3,899 research outputs found
The question of gendered voice in some contemporary Irish novels by Brian Moore and John McGahern
This thesis questions the use of the 'voice' metaphor in contemporary Irish cultural studies in order to examine
the ways in which gendered identities are constructed in some Irish Catholic communities in twentieth-century
Ireland. With reference to novels by Brian Moore and
John McGahern as well as to Judith Butler's theories of performativity and citational practices, it argues that gendered identities are constructed through the repetitive citation of hegemonic cultural discourses. This thesis
focuses on the ways in which gendered identities are produced and maintained through the citation of the official discourses of the Catholic Church and the State as
well as the more mundane discourses related to popular nationalism and the family.
The first two chapters concentrate on novels whose protagonists are trying to construct powerful identities in urban Irish society through the manipulation of gendered discourses. The discussion of Moore's The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne identifies some of the strategies through which conventional Irish women's voices are constructed
and questions the validity of the category of 'authentic' women's voices. In the chapter relating to McGahem's The
Pornographer, the powerful, abstract male voice is exposed as a performative construct which is sustained only through the abjection of those elements which disrupt the narrator's performance of masculinity.
The remaining chapters concentrate on the use of idealised images such as those of the 'woman-as-nation' and the iconised mother in novels by Moore and McGahem. Moore's The
Mangan Inheritance provides the basis for a discussion of whether or not voices attributed to women in texts by Irish men can be read in ways that disrupt the apparent authority of Irish men's voices. This thesis discusses the issues
raised when men participate in the deconstruction
of idealised images of Irish women. The final chapter examines the processes through which conventional identities are discursively constructed and maintained in two novels by John McGahem: The Dark and Amongst Women. This thesis contends that through the strategic
redeployment of those voices attributed to idealised images of Irish women, voices which are conventionally regarded
as silent, patriarchal gendered identities can be destabilised or displaced
Language and theology in St Gregory of Nyssa
This MA thesis focuses on the work of one of the most influential and authoritative theologians of the early Church: St Gregory of Nyssa (†396). My topic of research consists in the relationship between language and theology, as it shaped in Gregory’s polemical works against the radical Arians, in particular against Eunomius of Cyzicus (†395).The first chapter tackles the historical side of the controversy and provides the chronology of the dogmatic disputes on the dogma of Trinity following the Council of Nicaea (325). The second chapters illustrate the conflict being at stake between two theological methodologies: Gregory's grammar of thought is scriptural, whereas Eunomius' theology is much more philosophical and inflexible in its terms. Eunomius claimed that one can know God by his essence in the concept of 'ingenerate'. On the contrary, for Gregory of Nyssa, God 'is above all names'. For him, language and sexuality are realitites of the post-lapsarian world, which made human mind opaque and the exercise of interpretation indispensable. Gregory included also the episode of Babel in the genealogy of our linguistic finitude. The third and the fourth chapters focus on the relationship between language and theological knowledge in St Gregory's third book Contra Eunomium. All words used in human language - including Eunomius' concept of agennetos – have complementary meanings, since no one can describe the essence of an object or of any part of reality. On this basis, Gregory develops his 'theory of relativity' of names, which can never befit God's majesty and glory. In the last chapter, under the heading 'Pragmatics of Language', I investigate the immediate consequences of Gregory's 'theory of relativity'. Speech is treated as a sphere, which resembles the creative power of the hypostatic Word. Therefore, rhetoric becomes the perfect tool for his pastoral concern in doing theology. By choosing rhetoric, Gregory is free to start his theological argument from anywhere, since theology is a discourse about God's redemptive economy. In conclusion, I try to emphasise the actuality of Gregory's theory of names and its importance for the contemporary debates in the Church on thorny issues as Trinitarian theology or gender. I also evaluate Gregory of Nyssa's self-consistency in positive terms
Policing serious public disorder: the search for principles, policies and operational lessons. [In two volumes]
The paper examines the influence of central government on the police response to serious public disorder; the effectiveness or otherwise of the law and the way in which it is used by the police in their response to such disorder, and searches for sone principles which need to be followed if the police are to maintain the general support of the communities in which they are required to act. Some comparisons are made, and differences highlighted, between the police commander in his response to serious public disorder, once it has broken out, and the military commander in battle. But, guided by lessons from history, the paper principally concentrates on the environment in which the operational police commander is required to act in responding to actual or potential serious public disorder, pointing out that he is dependant for his success on firstly, an effective system of command and control; secondly, on an intelligence system which feeds relevant and accurate information on which he can make sound and informed decisions; and thirdly, the physical resources, e.g. personnel and equipment, and the approved tactics which enable him to restore public tranquility once disorder has broken out. But before he can use the physical resources effectively, he must have a sound strategy for dealing with actual or potential disorder
Supplemental Material - Patient Reported Outcomes Using Medical Cannabis for Managing Pain in Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease
Supplemental Material for Patient Reported Outcomes Using Medical Cannabis for Managing Pain in Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease by Priscilla C. Canals, Alexia G. Aguilar, Gregory T. Carter, MD, C. Miyabe Shields, PhD, Andrew Westerkamp, PhD, Meg D’Elia, MS, Joy Aldrich, Robert N. Moore, Allison T. Moore, and Brian J. Piper, PhD in American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine®</p
Supplemental Material - Patient Reported Outcomes Using Medical Cannabis for Managing Pain in Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease
Supplemental Material for Patient Reported Outcomes Using Medical Cannabis for Managing Pain in Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease by Priscilla C. Canals, Alexia G. Aguilar, Gregory T. Carter, MD, C. Miyabe Shields, PhD, Andrew Westerkamp, PhD, Meg D’Elia, MS, Joy Aldrich, Robert N. Moore, Allison T. Moore, and Brian J. Piper, PhD in American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine®</p
Spaces of the Past, Histories of the Present: An Interview with Stuart Elden and Derek Gregory
The ontologies of space and territory, our experience of them and the techniques we use to govern them, the very conception of the socio-spatial formations that we inhabit, are all historically specific: they depend on a genealogy of practices, knowledges, discourses, regulations, performances and representations articulated in a way that is extremely complex yet nevertheless legible over time. In this interview we look at the logic and the patterns that intertwine space and time — both as objects and tools of inquiry — though a cross-disciplinary dialogue. The discussion with Stuart Elden and Derek Gregory covers the place of history in socio-spatial theory and in their own work, old and new ways of thinking about the intersection between history and territory, space and time, the implications of geography and history for thinking about contemporary politics, and the challenges now faced by critical thought and academic work in the current neo-liberal attack on public universities and the welfare stat
Developing and Implementing a Discipleship Curriculum for Young Adult Men at Trinity Baptist Church in Fort Valley, Georgia
ABSTRACT
DEVELOPING AND IMPLEMENTING A DISCIPLESHIP
CURRICULUM FOR YOUNG ADULT MEN AT
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH IN
FORT VALLEY, GEORGIA
Gregory Emille Moore, D.Min.
The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2014
Faculty Supervisor: Dr. T. Vaughn Walker
Chapter 1 details the recruiting and enlistment of young men in the church for the project and the evaluation of their knowledge of discipleship. It details the strategy for developing a curriculum for a men's disciple ministry and discusses the present ministry context at Trinity. A brief history of Trinity's ministry to men is discussed to highlight the need for a men's discipleship ministry at the church.
Chapter 2 presents the biblical support and theological foundation for perpetuating the gospel ministry through discipleship. Commentary and supporting arguments are given from Matthew 28:18-20, Acts 2:41-42, Exodus 18:13-26, and 1 Timothy 2:2-4 that reveal the commonality that God's commandments are established in each generation through a form of discipleship.
Chapter 3 discusses the effectiveness of mentoring (the secular parallel to Christian discipleship) in secular society and what the church can glean from those successes. It highlights how entry level employees improve their skills and confidence as a result of mentoring by veteran staff. It stresses the importance of guiding mentees while they are in an actual work environment.
Chapter 4 describes the fifteen-week project in detail and specifically discusses what was done each week. It contains the methodologies used, such as surveys, pre- and post-test questionnaires, t-tests, the development of specific bible study topics, and an evaluation of the project by the project participants. A conclusion for the 15 weeks of activity is given.
Chapter 5 is an evaluation of the entire project to develop a discipleship curriculum for young men at Trinity Baptist Church. The project's purpose, goals, strengths, and weaknesses are discussed. There are suggestions for improvements for future reference along with theological and personal reflections about the entire project. The chapter concludes with findings and wisdom gained about developing a discipleship curriculum for young men at Trinity
A very good reason to reject the buck-passing account
This paper presents a new objection to the buck-passing account of value. I distinguish the buck-passing account of predicative value from the buck-passing account of attributive value. According to the latter, facts about attributive value reduce to facts about reasons and their weights. But since facts about reasons’ weights are themselves facts about attributive value, this account presupposes what it is supposed to explain. As part of this argument, I also argue against Mark Schroeder's recent account of the weights of reasons, which purports to explain the weights of reasons in terms of further reasons without circularity. I then argue that if we abandon the buck-passing account of attributive value, it would be ad hoc and unjustifiable to continue to endorse the buck-passing account of predicative value. In short, there seems to be little hope for the buck-passing account in either form. The paper ends by sketching a novel alternative theory according to which reasons are analysed in terms of the attributive value of motives. I suggest that a normative reason to φ is something that would be a good motive for φ-ing. At least at first glance, this view has numerous merits and few problem
Book and Author Luncheon
(Left) Mrs. Ellen Bowie Holland author of Gay as a Grig ; Dr. Charles P. Johnson author of J. Howard Williams: prophet of God and Fiend of man with joint author H. C. Brown Jr. and T. B. Maston; and Mrs. Lowell Gregory autograph copies of their books during the annual Book and Author Luncheon. Fort Worth Star-Telegram Morning April 16, 1964.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1960s/5637/thumbnail.jp
Relationship between disease severity and quality of life and assessment of health care utilization and cost for ulcerative colitis in Australia: a cross-sectional, observational study
Abstract not availablePeter R. Gibson, Carolynne Vaizey, Christopher M. Black, Rebecca Nicholls, Adèle R. Weston, Peter Bampton, Miles Sparrow, Ian C. Lawrance, Warwick S. Selby, Jane M. Andrews, Alissa J. Walshm, David J. Hetzel, Finlay A. Macrae, Gregory T. Moore, Martin D. Weltman, Rupert W. Leong, Tao Fa
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