This essay disucsses Ovid's Philomela in the context of the #MeToo Movement. It engages the problems of power and the use of masculine violence to silence female voices, and the ways these problems transcend time and culture. It then reflects on the potential for teaching Ovid alongside the #MeToo discourse.
Objective: This article describes a bibliometric analysis of articles appearing in the journal Research on Social Work Practice (RSWP). Method: Descriptive and predictive analyses for the sample of 322 articles are presented. Results: The typical RSWP article was 15 pages long, had two authors and 28 references, and was cited for the first time 2 years after publication. The typical article was cited in two different years and for a total of three times during the publication year and six subsequent years. The overall sample of articles received a total of 1,139 citations during the year of publication and subsequent 6 years. Additional subsample analyses are presented. Conclusion: Articles published during RSWP's first decade had an impact.
AbstractExperiences of family conflict are common in young people's accounts of homelessness, yet in‐depth explorations and conceptualisations of these experiences remain sparse. Drawing on focus group discussions with 29 participants, this article explores the accounts of young people and carers and parents about the dynamics, interactions and characteristics of family conflict. Findings highlight the primacy of verbal insults, criticisms or threats, as well as acts of aggression and violence in young people's and parent's understandings of family conflict. Feelings of mistrust, instability and a lack of safety also pervade family conflict and are considered its most impactful elements. We contend that these impacts are best understood via the concept of ontological (in)security, whereby young people's sense of self, belonging and stability are undermined by family conflict. This provides important insights for developing practice in this space, where working to remove long‐term patterns of family conflict, restoring young people's sense of self and belonging within their family, and supporting the stability and trust within a family may prove beneficial.
Abstract During 2020 a menacing sense of doom and anxiety proliferated by the Trump administration's shock-and-awe tactics compounded the brutally uneven distribution of exposure, social atomization, precarity, abandonment, and premature death under the COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic has had especially lethal consequences for those who are impoverished, racially abjected, and deemed violable or disposable within economies of dispossession. For Indigenous peoples under US occupation, the mainstream news coverage of the pandemic's death toll on the Navajo Nation, on Standing Rock, and on other Indigenous nations came and went with little sustained inquiry into the conditions of colonization, critical for understanding the current moment. The obstinate negligence of the CARES Act toward peoples and communities most impacted by the pandemic is only one example of this intensified necropolitics. We focus here on conceptions and mobilizations of care and uncaring, and the catastrophe of the settler-capitalist state at this time. With all the talk about the need for self-care and community care in this period of concentrated epic crises, we ask: How does the discourse of care operate within an imperial social formation? Is an otherwise possible? What are our obligations in kinship and reciprocity? And how do we attend to these obligations in times of imposed distance?
The end of mechanism : the machine model of nature, technologies of information, and the ecological turn / Philip Rose -- On the possibility of a planetary entitlement / Allen Habib -- Can autopoiesis ground a response to the selectionist critique of ecocentrism? / Antoine C. Dussault -- Sentience, life, richness / Gregory M. Mikkelson -- Diverse environments, diverse people / Matthew J. Barker -- The environmental philosophy of Grey Owl / Frank Jankunis -- Going outside / Nathan Kowalsky -- Ecological nationalism : Canadian politics in the Anthropocene / Byron Williston -- Virtue in the Anthropocene / Kent A. Peacock -- Wildlife conservation in the Anthropocene : the challenge of hybridization / Jennifer Welchman -- Water rights and moral limits to water markets / C. Tyler DesRoches -- Geofunctions and pluralism in environmental management / Eric Desjardins, Jamie Shaw, Gillian Barker, and Justin Bzovy -- Being objective : how Mr Nowhere threatens the success of co-management / Jennifer Jill Fellows.
