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Reading this snowy story aloud together will have little ones
shouting âHEâS BEHIND YOU!â just like a trip to the
Pantomime! Penguin has a favourite teddy called Mikki Olsen.
Whatever Penguin does, wherever Penguin goes, Mikki is always right
there next to him. But after a particularly busy day, Penguin takes
his eye off the toy with potentially terrible consequences. Mikki
is lost.. or is he? This sweet and playful story is a great play on
the 'he's behind you' scenario. Young readers will love spotting
missing Mikki on every spread, as well as identifying with that
special love for a treasured toy. Â
What is depression? An "imagined sun, bright and black at the same
time?" A "noonday demon?" In literature, poetry, comics, visual
art, and film, we witness new conceptualizations of depression come
into being. Unburdened by diagnostic criteria and pharmaceutical
politics, these media employ imagery, narrative, symbolism, and
metaphor to forge imaginative, exploratory, and innovative
representations of a range of experiences that might get called
"depression." Texts such as Julia Kristeva's Black Sun: Depression
and Melancholia (1989), Andrew Solomon's The Noonday Demon (2000),
Allie Brosh's cartoons, "Adventures in Depression" (2011) and
"Depression Part Two" (2013), and Lars von Trier's film Melancholia
(2011) each offer portraits of depression that deviate from, or
altogether reject, the dominant language of depression that has
been articulated by and within psychiatry. Most recently, Ann
Cvetkovich's Depression: A Public Feeling (2012) has answered the
author's own call for a multiplication of discourses on depression
by positing crafting as one possible method of working through
depression-as-"impasse." Inspired by Cvetkovich's efforts to
re-shape the depressive experience itself and the critical ways in
which we communicate this experience to others, Re/Imagining
Depression: Creative Approaches to "Feeling Bad" harnesses critical
theory, gender studies, critical race theory, affect theory, visual
art, performance, film, television, poetry, literature, comics, and
other media to generate new paradigms for thinking about the
depressive experience. Through a combination of academic essays,
prose, poetry, and interviews, this anthology aims to destabilize
the idea of the mental health "expert" to instead demonstrate the
diversity of affects, embodiments, rituals and behaviors that are
often collapsed under the singular rubric of "depression."
What is depression? An "imagined sun, bright and black at the same
time?" A "noonday demon?" In literature, poetry, comics, visual
art, and film, we witness new conceptualizations of depression come
into being. Unburdened by diagnostic criteria and pharmaceutical
politics, these media employ imagery, narrative, symbolism, and
metaphor to forge imaginative, exploratory, and innovative
representations of a range of experiences that might get called
"depression." Texts such as Julia Kristeva's Black Sun: Depression
and Melancholia (1989), Andrew Solomon's The Noonday Demon (2000),
Allie Brosh's cartoons, "Adventures in Depression" (2011) and
"Depression Part Two" (2013), and Lars von Trier's film Melancholia
(2011) each offer portraits of depression that deviate from, or
altogether reject, the dominant language of depression that has
been articulated by and within psychiatry. Most recently, Ann
Cvetkovich's Depression: A Public Feeling (2012) has answered the
author's own call for a multiplication of discourses on depression
by positing crafting as one possible method of working through
depression-as-"impasse." Inspired by Cvetkovich's efforts to
re-shape the depressive experience itself and the critical ways in
which we communicate this experience to others, Re/Imagining
Depression: Creative Approaches to "Feeling Bad" harnesses critical
theory, gender studies, critical race theory, affect theory, visual
art, performance, film, television, poetry, literature, comics, and
other media to generate new paradigms for thinking about the
depressive experience. Through a combination of academic essays,
prose, poetry, and interviews, this anthology aims to destabilize
the idea of the mental health "expert" to instead demonstrate the
diversity of affects, embodiments, rituals and behaviors that are
often collapsed under the singular rubric of "depression."
SQUIBS: FOUR DIRECTIONS is a volume of seventeen-syllable poems for
which no superlatives would suffice, unfortunately. Here you will
find squibs and cartoons which may cause you to smile, to chuckle,
to LOL, perhaps to cry or at least to cry "Enough " SQUIBS is an
example of the current literature-as-therapy movement. If you're
feeling blue you can go take a haiku. Haaaiiiiii--ku seventeen
syllable verse squibs good, bad and worse all (thankfully) terse
This is the autobiography of a Rangers legend. Alex MacDonald's
compelling memoirs cover his formative years as a player with St
Johnstone, his rise to fame with Rangers, his transfer to Hearts
where he became player-manager, and his time in charge at Airdrie.
But Doddie is quintessentially a Rangers man, having grown up in
Glasgow supporting them and then going on to play a key role in the
club's 1972 Cup Winners' Cup triumph. Doddie won 12 medals in a
glittering career, including a highly-prized European one during
his time with Rangers, yet as he reveals, a chance meeting with
Celtic manager Jock Stein might have resulted in him signing for
the Old Firm's other half. Etched indelibly in his memory, too, is
the dejection he suffered when Hearts lost the League Championship
and Scottish Cup within the space of a week in the mid-1980s and
his subsequent delight at leading Airdrie into Europe. Doddie is a
fascinating story, both for his lifelong love affair with football
and his more personal story of growing up in Glasgow, his love of
animals and his midlife crisis when he put the car in the garage
and headed out on the highway on a brand new Harley Davidson. It
has been a life full of adventures and characters and the highs and
lows of his life and career are entertainingly and engagingly told.
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