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Books > Health, Home & Family > General
This 20-volume set has titles originally published between 1939 and
1991. It looks at marriage in a broad context from a variety of
perspectives, including anthropological, health, historical,
psychological, and sociological. Individual titles cover mediation,
divorce and separation, marriage guidance, disability, sexual
health, along with wider issues such as kinship, wardship, marriage
in India and Africa and the subordination of women internationally.
This collection is an excellent resource for those interested in
the place of marriage in society.
This book is about caring for elderly persons in the 21th century.
It shows that care has many facets and is influenced by many
factors. Central topics of this book thus include the relation
between the person depending on care and the care giver(s), the
impacts of caregiving on the family and the larger social context,
as well as socio-cultural and political aspects underlying the
growing need for and the practice of formal and informal care. It
is evident that care as a real-life phenomenon of our time needs
the co-operation ofmultiple disciplines to better understand,
describe, explain and modify phenomena of elder care. Such a need
for crossdisciplinary research is even more urgent given the
increasing population aging and the impending gaps between demand
and supply of care. The present book is dedicated to this approach
and provides a first substantive integration of knowledge from
geropsychology, other gerosciences, and cultural psychologies by a
multi-disciplinary cast of internationally renowned authors.
Cultural psychology emerged as a valuable partner of the
gerosciences by contributing essentially to a deeper understanding
of the relevant issues. Reading of this book provides the
reader-researcher or practitioner-with new insights of where the
problems of advancing age take our caring tasks in our 21st century
societies and it opens many new directions for further work in the
field. Finally and above all, this book is also a strong plea for
solidarity between generations in family and society in a rapidly
changing globalized world.
An electric memoir about what it means to live outside the gender boundaries imposed on us by society, from the award-winning trans writer and performer.
In None of the Above, Travis Alabanza examines seven phrases people have directed at them as a Black, mixed race, non-binary person. Some are deceptively innocuous, some deliberately loaded or offensive, some celebratory; sentences that have impacted them for better and for worse; sentences that speak to the broader issues raised by a world that insists that gender must be a binary.
Through these seven phrases, Travis Alabanza turns a mirror back on society, giving us reason to question the very framework in which we live and the ways we treat each other.
Why do we feel the way we feel? How do our thoughts and emotions affect our health?
In her groundbreaking book Molecules of Emotion, Candace Pert—an extraordinary neuroscientist who played a pivotal role in the discovery of the opiate receptor—provides startling and decisive answers to these and other challenging questions that scientists and philosophers have pondered for centuries.
Pert’s pioneering research on how the chemicals inside our bodies form a dynamic information network, linking mind and body, is not only provocative, it is revolutionary. By establishing the biomolecular basis for our emotions and explaining these scientific developments in a clear and accessible way, Pert empowers us to understand ourselves, our feelings, and the connection between our minds and our bodies—or bodyminds—in ways we could never possibly have imagined before. From explaining the scientific basis of popular wisdom about phenomena such as "gut feelings" to making comprehensible recent breakthroughs in cancer and AIDS research, Pert provides us with an intellectual adventure of the highest order.
Molecules of Emotion is a landmark work, full of insight and wisdom and possessing that rare power to change the way we see the world and ourselves.
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