%), and Serious/Sophisticated (11.7%). Secondly, 60.5% of the article headlines on the magazines¡¦ covers were related to the consumption issues. The topics of the headlines were centered on fashion (39.6%) and featured people (29.8%). Furthermore, comparing the transnational with the local magazine, there were differences in men¡¦s age, occupation, appearance type, body type, and the topic and product category that the magazine emphasized.
In conclusion, men¡¦s fashion magazines of Taiwan indeed appear a different kind of masculinity that I identify as ¡§stylish masculinity¡¨. This kind of masculinity focuses much attention on men¡¦s appearances, and it¡¦s achieved through a variety of ways of product consumption. The stylish masculinity overthrows some definitions of the traditional masculinity, but on the other hand, it still maintained some disciplines of traditional masculinity. Analyzing the transnational and local men¡¦s fashion magazines, we can understand even if the international men¡¦s fashion magazine, like GQ, appeared and influenced the local male in a global way. From different cultures, magazine origins and readerships, the local men¡¦s fashion magazine still can present some diverse features in many aspects. Finally, when the transnational fashion magazines introduce the international fashion information to local readers, it also conveys many global viewpoints about masculinity at the same time. However, it¡¦s still possible that the publisher takes a localized strategy in order to cater for the local life and culture.
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Life events and their impact on the mental health of young black men: a qualitative and quantitative studyWatkins, Daphne Charlene 17 September 2007 (has links)
Although it is presumed that men who acquire a college education will also
achieve middle-class status, middle-class status does not provide Black men with the
anticipated reductions for some health risks. Black men who attend predominately white
institutions (PWIs) are reported to face many obstacles such as racism, isolation,
alienation, and lack of support compared to Black men who attend historically Black
colleges/universities (HBCUs). Formative research methods were used to obtain
information about stressors of Black college men and how these stressors influence their
mental health and health behaviors. Focus groups captured men's understanding of
mental health and their stressful life events while a questionnaire was used to obtain
general health information, including depressive symptoms (i.e. feeling sad, nervous,
hopeless, and worthless). Results suggest that there are no major differences between the
health of Black college men at a PWI and a HBCU; however, men at each institution
experience different levels of psychosocial stress as a function of their academic settings.
Future research should explore the mental health of Black college men more thoroughly
and include an in-depth exploration of their health practices.
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Friends with nature : Nature and male bonding in Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men" and Kerouac's "On the Road"Johansson, Cecilia January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Identity and social participation : a case study of Chileans and soccer in Toronto /Molle, Ilena. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--York University, 2007. Graduate Programme in Geography. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 197-205). Also available on the Internet. MODE OF ACCESS via web browser by entering the following URL: http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:MR29294
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Relations between acculturation and gender role conflict, shame-proneness, and psychological well-being among Vietnamese-American men /Vu, Paul H. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2000. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 106-123). Also available on the Internet.
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Explicit and implicit attitudes and attributions of responsibility and blame in cases of domestic violence do men and women differ? /Jackson, Zebulon V. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ball State University, 2009. / Title from PDF t.p. (viewed on Nov. 12, 2009). Includes bibliographical references (p. 114-121).
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