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This book showcases a selection of current work and debates on
weight and body management practices that are being produced from
the vibrant arena of critical and postmodern approaches in the
social sciences. Weight issues have become central to Western
understandings of health and identity, but analyses of weight and
body management have often failed to contextualise weight related
issues. This timely book addresses this gap by examining three key
areas, namely, representation, identities, and practice, to explore
and interrogate how body and weight management, subjectivities,
experiences, and practices are constituted within and by the
normative discourses of contemporary western culture.
ALOIS ANGLEITNER and JERRY S. WIGGINS The personality questionnaire
has been with us for more than 60 years. It has been, and still is,
the most popular method of personality assessment and it no doubt
will continue to be so. The method has been sharply criticized
since its inception (e. g. , Allport, 1921; Watson, 1933; Ellis,
1946; Janke, 1973), and this criticism is also likely to continue.
The long-standing indifference of test con structors to criticisms
of their craft is brought home by noting the similarities between
objections raised many years ago and those that are offered today
(Gynther & Green, 1982). Within this context, one might well
ask why a book on personality questionnaires should appear at this
time. Despite the centrality of the personality questionnaire to
personality as sessment, there are, to our knowledge, no recent
books on the general topic of personality questionnaires. There are
of course books on specific instru ments (e. g. , Dahlstrom, Welsh
& Dahlstrom, 1972, 1975), books on interpre tation of specific
instruments (e. g. , Comrey, 1980), and books on specific is sues
such as response styles (e. g. , Block, 1965). Although not
specifically focused on personality questionnaires, Bass and Berg's
(1959) Objective Ap proaches to Personality Assessment dealt with a
number of issues that are cen tral to questionnaires.
DYNAMICS REPORTED reports on recent developments in dynamical
systems. Dynamical systems of course originated from ordinary
differential equations. Today, dynamical systems cover a much
larger area, including dynamical processes described by functional
and integral equations, by partial and stochastic differential
equations, etc. Dynamical systems have involved remarkably in
recent years. A wealth of new phenomena, new ideas and new
techniques are proving to be of considerable interest to scientists
in rather different fields. It is not surprising that thousands of
publications on the theory itself and on its various applications
are appearing DYNAMICS REPORTED presents carefully written articles
on major subjects in dynam ical systems and their applications,
addressed not only to specialists but also to a broader range of
readers including graduate students. Topics are advanced, while
detailed expo sition of ideas, restriction to typical results -
rather than the most general ones - and, last but not least, lucid
proofs help to gain the utmost degree of clarity. It is hoped, that
DYNAMICS REPORTED will be useful for those entering the field and
will stimulate an exchange of ideas among those working in
dynamical systems Summer 1991 Christopher K. R. T Jones Drs
Kirchgraber Hans-Otto Walther Managing Editors Table of Contents
Hyperbolicity and Exponential Dichotomy for Dynamical Systems Neil
Fenichel 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I 2.
The Main Lemma . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 3. The
Linearization Theorem of Hartman and Grobman 5 4. Hyperbolic
Invariant Sets: EURO-orbits and Stable Manifolds 6 5.
Using work produced from the critical and postmodern arena in
social sciences, this book examines three key areas -
representation, identities and practice - to explore and
interrogate how body and weight management, subjectivities,
experiences and practices are constituted within and by the
normative discourses of contemporary western culture.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
From distinguished scholar and teacher Jerry S. Wiggins, this
authoritative text offers a uniquely integrative introduction to
adult personality assessment. Part 1 identifies five major
assessment paradigms -- psychodynamic, interpersonal,
personological, multivariate, and empirical. Examined are the
history of each paradigm, key figures in its development, and the
current status of favored instruments and approaches. In Part 2,
leading representatives of each paradigm are invited to interpret
extensive test and interview data collected from a single subject.
The resulting collaborative case study facilitates comparison of
techniques, theories, and interpretations; illuminates the unique
contributions of each paradigm; and suggests areas of common ground
and potential integration. Special features include numerous
clearly presented timelines and charts.
Since the 1980s, personality psychologists from a range of
perspectives have found the five-factor model to be an effective
tool for identifying and structuring personality attributes.
Measuring individual differences in terms of degrees of
extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, emotional
stability, and openness to experience, the model provides a common
language for the field of personality psychology while, at the same
time, it supports widely divergent approaches. How has the model
evolved over time, and how has it been challenged? Are these five
dimensions adequate to describe the entire range of personality
traits? This timely and inclusive volume addresses these and other
questions as it explores the five-factor model's theoretical
underpinnings, initiating a fruitful dialogue among some of the
leading figures in contemporary personality research.
From distinguished scholar and teacher Jerry S. Wiggins, this book
is a uniquely integrative introduction to adult personality
assessment that will engage graduate and undergraduate students
alike. Part I thoroughly reviews five major assessment
paradigms--psychodynamic, interpersonal, personological,
multivariate, and empirical. In Part II, leading representatives of
each paradigm are invited to interpret extensive test and interview
data collected from a single subject. The resulting "collaborative
case study" facilitates comparison of techniques, theories, and
interpretations; illuminates the unique contributions of each
paradigm; and suggests areas of common ground and potential
integration.
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