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As a Confederate Soldier, John Fulton Brown opposed all things
pointing to a division of the United States. He felt he was helping
to establish a cause that he did not want established. His heart
was not in it and it didn't reflect his interests. He was
half-starved all the time and was plagued by the horrid, hungry
insects that sucked out what little beef and rice he didn't get at
suppertime. Who wouldn't move, influenced by a variety of facts
such as these?
In "The Bushwhackers," he recounts how, while traveling in the
high, craggy mountains of Tennessee, they discovered the area had
been overrun by both Yanks and Rebs. Barns and corncribs were empty
with no men in sight, except every now and then a very old man
would wander out of hiding. Women with long, peaked faces peeped
out through cracks in their huts, looking as scared to death as
they undoubtedly were. Children with woolly heads and prominent
eyeballs, pale from lack of sufficient food-skedaddled in all
directions. Real pretty girls, or those who would have been pretty
if there were peace and plenty, looked as though they had never had
a full meal in their lives.
This book provides a means of comprehensively grounding and
considering the epistemological and philosophical underpinnings of
practice-based research epistemologies. By introducing readers to
the diverse array of methodological tools and concepts that are
necessary to underpin postgraduate research, this book develops an
understanding of the distinctions between practice-led research,
practice-based research and question-led research, and the
contextual significance of each, as well as enabling students to
comprehend the historical relationships between academic
disciplines and the value of reconnecting them at an
epistemological and philosophical level. Through illustrated
examples from applied practice across disciplines such as art,
social sciences and medical and allied healthcare sciences, readers
are encouraged to develop the capacity to not only think
conceptually about their own research, but to systematically
evaluate that of others. With this focus on descriptive studies
from practice, the book fosters higher-order critical thinking in
relation to implications for methodological implementation,
encouraging deep learning processes and the confidence to transcend
the limits of one's own discipline in order to work collaboratively
with researchers in different fields.
This book provides a means of comprehensively grounding and
considering the epistemological and philosophical underpinnings of
practice-based research epistemologies. By introducing readers to
the diverse array of methodological tools and concepts that are
necessary to underpin postgraduate research, this book develops an
understanding of the distinctions between practice-led research,
practice-based research and question-led research, and the
contextual significance of each, as well as enabling students to
comprehend the historical relationships between academic
disciplines and the value of reconnecting them at an
epistemological and philosophical level. Through illustrated
examples from applied practice across disciplines such as art,
social sciences and medical and allied healthcare sciences, readers
are encouraged to develop the capacity to not only think
conceptually about their own research, but to systematically
evaluate that of others. With this focus on descriptive studies
from practice, the book fosters higher-order critical thinking in
relation to implications for methodological implementation,
encouraging deep learning processes and the confidence to transcend
the limits of one's own discipline in order to work collaboratively
with researchers in different fields.
The riddles of desire, youth, old age, poverty, and wealth are laid
bare in this radiant collection from a master of the form. From
inner-city pawnshops to highpowered law firms, from the desert of
California to the coast of France, The Flounder paints a vivid
portrait of how complex and poignant everyday life can be. Told in
vibrant, incantatory prose, these moving, lyrical, and surprising
stories teeter between desperation and hope, with Fulton showing us
what lasts in an impermanent world.
This book provides the first in-depth case study of 'Renew' - a
pastoral programme of religious revitalization. The programme
originated in the United States in 1976 and has been widely adopted
throughout the Roman Catholic world. Initiated from the top down in
a hierarchically-structured church, it can be seen as an example of
clerical attempts to stimulate and control lay spirituality in an
organizationally controlled manner (as opposed to grass-roots
movements, such as those associated with liberation theology). The
authors look at the history of religious organizations in the Roman
Catholic Church and the affects of modernity on religious practice,
and the decline in the latter which prompted the diocese to adopt
'Renew'. Their findings show that the effects of 'Renew' were
limited and short-lived, an inevitable consequence of the ambiguous
and often contradictory aims. In analysing these findings they
suggest some ways in which the church might reform itself - by
decentralization and a reform of the papacy, for example - to meet
the challenges of the modern age.
Order your digital inspection copy here. Sharp and focused, this
book provides the need-to-know information on how to design and
implement a good, high quality research project. Oriented around
real-world application, it emphasizes the aspects of research most
relevant to conducting practice-based research. Assuming no prior
knowledge, but appropriate for experienced learners, it builds
knowledge at a sustainable pace. It offers readers: - A no frills
guide to methodology and the theory of conducting research -
Strategies for communicating complex ideas - Insight into common
impact-driven methods like action research, case study, and mixed
methods - Ways to develop systematic research projects within the
boundaries of everyday working life - Ample opportunities to test
and apply newfound knowledge. With streamlined advice tailored
specifically to support research in professional contexts, this
book is the essential toolkit every researcher who is embarking on
a practice-led project needs.
Order your digital inspection copy here. Sharp and focused, this
book provides the need-to-know information on how to design and
implement a good, high quality research project. Oriented around
real-world application, it emphasizes the aspects of research most
relevant to conducting practice-based research. Assuming no prior
knowledge, but appropriate for experienced learners, it builds
knowledge at a sustainable pace. It offers readers: - A no frills
guide to methodology and the theory of conducting research -
Strategies for communicating complex ideas - Insight into common
impact-driven methods like action research, case study, and mixed
methods - Ways to develop systematic research projects within the
boundaries of everyday working life - Ample opportunities to test
and apply newfound knowledge. With streamlined advice tailored
specifically to support research in professional contexts, this
book is the essential toolkit every researcher who is embarking on
a practice-led project needs.
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