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This book presents strategies for using systemic theory and
evidence-based practice in schools to support students, the adults
in their lives, and their wider communities. Beginning by
introducing and explaining the Advocating
Students-within-Environments (ASE) theory, each chapter then
addresses a specific school-based issue, such as academic
achievement, crisis, trauma, and resiliency, from a systemic and
environmental lens. Practical and accessible, the chapters are
filled with case examples, evidence-base interventions, and helpful
tools to show how counselors can incorporate the approach into
their practice. Extending beyond school and student problems, this
text also explores greater system functioning, such as community
outreach and state level intervention, discussing advocacy and
political issues. This book is essential for school-based
professionals who are looking for new ways to work with students,
families, and their communities. It will also be of interest to
mental health professionals who work systemically, such as marriage
and family therapists and community counselors.
This book presents strategies for using systemic theory and
evidence-based practice in schools to support students, the adults
in their lives, and their wider communities. Beginning by
introducing and explaining the Advocating
Students-within-Environments (ASE) theory, each chapter then
addresses a specific school-based issue, such as academic
achievement, crisis, trauma, and resiliency, from a systemic and
environmental lens. Practical and accessible, the chapters are
filled with case examples, evidence-base interventions, and helpful
tools to show how counselors can incorporate the approach into
their practice. Extending beyond school and student problems, this
text also explores greater system functioning, such as community
outreach and state level intervention, discussing advocacy and
political issues. This book is essential for school-based
professionals who are looking for new ways to work with students,
families, and their communities. It will also be of interest to
mental health professionals who work systemically, such as marriage
and family therapists and community counselors.
An invigorating annual for those who are interested in medieval
textual cultures and open to ways in which diverse post-modern
methodologies may be applied to them. Alcuin Blamires, Review of
English Studies New Medieval Literatures is an annual of work on
medieval textual cultures, aiming to engage with intellectual and
cultural pluralism in the Middle Ages and now. Its scope is
inclusive of work across the theoretical, archival, philological,
and historicist methodologies associated with medieval literary
studies, and embraces both the British Isles and Europe. Essays in
this volume engage with real and metaphorical relations between
humans and nonhumans, with particular focus on spiders, hawks, and
demons; discuss some of the earliest Middle English musical and, it
is argued, liturgical compositions; describe the generic
flexibility and literariness of medical discourse;consider
strategies of affective and practical devotion, and their roles in
building a community; and offer an example of the creativity of
fifteenth-century vernacular religious literature. Texts discussed
include the Old English riddles and Alfredian translations of the
psalms; the lives of saints Dunstan, Godric, and Juliana, in Latin
and English; Piers Plowman, in fascinating juxtaposition with Hugh
of Fouilloy's Aviarium; medical remedybooks and uroscopies, many
from unedited manuscripts; and the fifteenth-century English Life
of Job. LAURA ASHE is Professor of English at the University of
Oxford and Fellow and Tutor at Worcester College, Oxford; PHILIP
KNOX is University Lecturer in English and Fellow of Trinity
College, Cambridge; WENDY SCASE is Geoffrey Shepherd Professor of
Medieval English Literature at the University of Birmingham; DAVID
LAWTON is Professor of English at Washington University in St
Louis. Contributors: Jenny C. Bledsoe, Heather Blurton, Hannah
Bower, Megan Cavell, Cathy Hume, Hilary Powell, Isabella Wheater
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC
BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford
Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and
selected open access locations. Middle English Medical Recipes and
Literary Play, 1375-1500 is the first detailed, book-length study
of Middle English medical recipes in their literary, imaginative,
social, and codicological contexts. Analysing recipe collections in
over seventy late medieval manuscripts, this book explores how the
words and structures of recipes could contribute to those texts'
healing purpose, but could also confuse, impede, exceed, and
redefine that purpose. The study therefore presents a challenge to
recipes' traditional reputation as mundane, unartful texts written
and read solely for the sake of directing practical action.
Crucially, it also relocates these neglected texts and overlooked
manuscripts within the complex networks forming medieval textual
culture, demonstrating that-though marginalized in modern
scholarship-medical recipes were actually linguistically, formally,
materially, and imaginatively interconnected with many other late
medieval discourses, including devotional writings, romances,
fabliaux, and Chaucerian poetry. The monograph thus models for
readers modes of analysis and close reading that might be deployed
in relation to recipes in order to understand better their
allusive, fragmentary, and playful qualities as well as their
wide-ranging influence on medieval imaginations.
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