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This book offers a completely new approach to the measurement of
academic library effectiveness. Based on a significant empirical
investigation, it contradicts established practices such as the
measurement of outputs as indicators of effectiveness and the
tendency to focus the evaluation of library effectiveness on the
success of isolated activities. The book also explores in detail
the fundamental inadequacy of library-based bibliographic
instruction and information-seeking skills development. It argues
that a student learns in order to become information literate and
does not become information literate in order to learn. In so
doing, it challenges much of the accepted wisdom in libraries and
information technology.
Moral injury has developed in earnest since 2009 within psychology
and military studies, especially through work with veterans of the
U.S. military's wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. A major part of this
work is the attempt to identify means of healing, recovery, and
repair for those morally injured by their experiences in combat (or
similar situations). What this volume does is to provide insight
into the identification of moral injury, the development of the
notion, attempts to work with those affected, emerging ideas about
moral injury, portraits of moral injury in the past and present,
and, especially, what creative engagement with moral injury might
look like from a variety of perspectives. As such, it will be an
important resource for Christian ministers, chaplains, health care
workers, and other providers and caregivers who serve afflicted
communities.
Moral injury has developed in earnest since 2009 within psychology
and military studies, especially through work with veterans of the
U.S. military's wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. A major part of this
work is the attempt to identify means of healing, recovery, and
repair for those morally injured by their experiences in combat (or
similar situations). What this volume does is to provide insight
into the identification of moral injury, the development of the
notion, attempts to work with those affected, emerging ideas about
moral injury, portraits of moral injury in the past and present,
and, especially, what creative engagement with moral injury might
look like from a variety of perspectives. As such, it will be an
important resource for Christian ministers, chaplains, health care
workers, and other providers and caregivers who serve afflicted
communities.
Seeking to build upon recent scholarship based on Biblical women,
Joseph McDonald uses a character-centered literary approach to read
the story of Sarah as it was told and retold in the Second Temple
period. McDonald offers an alternative to the usual approaches to
"rewritten Bible" narratives, which often emphasize near-context,
synoptic comparison of retold stories and their scriptural
precursors, arguing that examination of retold narratives as
narratives reveals important aspects of their internal literary
effects, that may otherwise go unnoticed. Taken together, McDonald
suggests that such readings reveal one of Sarah's trans-narrative
or "deep traits," as a curious, multi-faceted resemblance to the
character of Abraham. The richness of her images, however, shows
that this resemblance is not the ultimate distillation of Sarah,
but a symptom of the kind of restriction that she consistently
faces in this literature. McDonald concludes that creative readings
of the narratives featuring Sarah in the Hebrew Bible, the
Septuagint, the Genesis Apocryphon, and the Jewish Antiquities of
Josephus illuminate Sarah as a complex and sometimes contradictory
figure, whose individuality and agency often struggle to escape
limitations placed upon her - both by other characters, such as
Abraham and God, and by the narrators of her tales.
The nine years between 1912 and 1920 were a period of economic and
political struggle for the Salish and Kootenai tribes of the
Flathead Indian Reservation in western Montana. The Indian people
toiled to maintain their economic independence despite the theft of
most of their land assets. The new Flathead Irrigation Project
destroyed most of the private irrigation ditches tribal farmers had
dug over the years. Some tribal members opened businesses and
organized rodeos, but many ventures were frustrated by government
policies, fire, and drought. While trying to adapt to the economic
impact of allotment, the tribe also fought against paternalistic
and exploitive government policies. Until 1916 half of tribal
income from timber and land sales was used to operate the agency
and construct an irrigation project that largely benefited white
settlers. During most of the 1912 to 1920 period, Flathead Agent
Fred C. Morgan and his allies on the Flathead Business Committee
fought the more radical Flathead Tribal Council over agency
policies. The Flathead Tribal Council especially fought against
congressional appropriations to construct the irrigation project as
long as the construction was to be paid for with tribal funds or
with liens on tribal allotments.
By the beginning of the nineteenth century the crescendo of
economic change on the Flathead Reservation was reaching a climax.
