|
Showing 1 - 15 of
15 matches in All Departments
This volume examines this rapidly growing and changing field by
applying a unified framework that integrates both interpersonal and
mass communication investigations into theoretical and applied
issues. br br Using a systems perspective as the organizational
framework, relevant issues in the communication of health care,
ranging from micro to macro levels, are discussed. The contributors
recognize communication as a major factor affecting health today
and therefore go beyond examinations of health communication as
simply a dissemination of information regarding diseases,
diagnoses, and treatments to show it as a much larger and more
complex field with applications to all levels and forms of
communication. br br Communication and Health has as its three main
objecties: br br * providing a comprehensive, detailed, and up
to-date picture of health communication br br * applying an
integrated, logical structure to the field br br * making a clear,
strong statement regarding the state of healthcommunication and
examining its future prospects br br The contributors address such
issues as provider-patient communication, health care teams, health
care organizations, public health campaigns, and health education,
and then discuss the factors that affect the processing of health
information. Also included are examinations of changes in
communication use within interpersonal, small group, and
organizational health care contexts as well as the use of mass
media and other sources for public health campaigns and for raising
public awareness of health issues on a day-to-day basis. br br i
Communication and Health /i fills a void in current literature on
this field by serving as both a reference forprofessionals and
researchers and as a textbook for advanced undergraduate and
graduate level students in a multitude of courses. br
This volume examines this rapidly growing and changing field by
applying a unified framework that integrates both interpersonal and
mass communication investigations into theoretical and applied
issues.
Using a systems perspective as the organizational framework,
relevant issues in the communication of health care, ranging from
micro to macro levels, are discussed. The contributors recognize
communication as a major factor affecting health today and
therefore go beyond examinations of health communication as simply
a dissemination of information regarding diseases, diagnoses, and
treatments to show it as a much larger and more complex field with
applications to all levels and forms of communication.
Communication and Health has as its three main objecties:
* providing a comprehensive, detailed, and up to-date picture of
health communication
* applying an integrated, logical structure to the field
* making a clear, strong statementregarding the state of health
communication and examining its future prospects
The contributors address such issues as provider-patient
communication, health care teams, health care organizations, public
health campaigns, and health education, and then discuss the
factors that affect the processing of health information. Also
included are examinations of changes in communication use within
interpersonal, small group, and organizational health care contexts
as well as the use of mass media and other sources for public
health campaigns and for raising public awareness of health issues
on a day-to-day basis.
"Communication and Health" fills a void in current literature on
this field by serving as both a reference forprofessionals and
researchers and as a textbook for advanced undergraduate and
graduate level students in a multitude of courses.
The text of this Norton Critical Edition is that of the first book
edition, published in 1919, and includes Harald Toksvig s original
map of the fictional Winesburg. Ample annotation is provided
throughout. "Backgrounds" includes five of Anderson s letters,
which illustrate his ideas about the stories; memoirs in which he
wrestles with the revision process; and eight reviews of Winesburg,
Ohio by Anderson s contemporaries, among them H. L. Mencken and
William Faulkner. "Criticism" collects six of the most illuminating
assessments of the book published in the last three decades. A
variety of perspectives is provided by Walter B. Rideout, Sally
Adair Rigsbee, John Updike, Joseph Dewey, Kim Townsend, and David
Stouck. A Chronology and Selected Bibliography are included."
In 1919 a middle-aged Chicago advertising writer from Ohio, a
failure as a businessman, husband, and father, published a small
yellow book of short stories intended to "reform" American
literature. Against all expectations, Winesburg, Ohio: A Group of
Tales of Ohio Small Town Life achieved what its author intended:
after 1919 and after Winesburg, Ohio, American literature would be
written and read freshly and differently. Winesburg, Ohio has never
been out of print, but never has Anderson's book been published in
the form and with the editorial care that the work has needed and
deserved. The present text, authorized by the Sherwood Anderson
Literary Estate Trust, is an expert text. The editor has relied on
years of experience in editing Sherwood Anderson and has consulted
all Anderson manuscripts, typescripts, letters, and diaries and all
editions of the book to present the masterpiece in its intended
state. New to this expert edition of Winesburg, Ohio are historical
and cultural annotations, documentation of changes in the various
editions, identification of the Ohio originals for Anderson's
characters, and maps bearing the streets and buildings of the real
town of Clyde, Ohio, which is the basis of Anderson's fictional
account. Included as well are unique photographs of Anderson and
Clyde, Ohio, illustrations that deepen knowledge and feeling for
the author's actual hometown and time, revealing Winesburg, Ohio to
be an intensely local narrative-very much an "Ohio" book-and yet a
book that has found and held worldwide attention.
