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This groundbreaking reference offers mental health professionals a
rigorous, nuanced guide to working with abuse survivors with
disabilities in religious communities. Expert contributors unravel
complex intersections of disability, religion, and identity in the
context of gender violence (including spotlights on racial, gender,
and sexual minorities, Deaf persons, and men), and offer
survivor-centered best practices for intervention. Chapters explore
how responses from clergy and other religious figures may sometimes
prevent survivors from seeking help, and how faith leaders can help
to empower survivors. The concepts and research presented here
support multiple purposes, from removing barriers to survivor
services to working with religious communities to be more inclusive
and transparent. Among the topics featured: From barriers to
belonging for people with disabilities: Promising pathways toward
inclusive ministry. Empowering women with intellectual disabilities
to resist abuse in interpersonal relationships. Race, culture, and
abuse of persons with disabilities. Ableist shame and disruptive
bodies: Survivorship at the intersection of queer, trans, and
disabled existence. From the narratives of survivors with
disabilities: Strengths and gaps between faith-based communities
and domestic violence shelters. Religion, Disability, and
Interpersonal Violence brings transformative insights to
psychologists, social workers, and mental health professionals
across disciplines providing guidance within religious and disabled
communities in their clinical practice. It also provides valuable
background for researchers seeking to examine the interface between
religious culture and the abuse of persons with disabilities.
This book is a lively, passionate defence of contemporary work in
the humanities, and, beyond that, of the university system that
makes such work possible. The book's stark accounts of academic
labour, and its proposals for reform of the tenure system, are
novel, controversial, timely, and very necessary.
This book is a lively, passionate defence of contemporary work in
the humanities, and, beyond that, of the university system that
makes such work possible. The book's stark accounts of academic
labour, and its proposals for reform of the tenure system, are
novel, controversial, timely, and very necessary.
Imagine the Universe as a computer-machine, and Planet Earth as a
single cog. Imagine that the machine is malfunctioning on account
of a virus which mutated within the thought patterns of mankind.
Now imagine that the Universe has a restore point. Mollie Owen
lives her life in the 2040s, on the brink of this restore point. In
1999 Dylan Grace has his life diverted from what would have been an
uneventful course by the mysterious Jetaru Dark. Orchestrating a
second chance, bringing together prophesies, and twining fates,
Variables in the machine change the story, and with it, our
thoughts.
If you like to travel you might like to try our trips by car or as
we did in a motorhome. My husband encouraged me to share some of
our past trips and pictures with you. We have so many pictures and
they are just snapshots with no idea that we would be sharing them
in a book, so they are not professional photos I know I picked some
famous shots and also some human interest photos. I believe you
will find this is an unusual travel book. I've given all of the
route numbers if you care to try any or part of a trip. I did not
always know exactly where some of the scenes were but they are in
the book in order of our travels. You might recognize your location
or town in some of the photos.
The introduction of this book reads, "Beauty, like every other
quality -- courage, fear, ugliness, trust, truth, wisdom -- is a
part of us and apart from us, inside us and outside us, personal
and impersonal. Beauty invites us to build bridges and make
connections between the senses and the soul, between contemplation
and expression, between ourselves and the world." In this
wide-ranging and deeply felt book, artist and writer J. Ruth
Gendler invites us to reclaim and celebrate the often misunderstood
quality of beauty as one of the most profound and essential forces
in our lives. Drawing upon observations from art and mythology,
science and nature, contemporary culture and personal experience,
the author looks at her subject in its most generous implications
-- not simply as a reflection of surface and image, but as a
pathway to wholeness, integrity, coherence, and ultimately, to
love. Written with curiosity, courage, a discerning eye and a
lyrical sensibility, and illustrated with evocative line drawings
by the author, Notes on the Need for Beauty displays the strong
personal voice that has made her previous book, The Book of
Qualities so beloved. It is a work to savor and to share.
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