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Media events have been described as broadcasts that involve an
engaged audience viewing the same event simultaneously; though this
definition is still relevant, the way media outlets interact with
and react to their audiences has greatly changed. This is in part
due to the emergence of social media platforms which allow a
participatory audience, something that genre-specific television
channels now rely on. Because these genre-specific, 24-hour
channels seek to hook viewers with hyperbolic presentation and the
illusion of large media events, the original definition must be
adapted. Global Perspectives on Media Events in Contemporary
Society seeks to re-define the role of the media in relaying
information about current events within a modern context.
Determining what constitutes as and the proper presentation of a
media event is of great importance given the ubiquity of media
consumption. This book approaches the topic from historical,
ceremonial, and globally cultural perspectives while addressing
news, sports, and other significant current events. It is a vital
resource for students and teachers of communication, media, and
journalism, professionals in the media industry, policy makers, and
sociologists.
Focusing on the transitional period of the late Republic to the
early Principate, Trees in Ancient Rome offers a sustained
examination of the deployment of trees in the ancient city,
exploring not only the practicalities of their cultivation, but
also their symbolic value. The Ruminal fig tree sheltered the
she-wolf as she nursed Romulus and Remus and yearâs later Rome
was founded between two groves. As the city grew, neighbourhoods
bore the names of groves and hills were known by the trees which
grew atop them. From the 1st century BCE, triumphs included trees
among their spoils and Romeâs green cityscape grew, as did the
challenges of finding room for trees within the congested city.
This volume begins with an examination of the role of trees as
repositories of human memory, lasting for several generations. It
goes on to untangle the import of trees, and their role in the
triumphal procession, before closing with a discussion of how trees
could be grown in Romeâs urban spaces. Drawing on a combination
of literary, visual and archaeological sources, it reveals the rich
variety of trees in evidence, and explores how they impacted, and
were used to impact, life in the ancient city.
Jules Duchon was a real New Orleans vampire. Born and bred in the working-class Ninth Ward, bitten and smitten with the Big Easy. Driving through the French Quarter, stuck in a row of bumper-to-bumper cars that crept along Decatur Street like a caravan of bone-weary camels, Jules Duchon barely fit behind the steering wheel of his very big Cadillac taxicab. Even with the seat pushed all the way back.
Damn, he was hungry.
Jules stopped his cab, pressed the wobbly rocker switch that jerked the electric windows reluctantly to life, and stuck his head into the humid night air. “Hey, baby. You interested in some dinner?”
–from Fat White Vampire Blues
Vampire, nosferatu, creature of the night–whatever you call him–Jules Duchon has lived (so to speak) in New Orleans far longer than there have been drunk coeds on Bourbon Street. Weighing in at a whopping four hundred and fifty pounds, swelled up on the sweet, rich blood of people who consume the fattiest diet in the world, Jules is thankful he can’t see his reflection in a mirror. When he turns into a bat, he can’t get his big ol’ butt off the ground.
What’s worse, after more than a century of being undead, he’s watched his neighborhood truly go to hell–and now, a new vampire is looking to drive him out altogether. See, Jules had always been an equal opportunity kind of vampire. And while he would admit that the blood of a black woman is sweeter than the blood of a white man, Jules never drank more than his fair share of either. Enter Malice X . Young, cocky, and black, Malice warns Jules that his days of feasting on sisters and brothers are over. He tells Jules he’d better confine himself to white victims–or else face the consequences. And then, just to prove he isn’t kidding, Malice burns Jules’s house to the ground.
With the help of Maureen, the morbidly obese, stripper-vampire who made him, and Doodlebug, an undead cross-dresser who (literally) flies in from the coast– Jules must find a way to contend with the hurdles that life throws at him . . . without getting a stake through the heart. It’s enough to give a man the blues.
Adding to the growing literature on shared formulation, the authors
provide over two decades of practice-based evidence for the use of
a Shared Assessment, Formulation and Education (SAFE) approach to
working with those with complex mental health and behavioural
needs. The SAFE approach offers an evidence-informed framework for
multidisciplinary teams to address the needs of those with complex
and enduring psychosis for whom current evidence-based
interventions are ineffective in promoting their recovery. Drawing
from richly detailed case studies, the authors provide a range of
useful tools and fomulation templates for use by clinicans and
professionals alike. They put forward a shared language to promote
a multidisciplinary understanding of service users' complex needs
and a means of organising treatment into a focused, realistic and
targeted approach aimed at reducing barriers to recovery and
allowing individuals to lead personally meaningful lives. The book
focuses predominantly on the treatment of those with psychosis who
require bespoke, multi-theory informed care. This work will be an
invaluable resource to professionals working with this client
group, including clinical and counselling psychologists,
psychiatrists and other allied health professionals.