This book, which encompasses the years from 1927 through 1931, is
the first comprehensive sampler of Anderson's writings in the two
weekly newspapers of which he was owner, publisher, reporter, copy
writer, and printer. These articles from the files of the "Marion
Democrat" and the "Smyth County News" reflect Anderson's interests
in the local countryside that subsequently figured in his creative
works.
Originally published in 1967.
A UNC Press Enduring Edition -- UNC Press Enduring Editions use the
latest in digital technology to make available again books from our
distinguished backlist that were previously out of print. These
editions are published unaltered from the original, and are
presented in affordable paperback formats, bringing readers both
historical and cultural value.
This memoir revisits a Bible-based boyhood in Hannibal Missouri, or
"America's Hometown," as the tourist brochures proclaim.
Hale-cheeked meanderings along the Mississippi River give way to
long sleepless nights when the author falls for a girl who was
voted the town's official "Becky Thatcher" representative. Her
dimples and sunny disposition hide a dark past: she had been
orphaned at a young age in Germany when her dad was responsible for
the death of her mother, and her name was changed by her adoptive
parents in America. The author's father is an itinerant preacher
and the young couple quickly find themselves in violation of the
most cherished rules of family, church, and state.
In 1927, tired of the literary life of New York City, New
Orleans, and Chicago, a famous but aging American writer named
Sherwood Anderson (1876-1941) -- author of Winesburg, Ohio(1919)
and other short stories in which he virtually invented the modern
American short-story -- moved to rural Southwest Virginia to write
for and edit two small-town weekly newspaper that he owned, the
Marion Democrat. and the Smyth County News. Living again among the
small-town figures with whom he was usually most content, William
Faulkner, Thomas Wolf, and indeed an entire generation of the
greatest American writers -- worked for several years at making his
newspaper nationally famous while struggling to come to terms with
a life-threatening psychological depression and a failing third
marriage.
Both of Anderson's midlife problems were complicated when he met
Eleanor Copenhaver, lovely young daughter in one of the prominent
first families of Marion and a career social worker for the YWCA.
Trying to keep their ardent affair secret in the small town,
Anderson avidly courted the socially prominent and much younger
Miss Copenhaver while at the same time trying to free himself from
his embittered third wife and overcome the disadvantages of his age
and his lover's family's distrust of him.
Having by the end of 1931 continued for three years his
surreptitious and consuming affair with Miss Copenhaver, Anderson
determined on the first day of 1932 that the new year should be the
year of decisions for him to gain his love in marriage or perhaps
to end his life, and he began the new year with a creative venture
unique in literature. Starting on January1, Anderson secretly wrote
and hid away for Eleanor Copenhaver to find after his eventual
death one letter each day, letters that she should someday
discover, whether they had ever become married or not, and thereby
relive in her memory their days of intense lovemaking a mutual
despair about their then-unlikely marriage.
Found by Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson only at Sherwood Anderson's
death in 1941 and then preserved intact by this grieving widow who
had married Anderson in 1933, the carefully hidden letters of 1932
recording their intense and seemingly doomed love affair have
remained secret until now. Chosen by Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson
before her death in 1985 to publish her husband's secret love
letters, Anderson scholar Ray Lewis White has prepared a
fascinating edition of these unique letters for the enjoyment of
students and scholars of literature as well as for all other
readers who savor compelling and inspiring stories of loss and
love.
|
|