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Leaving Iberia: A Mufti, His Fatwa, and the Islamic Obligation to Emigrate
Jocelyn Hendrickson is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies and History & Classics at the University of Alberta. Her research focuses on Islamic legal history in medieval and early modern North Africa and Iberia. She has published articles in Islamic Law and Society, Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies, and MELA Notes: Journal of Middle Eastern Librarianship.During the fall of al-Andalus (known to Christians as the reconquista) some of the first substantial Muslim populations came under permanent non-Muslim rule. For centuries, Muslims had lived alongside Jews and Christians who accepted a subordinate, dhimmī status. Christian conquest inverted this hierarchy and thus presented novel and difficult questions for Muslim jurists. Could Muslims accept minority status under Christian rule, or must they emigrate to Muslim-ruled territory? Scholars interested in Islamic legal responses to Christian conquest have devoted generous attention to the legal opinions (fatwās) of one jurist in particular, Fez’s chief muftī Ahmad al-Wansharīsī (died 1508). In this talk, I explore multiple ways o reading al-Wansharīsī’s infamous fatwās obligating Iberian Muslims to leave their conquered homelands. Did these texts speed the “downfall of Spanish Islam”? Do they represent Islamic law at its medieval worst, strict and inhumane? Or were they a thinly veiled commentary on the lesser-known Reconquest, the expansion of Portugal into Morocco? Are the questions posed to al-Wansharīsī “true” stories? This talk critiques the perceived exceptionalism of the Iberian Muslim predicament, takes a fresh look at Muslim-Christian relations in North Africa, and considersfatwās as narratives of indigenous resistance and political critique.Middle Eastern StudiesHistoryAudio recording contains copyrighted material. Reproduction or use other than fair use requires permission of Jocelyn Hendrickson
Sons of Mississippi: A Story of Race and Legacy
By Paul Hendrickson Knopf (Hardcover, $26.95, ISBN: 0375404619, 3/2003) “Nothing is ever escaped,” is the woeful reminder Hendrickson imparts in this magisterial group biography-cum-social history, a powerful, unsettling, and beautifully told account of Mississippi’s still painful past. Hendrickson, author of the searching Robert McNamara chronicle The Living and the Dead (an NBA finalist), sets out to profile seven Mississippi sheriffs photographed while one of their number postures with a billy club just before the 1962 riots against the integration of the University of Mississippi at Oxford (“Ole Miss”). The picture, shot by freelance photographer Charlie Moore, was published in Life magazine soon after, and it captured Hendrickson’s imagination when he came upon it decades later. Chapter by chapter, Hendrickson reconstructs the everyday existences of the seven sheriffs, concentrating on the time of the photo, but taking his subjects through to their deaths. None are now living, but Hendrickson interviewed former Natchez sheriff John Ed Cothram in the early ’90s, and the Cothram chapters comprise a paradigmatically subtle and eerie portrait of the intelligence and banality of evil, and how it destroys individuals. The number of telling quotes, interviews with friends and family, primary and secondary sources, allusions to art and history, and gut reactions Hendrickson offers are what really make the book. He begins with a wrenching retelling of the Emmett Till lynching—seven years before James Meredith fought for and finally won admission to Ole Miss, a bloody story Hendrickson also recounts (in addition to a fascinating recent interview with Meredith himself). The book’s final third tries to get at the legacy of Mississippi’s particular brand of segregation—the whites and blacks Hendrickson interviews throughout articulate it masterfully—by profiling the children of the men in the photo and of Meredith, with sad and inconclusive results. While Hendrickson can be intrusive in telling readers how to interpret his subjects, he repeatedly comes up with electric interview material, and deftly places these men within the defining events of their times, when “a 100-year-old way of life was cracking beneath them.” —Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. (from Publishers Weekly)https://egrove.olemiss.edu/mwp_books/1309/thumbnail.jp