Adding to the growing literature on shared formulation, the authors
provide over two decades of practice-based evidence for the use of
a Shared Assessment, Formulation and Education (SAFE) approach to
working with those with complex mental health and behavioural
needs. The SAFE approach offers an evidence-informed framework for
multidisciplinary teams to address the needs of those with complex
and enduring psychosis for whom current evidence-based
interventions are ineffective in promoting their recovery. Drawing
from richly detailed case studies, the authors provide a range of
useful tools and fomulation templates for use by clinicans and
professionals alike. They put forward a shared language to promote
a multidisciplinary understanding of service users' complex needs
and a means of organising treatment into a focused, realistic and
targeted approach aimed at reducing barriers to recovery and
allowing individuals to lead personally meaningful lives. The book
focuses predominantly on the treatment of those with psychosis who
require bespoke, multi-theory informed care. This work will be an
invaluable resource to professionals working with this client
group, including clinical and counselling psychologists,
psychiatrists and other allied health professionals.
As the US faced its lowest levels of reported trust in government,
the COVID-19 crisis revealed the essential service that various
federal agencies provide as sources of information. This Element
explores variations in trust across various levels of government
and government agencies based on a nationally-representative survey
conducted in March of 2020. First, it examines trust in agencies
including the Department of Health and Human Services, state health
departments, and local health care providers. This includes
variation across key characteristics including party
identification, age, and race. Second, the Element explores the
evolution of trust in health-related organizations throughout 2020
as the pandemic continued. The Element concludes with a discussion
of the implications for agency-specific assessments of trust and
their importance as we address historically low levels of trust in
government. This title is also available as Open Access on
Cambridge Core.
Despite the steady acceptance of psychological interventions for
people with psychosis in routine practice many people continue to
experience problems in their recovery. The need to develop new
approaches, particularly for those who are more difficult to engage
and have significant co-morbidities is therefore important.
Innovations in Psychosocial Interventions for Psychosis positions
psychological formulation as a key organising principle for the
delivery of care within multidisciplinary teams. The interventions
described all have the common theme of supporting recovery and
achieving goals that are of primary importance to the service user
which targets interventions on broader obstacles to recovery. Along
with their experienced contributors, Alan Meaden and Andrew Fox
introduce new developments in psychological interventions for
people affected by psychosis who are hard to reach, working in a
variety of settings with people at various stages of recovery. The
book is divided into three parts. In part one brief interventions
and approaches aimed at promoting engagement are described as
interventions in their own right. Part two is focused on
longer-term interventions with individuals. Some of these highlight
new developments in the evidence base whilst others draw on work
applied less frequently to psychosis drawing from the broader
psychological therapy practice-based evidence field. In part three
attention is given to innovations in group settings and those aimed
at promoting greater multidisciplinary working in settings where a
whole team approach is needed. Each chapter describes the theory
underpinning a different approach, its development, key strategies,
principles and stages, and contain case examples that illustrate
the use of the approach in a clinical setting. Innovations in
Psychosocial Interventions for Psychosis will be an invaluable
resource to professionals working with this client group, including
clinical and counselling psychologists, psychiatrists, and other
allied health professionals.
Despite the steady acceptance of psychological interventions for
people with psychosis in routine practice many people continue to
experience problems in their recovery. The need to develop new
approaches, particularly for those who are more difficult to engage
and have significant co-morbidities is therefore important.
Innovations in Psychosocial Interventions for Psychosis positions
psychological formulation as a key organising principle for the
delivery of care within multidisciplinary teams. The interventions
described all have the common theme of supporting recovery and
achieving goals that are of primary importance to the service user
which targets interventions on broader obstacles to recovery. Along
with their experienced contributors, Alan Meaden and Andrew Fox
introduce new developments in psychological interventions for
people affected by psychosis who are hard to reach, working in a
variety of settings with people at various stages of recovery. The
book is divided into three parts. In part one brief interventions
and approaches aimed at promoting engagement are described as
interventions in their own right. Part two is focused on
longer-term interventions with individuals. Some of these highlight
new developments in the evidence base whilst others draw on work
applied less frequently to psychosis drawing from the broader
psychological therapy practice-based evidence field. In part three
attention is given to innovations in group settings and those aimed
at promoting greater multidisciplinary working in settings where a
whole team approach is needed. Each chapter describes the theory
underpinning a different approach, its development, key strategies,
principles and stages, and contain case examples that illustrate
the use of the approach in a clinical setting. Innovations in
Psychosocial Interventions for Psychosis will be an invaluable
resource to professionals working with this client group, including
clinical and counselling psychologists, psychiatrists, and other
allied health professionals.