Income was not distributed equally on the reservation even though
by 1905 the Indians were basically self-supporting and most of the
poorer tribal members had enough to get by. But the surrounding
white community cast covetous eyes on tribal assets—especially
the land. In 1903, Congressman Joseph Dixon led an assault on the
tribes to force the sale of reservation land to white homesteaders
at far below its real value. Tribal leaders realized they were
being robbed and protested vigorously—to no avail. With the loss
of their assets in land, the tribes’ future income declined,
leaving them poorer than white rural Montanans. As part of the
allotment policy, tribal members wrestled with a formal enrollment
to determine who had rights on the reservation. White businessmen
also moved to claim possession of the dam site at the foot of
Flathead Lake. While the tribes were fighting against the coerced
allotment, they fought the State of Montana over taxes and hunting
rights. In the background alcohol and crime impacted some tribal
members. Â
The written records of Salish, Pend d’Oreille, and Kootenai
Indian history between 1907 and 1911 are dominated by continued
complaints against allotting and opening the reservation. A long
string of letters and a series of delegations to Washington, DC,
left no doubt that the Indian leaders and tribal members opposed
the opening. Tribal members recognized that the allotment policy
was driven by white men’s greed and desire to get tribal assets
at bargain prices. Most of the complaints that made it to the
Indian Office files are from, or were initiated by, Sam
Resurrection. To make matters even worse, in 1908 Senator Joseph
Dixon secured funding for the Flathead Irrigation Project. The
project would destroy most of the private irrigation ditches the
Indian farmers had dug over the years and make the tribes pay for
the construction of the irrigation project, which mainly benefited
white homesteaders. The tribes fervently protested against this use
of their assets—the land—to reward Dixon’s political backers.
The allotment and opening of the Flathead Reservation devastated
the new tribal economy based on livestock and agriculture. Â
To Keep the Land for My Children's Children is a collection of
primary documents about the Salish and Kootenai tribes of the
Flathead Indian Reservation in western Montana between 1890 and
1899. The 1890s witnessed the heartbreaking climax of the struggle
of Chief Charlo and the Salish Indians to develop a self-supporting
community in the Bitterroot Valley. The period also saw the doleful
impact of a biased white-controlled justice system and predatory
economic interests in western Montana. Four Indians were hung for
murder in Missoula in 1890, but whites who murdered Indians escaped
punishment. In the 1890s tribal leaders labored to hold the
agency-controlled Indian police and Indian court accountable.
Serious crimes were tried in off-reservation courts with varying
degrees of justice. In the early part of the decade government
agent Peter Ronan and Kootenai leaders tried and failed to protect
Kootenai farmers just north of the reservation boundary. A
predacious Missoula County government developed new and novel legal
theories to justify collecting county taxes from the "mixed blood"
people on the reservations. Duncan McDonald and Charles Allard Sr.
ran a hotel and a stage line on the reserve. Sources describe a
community that actively looked out for its interests and fought to
protect tribal independence and assets.
In the middle of the nineteenth century, the Salish, Pend
d'Oreille, and Kootenai tribes of western Montana navigated a world
of military struggles with enemy tribes in alliance with the newly
arrived tribe of white Americans. By the last quarter of the
century-from 1875 to 1889-the paradigm had shifted, as the tribes
worked to keep the peace and preserve their tribal rights and
assets against the onslaught of the growing white population. In
just fifteen years, the Flathead Reservation tribes careened from
dramatic efforts to stay out of the 1877 Nez Perce War to pressing
the white justice system to punish white men who murdered Indians.
In 1889 the Missoula County sheriff actively pursued Indians
accused of murdering white men, but whites accused of killing Pend
d'Oreille chief Michelle's relatives and Kootenai chief Eneas's son
went unpunished. In 1882 tribal leaders negotiated terms for the
sale of a railroad right of way through the reservation. Throughout
the 1880s, Chief Charlo worked to secure the Salish's right to
remain in the Bitterroot and, if possible, obtain enough government
aid to help establish a self-supporting Salish community in the
Bitterroot Valley.
The documents collected in this book provide a window into a
challenging and dangerous period in the history of the Salish and
Pend d'Oreille Indians of western Montana. Although all of these
sources were written or recorded by white people, used carefully,
the documents provide important information about the experiences
of the tribes. Between 1845 and 1874, the Salish and Pend
d'Oreilles faced continued attacks, property loss, and death from
the Plains Indian tribes east of the Continental Divide. The
population losses the western tribes suffered nearly exterminated
them as independent tribal bodies. The Salish and Pend d'Oreilles
allied with and adopted warriors from other western tribes to
replace some of their war losses. They also reached out for
spiritual power from the Christian missionaries who established
Saint Mary's and Saint Ignatius missions. Another coping strategy
was their alliance with the white men who invaded the Northern
Rocky Mountains and fought the same Plains tribes. During this era,
the Salish and Pend d'Oreilles also expanded their farms and horse
and cattle herds to compensate for the declining plains buffalo
herds.
