14,561 research outputs found

    There is a job to be done

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    Speaker discusses the relationship between followers and God and that followers must turn their attention towards God, instead of focusing on one's own goals and making Him secondary

    Hopelessly Mortal: The Role of Mortality Salience, Immortality and Trait Self-esteem in Personal Hope

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    Do people lose hope when thinking about death? Based on Terror Management Theory, we predicted that thoughts of death (i.e., mortality salience) would reduce personal hope for people low, but not high, in self-esteem, and that this reduction in hope would be ameliorated by promises of immortality. In Studies 1 and 2, mortality salience reduced personal hope for people low in self-esteem, but not for people high in self-esteem. In Study 3, mortality salience reduced hope for people low in self-esteem when they read an argument that there is no afterlife, but not when they read “evidence” supporting life after death. In Study 4, this effect was replicated with an essay affirming scientific medical advances that promise immortality. Together, these findings uniquely demonstrate that thoughts of mortality interact with trait self-esteem to cause changes in personal hope, and that literal immortality beliefs can aid psychological adjustment when thinking about death. Implications for understanding personal hope, trait self-esteem, afterlife beliefs and terror management are discussed

    Poetry draws upwards in hope

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    Thomas Delahunt, Canterbury Christ Church University – ‘Poetry Draws Upwards in Hope’ A creative discussion or polyculture on the need to use arts and poetry as a vehicle for professional expression. Thomas Delahunt, an award-winning academic, author and virgin playwright, is looking for willing orators to join a conversation on the premise that trauma needs discussion and a position of freedom within vocational roles filled with professional trauma

    In the Excelsiora, a Hope Student News Paper, There is a Report of the Death of the Rev. Albertus C. Van Raalte That Occurred On This Day but Published in Volume VII, Nov. to June, 1877

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    In the Excelsiora, a Hope student news paper, there is a report of the death of the Rev. Albertus C. Van Raalte that occurred on this day but published in volume VII, Nov. to June, 1877. The author of the tribute to Van Raalte was R[ensa] H. Joldersma. The news paper/magazine was not published as such but was hand written. This tribute consists of seven pages.https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/vrp_1870s/1274/thumbnail.jp

    Ishmael Hope presents Courtesans of Founder Hill

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    Ishmael Hope is a storyteller, poet, and writer who explores his Inupiaq and Tlingit heritages. His Inupiaq name is Angaluuk and his Tlingit name is Khaagwaask'. Courtesans of Flounder Hill is his first collection of poetry and is published by Ishmael Reed Publishing Company. According to the late Richard Dauenhauer, Ishmael Hope "reminds us how each of us is central in a multigenerational relationship involving ancestry, self, and descendants; heritage, contemporary culture, and legacy; an unbroken chain of storytellers, daily life, and dreams, always negotiating, in the words of T. S. Eliot, between tradition and the individual talent." Ishmael Hope is also the author of the comic book Strong Man and was the lead writer for the highly acclaimed video game Kisima Ingitchuna: Never Alone

    Hope Mirrlees papers

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    Hope Mirrlees (1887-1978) was an author of novels, poems, and translations. However, she is most remembered for her circle of literary friends, which included T. S. Eliot, Virginia Woolf, and Lady Ottoline Morrell. She published two novels, Lud-in-the-Mist and Counterplot, and a book of poetry, Moods and Tensions: Poems. She began, but never completed, a biography of seventeenth-century British antiquarian Sir Robert Bruce Cotton; part of this was published as A Fly in Amber in 1962. With Jane Harrison, she produced two translations of Russian literature, The Life of the Archpriest Avvakum by Himself and The Book of the Bear. Her papers consist solely of correspondence; significant correspondents include T. S. Eliot, Ottoline Morrell, Virginia Woolf, and Leonard Woolf

    In This Issue of De Grondwet, There Appeared an Article Entitled, The Hollanders and the Reformed Church.

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    In this issue of De Grondwet, there appeared an article entitled The Hollanders and the Reformed Church. The anonymous author is arguing with the author of an article that appeared in De Hope. Dr. Albertus C. Van Raalte is given credit for accomplishing much on behalf of the Dutch immigrants.https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/vrp_1880s/1011/thumbnail.jp

    Where are the children? Que son les enfants devenus: Healing the legacy of the residential schools l'experince des pensionnats autochtones

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    The Legacy of Hope Foundation was established to address the long-term implications of the damage done to Aboriginal children and their families by many of the residential schools. The psychological wounds run deep and have infected new generations. Healing is a gradual process that will demand time and patience. A primary objective of our work is to promote awareness among the Canadian public about residential schools and try to help them to understand the ripple effect those schools have had on Aboriginal life. But equally important, we want to bring about reconciliation between Aboriginal people and non-Aboriginal Canadians.Not peer reviewedbookLegacy of Hop

    A New Art for a New China: Modern Chinese Prints from the Ihrman Collection

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    Kruizenga Art Museum, Hope College Catalog for exhibition: A New Art for a New China: Modern Chinese Prints from the Ihrman Collection . Exhibition dates: September 1-December 16, 2023. Charles Mason, author. Andie Near, photographer, designer.https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/kam_catalogs/1004/thumbnail.jp

    Deep Roots, New Shoots: Modern and Contemporary African Art from the KAM Collection

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    Kruizenga Art Museum, Hope College Catalog for the exhibition: Deep Roots New Shoots: Modern and Contemporary African Art from the KAM Collection. Exhibition dates: January 12 – May 18, 2024. Charles Mason, author. Andie Near, photographer, designer.https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/kam_catalogs/1005/thumbnail.jp
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