201 research outputs found
emery_online_appendix – Supplemental material for You Can’t See the Real Me: Attachment Avoidance, Self-Verification, and Self-Concept Clarity
Supplemental material, emery_online_appendix for You Can’t See the Real Me: Attachment Avoidance, Self-Verification, and Self-Concept Clarity by Lydia F. Emery, Wendi L. Gardner, Kathleen L. Carswell, and Eli J. Finkel in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin</p
Avoidance_SCC_Supplementals_R3 – Supplemental material for You Can’t See the Real Me: Attachment Avoidance, Self-Verification, and Self-Concept Clarity
Supplemental material, Avoidance_SCC_Supplementals_R3 for You Can’t See the Real Me: Attachment Avoidance, Self-Verification, and Self-Concept Clarity by Lydia F. Emery, Wendi L. Gardner, Kathleen L. Carswell, and Eli J. Finkel in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin</p
sj-docx-1-spp-10.1177_19485506211067040 – Supplemental material for Confusion or Clarity? Examining aPossible Tradeoff Between Self-Expansionand Self-Concept Clarity
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-spp-10.1177_19485506211067040 for Confusion or Clarity? Examining aPossible Tradeoff Between Self-Expansionand Self-Concept Clarity by Lydia F. Emery, Erin K. Hughes and Wendi L. Gardner in Social Psychological and Personality Science</p
sj-docx-1-amp-10.1177_25152459231193044 – Supplemental material for Conducting Research With People in Lower-Socioeconomic-Status Contexts
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-amp-10.1177_25152459231193044 for Conducting Research With People in Lower-Socioeconomic-Status Contexts by Lydia F. Emery, David M. Silverman and Rebecca M. Carey in Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science</p
Contrapunteos de Lydia Cabrera
Even today in the history of Cuban anthropology, little attention is paid to the writer and anthropologist Lydia Cabrera, who has only recently begun to be part of the list of intellectuals in official Cuban culture. However, because of her work and life trajectory, Cabrera can be considered the modern founder of studies on Afro-Cuban religions.
The main purpose of this text is to analyse Lydia Cabrera’s ethnographic work based on the idea that there was a ‘counterpoint’, a dialogue, a metaphorical game, between the liminal identity of the author herself – manifested in a racial, cultural, gender, social and political sense – and her interest and dedication to the contribution of slaves and the population of African origin to the history, culture and, ultimately, the identity of their Cuban homeland.Todavía hoy en la historia de la antropología cubana se presta poca atención a la escritora y antropóloga Lydia Cabrera, quien solo muy recientemente ha empezado a formar parte de la nómina intelectual de la cultura cubana oficial. Sin embargo, en función de su obra y trayectoria vital puede considerarse a Cabrera como la fundadora moderna de los estudios sobre las religiones afrocubanas.
El objeto central de este texto es analizar el trabajo etnográfico de Lydia Cabrera a partir de la idea de que existe un contrapunteo, un diálogo, un juego metafórico, entre la identidad liminar de la propia autora -manifiesta en un sentido racial, cultural, de género, social y político- y su interés y dedicación a la aportación de los esclavos y la población de origen africano a la historia, a la cultura y, en última instancia, a la identidad misma de su patria cubana
Florence Lydia Graham, 2020: Turkisms in South Slavonic Literature: Turkish Loanwords in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Bosnian and Bulgarian Franciscan Sources
Avtor predstavlja delo F. Lydie Graham: Turkisms in South Slavonic Literature: Turkish Loanwords in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Bosnian and Bulgarian Franciscan Sources (2020).
The author presents the work of F. Lydia Graham: Turkisms in South Slavonic Literature: Turkish Loanwords in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Bosnian and Bulgarian Franciscan Sources (2020)
Florence Lydia Graham, 2020: Turkisms in South Slavonic Literature: Turkish Loanwords in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Bosnian and Bulgarian Franciscan Sources: Oxford: OUP. 409 pp.
Avtor predstavlja delo F. Lydie Graham: Turkisms in South Slavonic Literature: Turkish Loanwords in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Bosnian and Bulgarian Franciscan Sources (2020).The author presents the work of F. Lydia Graham: Turkisms in South Slavonic Literature: Turkish Loanwords in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Bosnian and Bulgarian Franciscan Sources (2020)
The Role of Contracts in the Organic Supply Chain: 2004 and 2007
Organic food products are excellent candidates for contract production and marketing because they are produced using a distinct process and are in high demand. This report summarizes survey data on contracting in the organic sector, addressing the extent of contracting, the rationale for using contracts, and contract design for select commodities. The central survey data were collected from certified organic handlers (intermediaries)in the United States who marketed and procured organic products in 2004 and 2007. Contracting is widespread in the organic sector, and, in 2007, firms used contracts most frequently to secure organic products essential to their business and to source products in short supply. Large firms were more likely to use contracts for procurement, and these firms contracted for a larger share of their procurement needs. Nearly all contracts required suppliers to provide evidence of organic certification. Firms using contracts rarely assisted suppliers with obtaining organic certification or the transition to organic. Most contracts include provisions regarding quality, and quality verification was an essential component of these contracts. Prices were determined in a variety of ways and, in some cases, depended on delivered quality.Organic supply chain, contracts, organic marketing, organic procurement, intermediaries, certified organic handlers, contract design, certified organic, Agribusiness, Marketing,
Power and Construal Level in Close Relationships
Previous research has established a robust association between high construal level (i.e., abstract thinking) and high power (Smith & Trope, 2006; Smith et al., 2008), yet this process has never been studied in the context of close relationships. In two studies, we examined the influence of power (defined as non-mutual dependence) and construal level (abstract or concrete thinking) on relationship investments, perception of alternatives, and willingness to sacrifice. In Study l, a cross-sectional design, we found that both low power and high construal level predict greater investments, fewer\ud
alternatives, and more willingness to sacrifice. We attempted to manipulate power and\ud
construal level experimentally in Study 2, but our manipulation was unsuccessful. These\ud
data show preliminary evidence that construal level assumes a markedly different function in close relationships: individuals with a high construal level behaved like those with low power, suggesting the importance of the relational context in altering psychological processes
"A line there, in the centre": Temporality, Narrative, and the Rewriting of Loss in 'To the Lighthouse'
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