This book is a window into the Flathead Indian Reservation of
western Montana in the twentieth century. The manuscript has been
taken from the transcripts of a series of thirteen audio and video
interviews conducted with Charles Duncan McDonald between 1982 and
1991. He tells much about his life, experiences, and the Flathead
Reservation ordeal during the twentieth century. McDonald was a
widely respected elder of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai
Tribes. During his long life (1897-1995), he was an eyewitness to
almost a century of economic and political change on the
reservation. He experienced the loss of his allotment and the hard
times of the second decade of the last century and the Depression
years in the 1920s and the 1930s. As a tribal councilman and later
as a tribal employee, he witnessed the slow growth of the economic
and political power of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes
between 1935 and the end of the twentieth century. In his later
years his excellent memory and willingness to share his experiences
made him a frequent source of reservation history.
Duncan McDonald (1849–1937) led a remarkable life as an
entrepreneur, tribal leader, historian, and cultural broker on the
Flathead Indian Reservation in western Montana. The mixed-blood son
of a Hudson’s Bay Company fur trader and a Nez Perce Indian
woman, Duncan accompanied the Pend d’Oreille Indians on a buffalo
hunt and horse-stealing expedition to the Montana plains during the
early 1870s. During the late nineteenth century he was put in
charge of Fort Connah, the Hudson’s Bay Company post on the
Flathead Indian Reservation, and worked as an independent trader
across the northern Rocky Mountains. Duncan established a hotel and
restaurant, among other businesses, on the Flathead Reservation. In
1878 and 1879 he wrote a history of the 1877 Nez Perce Indian War,
which was published in a Deer Lodge, Montana, newspaper. Long a
thorn in the side of Flathead Indian agents, Duncan was chairman of
the Flathead Business Committee between 1909 and 1924 and for many
years represented the interests and views of tribal members to the
Montana white community.
Publisher's Note: Products purchased from Third Party sellers are
not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or
access to any online entitlements included with the product. The
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of associations that publish research on safe rigging Bibliography
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Handbook of Rigging covers: Codes & Standards OSHA Updates
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Seeking to build upon recent scholarship based on Biblical women,
Joseph McDonald uses a character-centered literary approach to read
the story of Sarah as it was told and retold in the Second Temple
period. McDonald offers an alternative to the usual approaches to
"rewritten Bible" narratives, which often emphasize near-context,
synoptic comparison of retold stories and their scriptural
precursors, arguing that examination of retold narratives as
narratives reveals important aspects of their internal literary
effects, that may otherwise go unnoticed. Taken together, McDonald
suggests that such readings reveal one of Sarah's trans-narrative
or "deep traits," as a curious, multi-faceted resemblance to the
character of Abraham. The richness of her images, however, shows
that this resemblance is not the ultimate distillation of Sarah,
but a symptom of the kind of restriction that she consistently
faces in this literature. McDonald concludes that creative readings
of the narratives featuring Sarah in the Hebrew Bible, the
Septuagint, the Genesis Apocryphon, and the Jewish Antiquities of
Josephus illuminate Sarah as a complex and sometimes contradictory
figure, whose individuality and agency often struggle to escape
limitations placed upon her - both by other characters, such as
Abraham and God, and by the narrators of her tales.
This is a new release of the original 1941 edition.
Additional Contributors Are Robert H. Spitzer And Matthew C. Urbin.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Moral injury is a profound violation of a human being's core moral
identity through experiences of violence or trauma. This is the
first book in which scholars from different faith and academic
backgrounds consider the concept of moral injury not merely from a
pastoral or philosophical point of view but through critical
engagement with the sacred texts of Judaism, Christianity, Islam,
Buddhism and American Civil Religion. This collection of essays
explores the ambiguities of personal culpability among both
perpetrators and victims of violence and the suffering involved in
accepting personal agency in trauma. Contributors provide fresh and
compelling readings of texts from different faith traditions and
use their findings to reflect on real-life strategies for recovery
from violations of core moral beliefs and their consequences such
as shame, depression and addiction. With interpretations of the
sacred texts, contributors reflect on the concerns of the
morally-injured today and offer particular aspects of healing from
their communities as support, making this a groundbreaking
contribution to the study of moral injury and trauma.
This history of the Nez Perce War was written in 1878-79 by Duncan
McDonald, a relative of Chief Looking Glass and the son of a
Hudson's Bay Company fur trader and a Nez Perce Indian woman.
McDonald spent most of his life on the Flathead Indian Reservation
in western Montana. McDonald wrote the history based on interviews
and family sources. In 1878 he traveled to Canada to interview Nez
Perce chief White Bird and learn his side of the story. Remarkably,
the history was published in a Deer Lodge, Montana, newspaper only
a year or two after the war ended. McDonald's Nez Perce War history
is published with a historical introduction and selection of his
other essays on Indian affairs, in which he objects to the United
States government's unjust treatment of northwest Indian tribes and
condemns the threats of some Montana whites to attack Indians who
were friendly to the settlers.
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