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This book examines the effects of a study abroad experience on
students' culture and identity and the impact of these effects on
their read-justment to their home culture. It explores issues of
culture and identity from the perspective of French students
studying in Australia. Issues of perceived cultural proximity
between France and Australia, a relative lack of prior knowledge of
the host country before the period of study and the impact of
distance all influence aspects of these students' experiences.
Employing long-term and cross-sectional studies focusing on culture
shock, reverse culture shock and cultural identity issues, the
author investigates the cyclical journey of French academic
sojourners and examines the impact of the acculturation and
repatriation processes and the language experiences on their
perceptions of cultural identity. Once the students had traversed
the difficult stages of culture shock and reached the stage of full
recovery (adjustment), they no longer wished to go home. What
impact has this process had on the returnees who faced the
insularity of their home society once they returned home? Is the
French community beginning to acknowledge the start of a
brain-drain of the educated French overseas? What are the
implications for borderless higher education? What value should be
placed on pre-departure preparation from participating institutions
and the individuals themselves, both on a linguistic and a
psychological level? This book poses questions relating to these
issues.
The world is peopled by victims; everyone has a story. However,
victimhood is just the beginning of the story. This book is about
the endings of at least some of those stories, the stories of
victims who strive to overcome and even triumph in the end. This
book is a collection of research perspectives and personal stories
exploring the various pathways for overcoming victimhood. It is
hoped that they might offer an inspiration for others and encourage
others to stay on the path to find a positive ending. Victim
Victorious is an examination of the ways in which victims come to
rise above the challenges that they face. Victims may be innocent
bystanders, and in no way responsible for their victimhood.
Nonetheless, they can -- and indeed we argue need to -- take
responsibility for finding a personal solution. To assist in this
task, this book chronicles the pathway of prejudice and how the
pain and the damage experienced by individual victims may be
overcome by effort, by and on their own behalf. The first half of
the book features outsider views of victimhood. A range of
professionals, philosophers, psychologists, criminologists and
critical theorists offer their thoughts on how people might
overcome victimhood. The second half of the book features insider
views of victimhood; in this section, the victims speak for
themselves about their experience and how they have endeavoured to
break through their victimhood. This book is less about identifying
and proscribing the behaviours of perpetrators and more about the
efforts that victims can undertake to heal themselves as they
journey towards resilience and victory.
The world is peopled by victims; everyone has a story. However,
victimhood is just the beginning of the story. This book is about
the endings of at least some of those stories, the stories of
victims who strive to overcome and even triumph in the end. This
book is a collection of research perspectives and personal stories
exploring the various pathways for overcoming victimhood. It is
hoped that they might offer an inspiration for others and encourage
others to stay on the path to find a positive ending. Victim
Victorious is an examination of the ways in which victims come to
rise above the challenges that they face. Victims may be innocent
bystanders, and in no way responsible for their victimhood.
Nonetheless, they can -- and indeed we argue need to -- take
responsibility for finding a personal solution. To assist in this
task, this book chronicles the pathway of prejudice and how the
pain and the damage experienced by individual victims may be
overcome by effort, by and on their own behalf. The first half of
the book features outsider views of victimhood. A range of
professionals, philosophers, psychologists, criminologists and
critical theorists offer their thoughts on how people might
overcome victimhood. The second half of the book features insider
views of victimhood; in this section, the victims speak for
themselves about their experience and how they have endeavoured to
break through their victimhood. This book is less about identifying
and proscribing the behaviours of perpetrators and more about the
efforts that victims can undertake to heal themselves as they
journey towards resilience and victory.
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