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This book presents an authoritative and illuminating insight into
the development and most important characteristics of Japanese
society and culture. Approaching the subject from a number of
different points of view.
Originally published in 1963.
Despite cultural progress in reducing overt acts of racism, stark
racial disparities continue to define American life. This book is
for anyone who wonders why race still matters and is interested in
what emerging social science can contribute to the discussion. The
book explores how scientific evidence on the human mind might help
to explain why racial equality is so elusive. This new evidence
reveals how human mental machinery can be skewed by lurking
stereotypes, often bending to accommodate hidden biases reinforced
by years of social learning. Through the lens of these powerful and
pervasive implicit racial attitudes and stereotypes, Implicit
Racial Bias across the Law examines both the continued
subordination of historically disadvantaged groups and the legal
system's complicity in the subordination.
This book presents an authoritative and illuminating insight into
the development and most important characteristics of Japanese
society and culture. Approaching the subject from a number of
different points of view. Originally published in 1963.
The understanding and use of conscience in Roman Catholicism has
undergone evaluation within the broader efforts of the renewal of
moral theology called for by Vatican II. A review of the literature
reveals that among contemporary Catholic moral theologians there
are differences in the way conscience is understood and employed.
These differences are reflected in the distinct perspectives of
^D< 'revisionist' and 'non-revisionist' or 'traditional' Roman
Catholic moral theologians. Because conscience is a central issue
in Roman Catholic moral theology and pastoral practice, and since
'freedom of conscience' and the 'rights of conscience' are often
invoked in response to both theological issues and pastoral
concerns, an analysis and evaluation of contemporary theological
understandings of conscience is called for. This book studies the
nature and function of conscience in contemporary Roman Catholic
moral theology. It does so by examining, comparing and evaluating
the ways in which conscience is understood by two representative
contemporary moral theologians: Germain Grisez who represents the
non-revisionist or more traditional school Roman Catholic moral
theology and Bernard Hring who represents the revisionist school.
Japanese women are frequently perceived by foreigners as
stereotypes. Pictured as compliant, long-suffering, and charming in
a childlike way, they are said to be child-centered and restricted
in their interests and actions to the domestic realm. The appear as
victim, pawn, or tragic heroine: Madame Chrysanthemum, Madame
Butterfly, and even the impossible Mariko of "Shogun,"
"The Women of Suye Mura" provides a rich body of information by
means of which such stereotypes may be reevaluated and challenged.
Based on Ella Wiswell's extensive field notes from the
mid-1930s2;when she and her late husband John Embree undertook a
joint research project in rural Japan2;this volume forms a
companion to Embree's now-standard "Suye Mura: A Japanese Village,"
Its focus on the women of the village affords a unique look at
their daily lives and a detailed portrait of their world-views and
social understandings at a time when the orthodoxies of the
contemporary state were not yet completely accepted. Through Ella
Wiswell's journal, sensitively edited by Robert Smith, we may
understand some of their hopes and fears, see what amuses and
angers them, and hear their comments on everything from adultery
and illness to religion, magic and the origins of the imperial
house.
The body of data, secured by direct observation, is unparalleled in
the literature. No other account of the lives of Japanese rural
women of this era remains, and in no contemporary community can
their like be found. "The Women of Suye Mura" will thus serve as an
important resource for anyone interested in the past2;and
present2;of the Japanese woman.
In the late nineteenth century, a strange and unique experience
happened to a young French farmer. Witnessed by both the farmer's
wife and a local French physician, the strange occurrence remained
a mystery throughout both their lives. Nearly a hundred years
later, a newly graduated doctor of psychology discovered the
physician's documentation of the bizarre event in some old papers
that had been preserved over the years. Unbeknownst to the
psychologist, the event was about to repeat itself in the life of a
similarly young American.
Christmastime is here and cat detectives Yoshi and Gatsby are back
in this holiday whodunnit Someone not filled with the holiday
spirit is trying to kill an obnoxious dog and the Petectives are on
the case. While conducting their latest investigation, Gatsby's
also planning a Christmas Eve blowout for the neighborhood animals.
Yoshi is dead set against the party but he may be able to use the
festivities to unmask a would be killer and teach Gatsby what
Christmas is all about. Throw in a canine love triangle and a cute
orphan kitten and you've got the recipe for one riveting Yuletide
affair. The Petectives are throwing a Christmas party and you don't
want to miss it
It's the 4th of July and the Petectives are feeling the heat In the
midst of a sweltering heat wave, feline detectives Yoshi and Gatsby
get word that an old enemy is back and running a protection racket
in their neighborhood. When an attack lands Gatsby's girlfriend in
the veterinary hospital, he gets hot under the collar but it may
take Yoshi's cool logic to shut down a gang of animal criminals and
clear a dog from a horrible accusation. The Petectives are back and
there's going to be fireworks
In 1899 two young boys, James Peterson and Eddie Carter, are
involved in an incident when they accidentally set Eddie's house on
fire. Hesitant to take responsibility, the boys shift the blame to
an unsuspecting black man, Jesse, who has had an argument with
Eddie's father. Inflamed by the boys' account of the fire, Eddie's
father enlists four brothers to help him run down the black man and
lynch him. Aided by his friends, Jesse takes refuge in a nearby
swamp until the truth is found out. The brothers follow Jessie into
the swamp. Hidden and unhidden danger awaits everyone who wanders
into the swamp. The chase rushes to a deadly conclusion as Jesse
tries to elude Carter and the unsavory characters he's hired to
catch him.
It's almost Halloween and cat detectives Yoshi and Gatsby are up to
their collars in mystery in this humorous whodunnit for pet lovers.
When Gatsby and Yoshi decide to help a pretty young cat find her
missing brother, what starts as a routine missing pet investigation
soon pits them against both a gang of vicious criminal pit bulls as
well as the neighborhood dog police, who are looking into rumors of
dogfights. While Gatsby's up to his whiskers in danger and romance,
Yoshi's putting together the pieces of a puzzle that could rock
their community. Can the boys find a missing cat and shut down a
dogfighting operation while staying two steps ahead of the local
dog police? It's all in a night's work for the Petectives
This book presents an authoritative and illuminating insight into
the development and most important characteristics of Japanese
society and culture. Approaching the subject from a number of
different points of view.
Originally published in 1963.
As the world's only major industrial society yet to emerge from
outside the Western tradition, Japan has evolved into an industrial
state very different from those of the West. Robert Smith argues
that this difference is found not so much in organisational and
institutional forms as in the Japanese view of the relationship of
individuals to one another and to society as a whole. He traces the
origin of this difference to the historical traditions of Japan,
which rest on cultural premises quite unlike those of the Western
world. His compelling and convincing analysis of contemporary
Japanese society has far-reaching implications for our
understanding of the nature of the modern industrial world.
Despite cultural progress in reducing overt acts of racism, stark
racial disparities continue to define American life. This book is
for anyone who wonders why race still matters and is interested in
what emerging social science can contribute to the discussion. The
book explores how scientific evidence on the human mind might help
to explain why racial equality is so elusive. This new evidence
reveals how human mental machinery can be skewed by lurking
stereotypes, often bending to accommodate hidden biases reinforced
by years of social learning. Through the lens of these powerful and
pervasive implicit racial attitudes and stereotypes, Implicit
Racial Bias across the Law examines both the continued
subordination of historically disadvantaged groups and the legal
system's complicity in the subordination.
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