A Promethean technology is one that allows someone of average
resources, skills, and intelligence to carry out actions that were
once only doable by governments, militaries, or institutions with
considerable resources. Essentially, Promethean technologies allow
users to create their own weapons of mass destruction from their
home computer and deploy them globally with a keystroke. These
emerging technologies are increasingly affordable and accessible -
and are no more complicated to operate than a satellite TV control
box or a smart phone. Although these technologies are a terrifying
prospect, the more we know about these dangers, the better we can
prepare to head them off. In The Devil's Toy Box, Andrew Fox lays
out seven decades of preemptive analysis and shows that while
homeland security has explored, in depth, the possible Promethean
threats the world faces, it has failed to forecast the most likely
attacks. Using actual scenarios Fox teaches how to predict future
threats and how to forecast which ones are likely to be used by bad
actors within the next five to ten years. Combining the skills of
homeland security experts and the imaginations of speculative
fiction writers, he then offers an analytical method to deter,
counter, or abate these threats, rather than adopting an attitude
of resigned fatalism.
What price redemption? Is martial honor worth the cost of one's
soul? Lieutenant Commander August Micholson lost his first ship,
the wooden frigate USS Northport, in reckless battle against the
ironclad ram CSS Virginia. However, Flag Officer Andrew Foote
offers the disgraced young Micholson a chance to redeem himself: he
can take the ironclad gunboat USS James B. Eads on an undercover
mission to destroy a hidden rebel boat yard, where a fleet of
powerful ironclads is being constructed which will allow the
Confederate Navy to dominate the Mississippi. But dangers far more
sinister than rebel ironclads await Micholson and his crew. On the
dark waters of the Yazoo River, deep within rebel territory, they
become entangled in a plot devised by a slave and his master to
summon African fire spirits to annihilate the Federal armies.
Micholson must battle devils both internal and external to save the
lives of his crew, sink the Confederate fleet, and foil the arcane
conspiracy. Ultimately, Micholson is faced with a terrible choice -
he can risk the lives of every inhabitant of America, both Union
and Confederate, or destroy himself by merging with a demon and
forever melding his own soul with that of his greatest enemy...
Book One of Midnight's Inferno: the August Micholson Chronicles
Watch for Book Two, Hellfire and Damnation, available April, 2014
Coby's back at the drawing board to create yet another new pet
After asking Mom for an alligator, she suggests starting with
something small first, like a Hamster. Lame So, Coby combines all
the things he likes about hamsters and all the things he loves
about alligators and creates another new creature. Hamstigator is
the 2nd book in the Petimals series
Dogopotamus is the first book in a NEW children's series called,
Petimals. Ages 7-10. FULL COLOR INTERIOR Coby is 8 years old, and
he wants a pet. Not just any pet, he wants a hippopotamus. But,
apparently you can't have a hippo for a pet, so Coby combines all
the things he loves about dogs and all the things he loves about
Hippos and creates his own NEW pet. Dogopotamus: The mind of a dog,
and the weight of a house means disaster might be just around the
corner
FROM THE SNOW CLAD FORESTS OF BELARUS TO THE SUN BAKED DESERTS OF
IRAQ. A SLAUGHTERHOUSE OF DEADLY VIOLENCE AND REVENGE WITH
SUPERNOVA INTENSITY! ABDUCTION EXPLODES INTO A NEW KIND OF FICTION,
GRAPHIC AND VIOLENT. LIVE THE STORY! ENTER THE PAGES OF LIVING
FICTION. GASP WITH WONDER AND AWE. BE LEFT BREATHLESS! A BLOODY
WHIRLPOOL OF VIOLENCE. DRUG BARONS AND THE FORCES OF JUSTICE SWORN
TO DESTROY THEIR NEFARIOUS TRADE. A MURDEROUS COLLISION BETWEEN
GOOD AND EVIL! VIOLENT. GRAPHIC. DEADLY
After morphing into 187 very large white rats in the name of
self-preservation, Jules Duchon is back to his portly self, a
member of that secret class of New Orleans citizens known as the
undead. Though he would like nothing better than to spend his
nights raising hell and biting flesh in his beloved French Quarter,
duty calls when an exclusive club of blue blood vampires demands
that the 450-pound cabbie find out who is attacking its young and
beautiful members. Adding insult to injury, he has to enlist the
help of a former foe: a black vampire named Preston.
What's a vampire to do? Without the love of a woman to ease his
pain, Jules isn't convinced that his undead life is worth living.
He doesn't desire Doodlebug (she may be a woman now but Jules knew
her back when she was just a boy) any more than he longs for
Daphne, a rat catcher who nourishes a crush the size of Jules. No,
only Maureen will do. Once a beautiful stripper with nothing but
curve after curve to her bodacious body, now she is mere dust in a
jar. But Jules will move heaven and earth to get her back . . .
even if it means pulling her back from the dead.
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