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Avatar Guided Stories of Ease from Adolescents with CancerUnknown Date (has links)
The overall purpose of this mixed method study was to describe adolescents’
experiences of ease while enduring treatment for cancer. Specifically, the study used
avatar image-guided story-sharing (AIGSS) to explore adolescent sense-of-self,
experiences of feeling uneasy, descriptions of qualities of ease, and best places for
finding ease during treatment. The innovative research approach used in this study
incorporated avatar images representing ‘ease’ in typical environments. By testing a
developmentally relevant approach, AIGSS, to explore ease for adolescents enduring
cancer, this study addressed a pressing need for meaningful approaches to engage
adolescents in health-related dialogue about what matters most.
While 10 qualities captured adolescent ease (beauty, fun, safety, strength,
connectedness, calmness, rest, comfort, independence, and familiarity), connectedness,
strength, fun, rest, and safety were the most significant qualities of ease threaded
throughout stories. Two themes of self-reflected identity emerged: (a) valued personal
qualities (extrinsic/admired) and (b) infused unique demeanors. Three themes described adolescent uneasiness during cancer treatment: (a) persistent uncertainty, (b) fearful
anticipation, and (c) disrupted self. While home was most conducive for ease, personal
meaning was given to the hospital enabling finding ease.
This new knowledge is foundational for nurses who support adolescents during
cancer treatment. This research lays the groundwork to re-define ease as a relevant
outcome of quality nursing care, focusing on positive outcomes rather than catastrophic
ones such as infection and death. Advancing caring science with interactive participative
research enhanced communication with adolescents, having implications for both clinical
research and pediatric oncology nursing practice. / Includes bibliography. / Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2016. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
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Avatar in China : a cyber-audience discourse analysis perspective / Cyber-audience discourse analysis perspectiveZhang, Bing January 2011 (has links)
University of Macau / Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities / Department of Communication
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Neural narratives and natives: cognitive attention schema theory and empathy in AvatarHills, Paul R. 01 1900 (has links)
Text in English / This study offers a fine-grained analysis of James Cameron’s film, Avatar (2009), on several
theoretical fronts to provide a view of the film from a cognitive cultural studies perspective.
The insights gained from cognitive theory are used to situate the debate by indicating the value
cognitive theories have in cultural criticism. The critical discourse analysis of Avatar that
results is a vehicle for the central concern of this study, which is to understand the diverse,
often contradictory, meaning-making exhibited by Avatar audiences. A focus on the
construction of empathic responses to the film’s messages investigates the success of this
polysemy. Ihe central propositions of the study are that meanings and interpretations of the experience of
viewing Avatar are made discursively; they are situated in definable traditions, mores and
values; and this meaning-making takes place in a cognitive framework which allows for the
technical reproduction and reception of the experience while providing powerful, emerging and
cognitively plausible narratives. In an attempt to situate the film’s commercial success and its
plethora of awards, including an Oscar for best art direction, the analysis takes a critical view
of Cameron’s use of cultural stereotypes and the framing of the exotic other, and considers the
continuing development of these elements over the whole series and product line or, as Henry
Jenkins (2007) defines it, “transmedia”. In drawing the theoretical boundaries of the
methodologies used in this study and in arguing for their complementarities, the study
contributes to a renewal of Raymond Williams’ (1961) mostly forgotten claim of the cross-disciplinary cognitive dimension of cultural studies and demonstrates an affirmation of this
formulation as cognitive cultural studies. / Art History, Visual Arts and Musicology / M.A. (Art History)
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