|
Showing 1 - 12 of
12 matches in All Departments
This book offers a detailed and sensitive account of how parents
experience different forms of baby loss, and subsequently make
decisions about post-mortem examination. It also analyses some of
the challenges professionals face when working in this highly
sensitive field of medicine. It draws on data from an ESRC
award-winning UK based study on the development of minimally
invasive post-mortem to examine a range of sociologically pertinent
issues relating to: ‘trauma’ ‘emotions’, ‘decisions’,
‘care’ ‘technology’ ‘memory’ and the role of ‘social
and biological relationships’. By shedding light on this taboo
aspect of healthcare, the book provides a highly original
contribution to sociology, offering a comprehensive analysis of
some of the most pressing concerns in the field to date. -- .
This book examines research on death, dying and bereavement, and
how our approaches, perceptions and expectations shapes what we can
know about the end of life. The contributions include personal and
professional reflections, and practical suggestions for conducting
research in this field. The volume stems from the resurgence of the
international and interdisciplinary study of death in the last 20
years. Within this, empirical research is often viewed as
sensitive, but little has been written about the experience of
conducting research in this area. There has thus been little
reflection on the opportunities and challenges faced in undertaking
research as the field of death studies grows, including the
accommodation and recognition of cultural differences. This volume
seeks to in part address this gap. The chapters in this book were
originally published in the Mortality journal and the Death Studies
journal.
This book examines research on death, dying and bereavement, and
how our approaches, perceptions and expectations shapes what we can
know about the end of life. The contributions include personal and
professional reflections, and practical suggestions for conducting
research in this field. The volume stems from the resurgence of the
international and interdisciplinary study of death in the last 20
years. Within this, empirical research is often viewed as
sensitive, but little has been written about the experience of
conducting research in this area. There has thus been little
reflection on the opportunities and challenges faced in undertaking
research as the field of death studies grows, including the
accommodation and recognition of cultural differences. This volume
seeks to in part address this gap. The chapters in this book were
originally published in the Mortality journal and the Death Studies
journal.
Young Jewish woman fights to uncover the truth about her family
history in 1970s USA. Julie Ellis is the author of many popular
commercial novels. She's known for her portrayal of strong women
fighting for their families and for their faith. A SACRED
OBLIGATION tells the story of Diane, a child of holocaust
survivors, and her endeavours to prove that her father did not
commit suicide but was murdered. Diane Phillips grows up bright and
ambitious in New York; her only care is that everyone believes her
father committed suicide when she was a toddler. Her mother has
never accepted this and when she finally gives in to despair, Diane
is compelled to seek the truth and sets off for her birthplace, the
small town of Eden, Georgia. It's an elegant town of colonnaded
houses and legendary Southern charm, where the living is slow and
easy. Running the show is Diane's grandfather, Lloyd Masters,
powerful benefactor and philanthropist. But trouble lurks beneath
the facade of the perfect family in the perfect town. There have
been several grisly murders, with no discernible link. As Diane
takes on the might of her estranged relatives, long-buried secrets
are finally revealed.
This book is for ambitious, high-achieving women leaders,
entrepreneurs, aspiring entrepreneurs, and corporate leaders ready
to move to the next level. It is a manifesto and call to action for
women to lift themselves and each other up by refusing to accept
limitations and instead embracing an ethos of possibility. There
are big gorgeous goals that we all need to set. These are so
different from goals that we know we can accomplish because they
feel safe and tidy. These goals scare us; they keep us up at
night--because we fear they are beyond our grasp. We all know women
who are great at achieving big gorgeous goals. How do they do it?
What allows them to reach outward, upward, and think expansively?
The book explores the possibilities that open when we set big
gorgeous goals, and the common characteristics in the women who
move towards these. Through stories and lessons, the book shows
women leaders how thinking beyond habitual limits allows us to
surpass our current levels of success. It includes Julie's personal
story of becoming a founder of an unexpectedly and wildly
successful children's labels company that started in one of the
founders' basement and was eventually sold at an eight-figure
price. And it tells the story of what happened next, when having
hit a business high, she found herself at an inflection point,
where she needed to draw on different resources to find a new path
to success. Julie Ellis shares the lessons she has learned as an
entrepreneur and those of several other women entrepreneurs she
interviewed for the book. Their experiences impart to readers the
qualities that allow us to thrive as women in business, to
healthily, sustainably integrate the work of leadership into their
larger lives as mothers, caregivers, partners, dreamers and so much
more...
Julie Ellis and Phyllis Hornung Peacock team up once again to
explore Pythagorean ratios in this humorous sequel to WHAT'S YOUR
ANGLE, PYTHAGORAS?
Pythagoras and his cousins want to win a music contest, but first
they must figure out how to play their instruments in tune,
something that's never been done before.
While trying to fix the problem, Pythagoras makes an important
discovery--notes that sound pleasant together have a certain
mathematical relationship. When Pythagoras applies this ratio to
his cousins' pipes and lyres, the result is music to the ears.
In ancient Greece, young Pythagoras discovers a special number pattern (the Pythagorean theorem) and uses it to solve problems involving right triangles.
Orphaned whilst still in her teens, and forced to give up her
illegitimate baby for adoption, April Winston must make her own way
in life. She forges a career as a successful New York lawyer, and
enjoys the wealth and respect that come with it. But there is
something missing. She yearns to know what happened to her
long-lost baby daughter, and envies her married friends Bob and
Nicole their happy family home. When Bob offers April partnership
in his small-town legal practice, she seizes the opportunity of a
quieter, more fulfilling pace of life. Within days of April's
arrival, however, the little town of magnolia is shaken to its core
by the sudden death of a baby girl. Bob and April are soon drawn
into what will fast become a complex, disturbing and - for April
especially - emotional murder inquiry.
|
|