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This book reveals that seventeenth-century women's very marginality
to traditional institutions of church and state made them catalysts
for imagining an expanded public culture beyond these institutions.
Women authors such as the conduct writer Dorothy Leigh, the prophet
Sarah Wight, and the poet Katherine Philips recast sites of private
dialogue--the extended family, the religious coventicle, and the
poetic coterie--as the bases of public debate that crossed national
borders. By revealing women writers' key role in the heated
controversies of this period, Gray offers a new reading of those
struggles as fractured by private affiliation and extended by
transnational alliance.
By bringing together Milton specialists with other innovative early
modern scholars, the collection aims to embrace and encourage a
methodologically adventurous study of Milton's works, analyzing
them both in relation to their own moment and their many ensuing
contexts.
This volume focuses on the family Violaceae. They are annual or
perennial herbs, shrubs or small trees and contains about 22 genera
and some 900 species and confines mainly to the old New world
tropics and sub tropics, however the genus Viola is predominantly
temperate in distribution.
The organization and management of the arts and public-sector arts
organizations in Britain have undergone major changes over the last
twenty years. This book analyzes the process and politics of change
in the world of the arts and develops an analytical framework for
understanding an under-researched area of British political life.
Strategy is not a modern invention. It is an essential and enduring
feature of human history that is here to stay. In this original
essay, Colin S. Gray, world-renowned scholar of strategic thought,
discusses the meaning of strategy and its importance for
politicians and the military as a means of achieving desired
outcomes in complex, uncertain conditions. Drawing on a wide range
of examples from the Great Peloponnesian War to the Second World
War, Vietnam, and the ongoing conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan,
Gray ably shows how great military thinkers of the past and present
have acted strategically in their various ideological, political,
geographical and cultural contexts. Looking to the future, he
argues that strategy will continue to provide a vital tool-kit for
survival and security, but that the global threat posed by nuclear
weapons remains an on-going challenge without obvious practical
solutions. As Gray boldy asserts, there is no promised land ahead,
only hard and dangerous times that will require us to master the
theory and practice of strategy to secure our own future.
This is the first definitive textbook on veterinary communication,
written specifically for students and veterinary professionals by a
group of international experts. Communication is a core clinical
skill, and is now taught as a compulsory part of most veterinary
degree courses. Good communication is crucial to the
veterinarian-client-patient relationship, to patient health and
ultimately to the success of any veterinary business.
The book covers all the key areas of communication including:
the basic framework for the veterinary consultation; professional,
ethical and legal aspects; communication with clients and
colleagues; and coping with end-of-life and other difficult
situations. It combines the most up-to-date research with a wealth
of practical information, such as: Real-life case studies to help
you apply your learning to real scenariosSimple step-by-step
guidelines showing you how to deal with specific situationsExamples
of written resources you can use in practice
This valuable textbook has been written and edited by a
carefully chosen group of specialists, comprising veterinary
communication lecturers, veterinary practitioners, training
managers and counsellors.
By bringing together Milton specialists with other innovative early
modern scholars, the collection aims to embrace and encourage a
methodologically adventurous study of Milton's works, analyzing
them both in relation to their own moment and their many ensuing
contexts.
In late 1985, The President's Committee on Mental Retardation
(PCMR) spon sored a National Strategy Conference on Mental
Retardation and Mental Health in Washington, D.C. The purpose of
this conference was to bring together our nation's leadership in
the fields of mental retardation and mental health in order to
delineate the state of the art relative to the diagnosis, care, and
treatment of citizens with mental retardation/mental illness, as
well as to chart a national course for the support and integration
of citizens with these challenging needs into the confluence of
family and community life. The President's Committee on Mental
Retardation recognized that citizens with these needs constitute
one of the most underserved and, at times, forgotten segments of
the population. With this in mind, the PCMR called together govern
mental, professional, and parental representatives from across the
nation to define the nature and extent of the problem, programs,
and services that promise hope for substantive improvement in the
quality of life of citizens with mental retardation/mental
illness."
This book reveals women writers' key role in constituting
seventeenth-century public culture and, in doing so, offers a new
reading of that culture as begun in intimate circles of private
dialogue and extended along transnational networks of public
debate.
Strategy is not a modern invention. It is an essential and enduring
feature of human history that is here to stay. In this original
essay, Colin S. Gray, world-renowned scholar of strategic thought,
discusses the meaning of strategy and its importance for
politicians and the military as a means of achieving desired
outcomes in complex, uncertain conditions. Drawing on a wide range
of examples from the Great Peloponnesian War to the Second World
War, Vietnam, and the ongoing conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan,
Gray ably shows how great military thinkers of the past and present
have acted strategically in their various ideological, political,
geographical and cultural contexts. Looking to the future, he
argues that strategy will continue to provide a vital tool-kit for
survival and security, but that the global threat posed by nuclear
weapons remains an on-going challenge without obvious practical
solutions. As Gray boldy asserts, there is no promised land ahead,
only hard and dangerous times that will require us to master the
theory and practice of strategy to secure our own future.
"Measuring Voice, Speech, and Swallowing in the Clinic and
Laboratory'' provides a definitive reference and text for methods
of measurement of voice, speech, and swallowing functioning and
disorders. It was developed for measurement courses in
speech-language pathology graduate and doctoral programs and is
also an essential reference for practitioners or anyone who needs
to make quantitative assessments of the systems involved. The goal
of this text is to provide basic information on the instruments and
measures commonly used for assessing and treating persons with
disorders of voice, speech, and swallowing for clinical practice,
research studies, and conducting clinical trials. New developments
in electrical and magnetic stimulation for non-invasive stimulation
of nerves, muscles and the brain are provided for augmenting
treatment benefits for persons with voice, speech and swallowing
disorders. Other new techniques included are: electromyography,
articulography, transcranial magnetic stimulation, functional MRI,
fNIRS, DTI and transcranial direct current stimulation for
treatment applications. The text includes methods for recording and
analyzing speech, acoustics, imaging and kinematics of vocal tract
motion, air pressure, airflow, respiration, clinical evaluation of
voice and swallowing disorders and functional and structural
neuroimaging. Many of the methods are applicable for use in
clinical practice and clinical research. Key Features: *Over 250
full color images *Summary tables to guide selection of instruments
and measures for various applications. *Each chapter begins and
ends with an overview and conclusion for review of content
*Appendices of measurement standards Clinical investigators and
clinicians wanting to measure voice, speech, and swallowing
functions for clinical documentation will benefit from this book,
as will students and professors. ''Measuring Voice, Speech, and
Swallowing in the Clinic and Laboratory'' pulls together the
necessary information on methods of measurement from different
disciplines and sources into one convenient resource. Information
on measurement in the fields of voice, speech, and swallowing is
now readily available for training doctoral students and guidance
of clinicians incorporating instrumental assessment into their
practice.
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