Jesuit Polymath of Madrid: The Literary Enterprise of Juan Eusebio Nieremberg (1595–1658)
In Jesuit Polymath of Madrid D. Scott Hendrickson offers the first English-language account of the life and work of Juan Eusebio Nieremberg (1595-1658), a leading intellectual in Spain during the turbulent decades of the mid-seventeenth century. Most remembered as a prominent ascetic in the neo-Platonic tradition, Nieremberg emerges here as a writer deeply indebted to the legacy of Ignatius Loyola and his Spiritual Exercises. Hendrickson convincingly shows how Nieremberg drew from his formation in the Jesuit order at the time of its first centenary to engage the cultural and intellectual currents of the Spanish Golden Age. As an author of some seventy-five works, which represent several genres and were translated throughout Europe and abroad, Nieremberg’s literary enterprise demands attention.https://ecommons.luc.edu/facultybooks/1151/thumbnail.jp
SPINK1 protein expression and prostate cancer progression
Abstract not availableRichard Flavin, Andreas Pettersson, Whitney K. Hendrickson, Michelangelo Fiorentino, Stephen Finn, Lauren Kunz, Gregory L. Judson, Rosina Lis, Dyane Bailey, Christopher Fiore, Elizabeth Nuttall, Neil E. Martin, Edward Stack, Kathryn L. Penney, Jennifer R. Rider, Jennifer Sinnott, Christopher Sweeney, Howard D. Sesso, Katja Fall, Edward Giovannucci, Philip Kantoff, Meir Stampfer, Massimo Loda and Lorelei A. Mucc
Data in Support of: Pollen mineralization fuels biogeochemical cycling and microbial community succession in Lake Superior
These data were collected as a part of a microcosm incubation experiment where pollen was spiked to Lake Superior water. Measurements presented in this file include raw results (pollen_leaching_chemical_data_raw.csv). The data included here contain chemical measurements and sample/time identifiers (columns) and individual measurements (rows).This dataset supports the journal article "Pollen mineralization fuels biogeochemical cycling and microbial community succession in Lake Superior" in preparation for submission to the Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences and was collected during the winter of 2024-2025. The research team (Jake Zunker and Kathryn Schreiner) collected chemical variable measurements from a microcosm incubation study in which conifer pollen was spiked into waters collected from Lake Superior water to observe chemical leaching. Data include dissolved and particulate fractions of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus measured in both control (lake water, no pollen) and treatment (pollen spiked into lake water) jars over a time series spanning 0 to 60 days.Zunker, Jake D; Schreiner, Kathryn M; Wood, Andrew W; Larson, Britta L; Chun, Chan Lan; Bailey, Keagan; Minor, Elizabeth C; Hendrickson, Eva; Filstrup, Christopher T. (2025). Data in Support of: Pollen mineralization fuels biogeochemical cycling and microbial community succession in Lake Superior. Retrieved from the Data Repository for the University of Minnesota (DRUM), https://doi.org/10.13020/HRSJ-H838
Oregon's per capita personal income 2021
Title from PDF caption (viewed on October 8, 2019).Converted from HTML.Covers OCLC #1351857004, OCLC #1122616642, OCLC #1122616455, OCLC #968944106, and OCLC #1122616723.This archived document is maintained by the Oregon State Library as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Under The Bridge - vol. 1, issue 1
Acknowledgements ii A Message from the Editorial Team iv A Message from the Faculty Adviser Dr. Mary Lynn Colosimo - Retirement Reflections: Things I Will and Won’t Miss After Almost 30 Years of Teaching at Trinity Christian College 1 Featured Student Submission Hannah Dykstra - From Shostakovich: Allegro non Troppo 3 Non-Fiction Callie Bunker - Sevilla: The Quintessence of Spain 22 Joshua Coldagelli - “My Name is Josh…and I am Single.” Confessions of a Happily Single Small Christian College Student 28 A Former Student, One Who Wishes to Remain Anonymous - Advice to Trinity Students: Lessons Learned from Decades of Interesting Decisions 30 Mike Jones - The Power of Music in a Time of War 32 Ben Tocila - In the Midst of Transylvania 35 Ben Lashar - Breaking News: Freshman’s Discovery Forever Changes Campus 36 ShinHye Hwang - A Rhetorical Analysis of “Art Psychology” and The Arts in Therapy 37 Lexi Zambrano - Crediting the Author and Illustrator 39 DaEun Kang - The Witnesses to the Korean War 41 CESAG - The Three Rs and Responsible Campus Stewardship 42 Dr. Tim Hendrickson - Finding God in Unexpected Places 45 Kate Meyrick - What I Wrote on a Wrought-iron Bench at the Art Institute of Chicago, October 3rd, 2015 46 Kristen Speelman - Finding My Calling 48 Kristen Speelman - Four Senses: My Experience with Blindness Opened My Eyes 49 Anonymous - Feminism and Vocation 50Laura G. Van Blaricom - Gettysburg 53 Mary Huisenga - Salt and Light 54Latifah Williams - Anxious Black Woman 55 Makayla Cole - Are Black Women Undesirable? 