4,665 research outputs found

    Author interview: Q&A with Rachel O’Neill on Seduction: men, masculinity and mediated intimacy

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    In this author interview, we speak to Rachel O’Neill about her recent book, Seduction: Men, Masculinity and Mediated Intimacy, which offers an ethnographic study of the ‘seduction industry’. In the interview, she discusses the seduction industry as part of a continuum of mediated intimacy, the ways in which neoliberal rationalities are shaping masculine subjectivity today, how the book relates to contemporary discussions surrounding consent and women’s sexual agency and the particular challenges of undertaking this fieldwork. If you are interested in this interview, you can read a review of Seduction on LSE RB here. Q&A with Rachel O’Neill, author of Seduction: Men, Masculinity and Mediated Intimacy (Polity, 2018

    Episode 3: Rachel Wightman, CSP Staff and Author

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    In this episode, CSP\u27s Associate Director of Instruction and Outreach, Rachel Wightman, shares about her new book, Faith and Fake News: A Guide to Consuming Information Wisely, including how she became interested in the topic, what led to the creation of this book, and why this topic is so important today

    Rachel Swarns Book Event: The 272

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    A conversation with Rachel Swarns, author of The GU272: The Families Who Were Enslaved And Sold To Build The American Catholic Church (Penguin Random House 2023). The conversation was moderated by Georgetown Professor Adam Rothman and hosted by Georgetown's Center for the Study of Slavery and Its Legacies

    Theodore Clement Steele: A Lecture by Rachel Perry

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    Join author and curator Rachel Perry for a lecture on the life and artwork of Theodore Clement (TC) Steele. Perhaps the most well-known artist of the “Hoosier Group,” Steele created impressionist portraits and landscape paintings from his studio in Nashville, Indiana.https://scholarship.depauw.edu/peeler_event/1084/thumbnail.jp

    Harm reduction behaviours among a sample of people in Australia who regularly use ecstasy and/or other illicit stimulants, 2022.

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    The Ecstasy and Related Drugs Reporting System (EDRS) is a national drug monitoring system intended to identify emerging trends of local and national concern in illicit drug markets, and form part of Drug Trends. The aim of this bulletin is to describe engagement in various harm reduction behaviours on their last occasion of ecstasy and/or related drug use (e.g., LSD, ketamine, cocaine, methamphetamine) by a sample of people in Australia who regularly consume ecstasy and/or other illicit stimulants recruited from all Australian capital cities from April-July 2022
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