Cover -- Title Page -- Colophon -- Table of Contents -- Per Kristian Madsen -- Preface -- Mark L. Lawall & -- John Lund -- Introduction -- Tønnes Bekker-Nielsen -- Transport in Ancient Cyprus -- Elizabeth S. Greene, Justin Leidwanger & -- Harun Özdaş -- Expanding Contacts and Collapsing Distances in Early Cypro-Archaic Trade: Three Case Studies of Shipwrecks off the Turkish Coast -- Levent Zoroğlu -- Cypriot Basket-handle Amphorae from Kelenderis and its Vicinity -- Kristian Göransson -- Cypriot Basket-handle Amphorae in Hellenistic Cyrenaica -- Mark L. Lawall -- Two Amphorae from the Swedish Cyprus Expedition in the National Museum of Denmark: Late Archaic through Late Classical Cypriot Trade -- Gonca Cankardeş - Şenol & -- Ahmet Kaan Şenol -- Preliminary Remarks on Cypriot Amphorae and Stamps from Alexandria -- Gérald Finkielsztejn -- Cypriot Amphora Stamps of the Hellenistic Period Found in Israel -- Craig D. Barker -- Rhodian Amphorae from Cyprus: A Summary of the Evidence and the Issues -- Agata Dobosz -- Cyprus and Rhodes: Trade Links During the Hellenistic Period in the Light of Transport Amphora Finds -- Anthi Kaldeli -- Early Roman Amphorae from Cyprus as Evidence of Trade and Exchange in the Mediterranean -- Henryk Meyza & -- Dobiesława Bagińska -- Roman Amphorae from the Polish Excavations at Nea Paphos, Maloutena: An Overview -- David F. Williams & -- John Lund -- Petrological Analyses of "Pinched-handle" Amphorae from the Akamas Peninsula, Western Cyprus -- Tamás Bezeczky -- Cypriot Amphorae in Ephesus? -- Stella Demesticha -- Amphora Typologies, Distribution, and Trade Patterns: The Case of the Cypriot LR1 Amphorae -- Justin Leidwanger -- Amphorae and Underwater Survey: Making Sense of Late Roman Trade from Scattered Sherds and Shipwrecks -- Marcus Rautman -- Late Roman Amphorae and Trade in the Vasilikos Valley.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
This paper investigates the transportation, labor, quarrying, and time expenses of the 50ft column shafts that possibly were ordered originally for the famous Pantheon in Rome, Italy. The Pantheon currently includes 40ft column shafts though there is evidence showing that it may have been meant for 50ft column shafts as other parts of the monument are set up as so for the insertion of it; for example, as seen when looking at the pediment, there is a second one three meters higher behind it, displaying that the pediment is thought to originally be supported by a larger portico, hence using larger column shafts. A plausible explanation for this is that the 50ft column shafts were the original choice, but were lost in transit while being transported from the quarries in Egypt to Rome. And due to the loss of such expensive labor costing components and likely imperial budget issues, there is an order of 40ft column shafts instead. Assuming that the explanation is true, calculations made using the works by those such as Wilson Jones, Simon Barker, Ben Russel, and Justin Leidwanger are found for comparisons, analyses, and conclusions. Through the evaluations and results, one can interpret the rather great effect the loss had on the entire project and the display of a sense of importance that the Pantheon has during the Hadrian reign and even now.
Foreword / Joseph Krajcik -- STEM literacy : where are we now? / Maureen Cavalcanti and Margaret J. Mohr-Schroeder -- Getting to the bottom of the truth : STEM shortage OR STEM surplus? / Cathrine Maiorca, Micah Stohlmann and Emily Dreissen -- Underrepresentation of women and students of color in STEM / Dionne Cross Francis, Kerrie G. Wilkins-Yel, Kelli M. Paul and Adam V. Maltese -- Teaching and learning integrated STEM : using andragogy to foster an entrepreneurial mindset in the age of synthesis / Louis S. Nadelson and Anne L. Seifert -- National reports on STEM education : what are the implications for K-12? / Sarah Bush -- The role of interdisciplinary project-based learning in integrated STEM education / Alpaslan Sahin -- Inclusive STEM schools : origins, exemplars, and promise / Sharon J. Lynch -- Inclusive STEM school models : a review of characteristics & impact / Justin M. Bathon -- Informal learning in STEM education / Soledad Yao and Margaret J. Mohr-Schroeder -- Bringing out the "T" in STEM education / Bulent Dogan and Susie Gronseth -- Engineering education in K-12 : a look back and forth / Christine Guy Schnittka -- Classroom assessment in the service of integrated STEM education reform / Carol L. Stuessy and Luke C. Lyons -- A shared language : two worlds speaking to one another through making and tinkering activities / Amber Simpson, Jackie Barnes and Adam V. Maltese -- Educational robotics as a tool for youth leadership development and STEM engagement / Kathleen Morgan, Bradley Barker, Gwen Nugent and Neal Grandgenett -- Factors affecting students' STEM choice and persistence : a synthesis of research and findings from the second year of a longitudinal high school STEM tracking study / Adem Ekmekci, Alpaslan Sahin and Hersh Waxman -- Reaching youth with science : a look at some data on when science interest develops and how it might be sustained / Robert H. Tai -- Crossing borders and stretching boundaries : a look at community education partnerships and their impact on K-12 STEM education / Brett Criswell, Theodore Hodgson, Carol Hanley and Kimberly Yates -- What skills do 21st century high school graduates need to have to be successful in college and life? / Kristina Kaufman -- An international view of STEM education / Brigid Freeman, Simon Marginson and Russell Tytler -- Conclusions and next directions / Margaret J. Mohr-Schroeder and Alpaslan Sahin.