57 Kylla Pate - “Please Leave Me Alone.” A Theory on How Introverts can Survive in an Extrovert-Driven Discipline and Society 59 Sabor Latino - The Minority Experience at Trinity 60 Poetry Ben Lashar - Dark Poem 61 William Mulchrone - The Rose 61 Kailah Price - Searching 62 Kailah Price- Flight Patterns 62 Kailah Price - Knots 63 Lane Mejeur - Darkness 63 Kailah Price - Migraine 64 Lane Mejeur - Emotions 64 Kylla Pate - The Twenty-Second 66 Avery Kats - Fear 67 Esther Sullivan - Now I See Dimly 68 Crystal Linzy - Lesser Men 68 Fiction Mike Jones - Why I Left Nightingville 70 Ben Lashar - The Brothers’ Heist 70 Matthew TeBeest - “The Boy in the Snow,” Chapter 1 from Spellbound 74 In Process/Faculty Research Dr. John J. Fry, History - The Faith of Laura Ingalls Wilder 80 Dr. Tim Hendrickson, English - Heresy and Religious Conformity in Rider Haggard’s Adventure Novels 81 Dr. Michael Vander Weele, English - You’re on Sabbatical? Say What? 82https://digitalcommons.calvin.edu/tcc_underthebridge/1004/thumbnail.jp
The Story of the Predestined Pilgrim and His Brother Reprobate. Alexandre de Gusmão. Trans. Christopher C. Lund. Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies 489; Medieval and Renaissance Latin America 2. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2016. xxxvi + 138 pp. $55.
The Story of the Predestined Pilgrim and His Brother Reprobate, published in Portugal in 1682, is an allegorical novel originally written in Portuguese by Father Alexandre de Gusmão (1629–1724) in the Jesuit mission territory of Brazil. Subsequent editions were printed in both Portuguese and Spanish in Europe and the Americas. Christopher C. Lund’s translation is part of the Latin America series in the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies and is the first English-language edition. It is a welcome addition to scholarly work in the fields of colonial Latin American history and Jesuit history
Incorporating Clients\u27 Underlying Religious and Spiritual Beliefs in Therapy May Improve Substance Abuse Treatment Practices, Especially for Persons of Color
ABSTRACT
INCORPORATING CLIENTS\u27 UNDERLYING RELIGIOUS AND SPIRITUAL BELIEFS IN THERAPY MAY IMPROVE SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT PRACTICES, ESPECIALLY FOR PERSONS OF COLOR
Author: Marguerite E. Hendrickson
Dissertation Chair: Ram Cnaan, Ph.D.
Although pharmacological breakthroughs have improved treatment outcomes for
alcohol and opioid dependence through decreased cravings and blocked reward
effects, there are no FDA approved medications for the treatment of cocaine
dependence. In addition, many routinely practiced psychotherapy models for
addiction remain limited in their effects. As composite case studies will reveal,
cravings and urges to use cocaine prevent clients from obtaining and sustaining
abstinence. Multiple case studies will examine how clients use their underlying
religious and spiritual beliefs to cope with cravings and urges. The first paper in
this dissertation investigates how clients’ religious problem-solving styles can both
positively and negatively affect the recovery process when viewed through the lens
of a scientifically validated instrument, Religious Problem-Solving Scale. The
second paper examines how addressing religious/spiritual issues in therapy may
strengthen the therapeutic alliance with African Americans in outpatient treatment
for cocaine dependence. Given the research evidence that African Americans and
Hispanics actively engage their religious/spiritual beliefs during recovery, this multi-
paper dissertation suggests that clinicians adapt evidence-based therapies by
incorporating religious/spiritual content to meet the needs of the growing
population of color in the United States
Paul in Acts
Author: Porter, Stanley E Title: Paul in Acts. Publisher: Tubingen: Hendrickson Pubs, 1999
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