1,356,279 research outputs found
Shelley Doerner Wetherell and Mike Wetherell Interview
This interview is an oral history conducted by Linfield College archivist Rachael Cristine Woody with Shelley Doerner Wetherell and Mike Wetherell, Doerner family descendants and vineyard owners. The interview took place at the home of the Wetherells on June 7, 2013 and covers early wine industry history in Douglas County, as well as Doerner family history.
In the interview, the Wetherells explain the development of winemaking in their family as well as their thoughts on the evolution of the wine industry from early Oregon pioneer days to the present.
For a shareable version of this video, please see the interview on YouTube
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Negotiating hegemonic masculinity: imaginary positions and psycho-discursive practices
In this paper we provide a critical analysis of the concept of hegemonic masculinity. We argue that although this concept embodies important theoretical insights, it is insufficiently developed as it stands to enable us to understand how men position themselves as gendered beings. In particular it offers a vague and imprecise account of the social psychological reproduction of male identities. We outline an alternative critical discursive psychology of masculinity. Drawing on data from interviews with a sample of men from a range of ages and from diverse occupational backgrounds, we delineate three distinctive, yet related, procedures or psycho-discursive practices, through which men construct themselves as masculine. The political implications of these discursive practices, as well as the broader implications of treating the psychological process of identification as form of discursive accomplishment, are also discussed
The multitasking framework: the effects of increasing workload on acute psychobiological stress reactivity
A variety of techniques exist for eliciting acute psychological stress in the laboratory; however, they vary in terms of their ease of use, reliability to elicit consistent responses and the extent to which they represent the stressors encountered in everyday life. There is, therefore, a need to develop simple laboratory techniques that reliably elicit psychobiological stress reactivity that are representative of the types of stressors encountered in everyday life. The multitasking framework is a performance-based, cognitively demanding stressor, representative of environments where individuals are required to attend and respond to several different stimuli simultaneously with varying levels of workload. Psychological (mood and perceived workload) and physiological (heart rate and blood pressure) stress reactivity was observed in response to a 15-min period of multitasking at different levels of workload intensity in a sample of 20 healthy participants. Multitasking stress elicited increases in heart rate and blood pressure, and increased workload intensity elicited dose–response increases in levels of perceived workload and mood. As individuals rarely attend to single tasks in real life, the multitasking framework provides an alternative technique for modelling acute stress and workload in the laboratory
Wetherell, R D, WX559
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/425085Surname: WETHERELL. Given Name(s) or Initials: R D. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: WX559. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 3542.250943
Item: [2016.0049.57346] "Wetherell, R D, WX559
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Constructing Subjects, Producing Subjectivities: Developing Analytic Needs in Discursive Psychology
The publication of Potter and Wetherell’s (1987) blueprint for a discursive
social psychology was a pivotal moment in the discursive turn in psychology.
That transformational text went on to underpin much contemporary discursive
psychology; paving the way for what has become an enriching range of
analytic approaches, and epistemological and ontological arguments
(Wetherell, Taylor and Yates, 2001a; 2001b). Twenty years on, and as
discursive psychology continues to develop, the approaches it encompasses are
becoming more vibrantly contested and a range of positions are forming
around what one might appropriately designate a discursive psychology, and
what form that discursive psychology should take (Wetherell, forthcoming,
2007).
In this exploratory paper I pursue some of these debates insofar as they
offer analytic resources for my PhD study of women’s accounts of success and
failure. I outline two different strands in discursive psychology; an
epistemological constructionism concerned with how meaning is established in
interaction; and an ontological constructionism, which takes this somewhat
further by looking at the implications of constructions for subjects and
subjectivity. I consider a range of resources available for a discursive
psychology attentive to the everyday practices of lived lives, to the
intersubjective production of meanings and to the theorisation of individual
history and individual differences. As part of this, I explore the potential
contribution of a psycho-social discursive psychology, significant for the
inextricable connection it makes between individual and society, and for how it
might inform notions of a dynamic, acting, individual. In this, however, I query
whether a discursive psycho-social psychology must necessarily draw upon
traditional psychoanalytic architectures
When art meets science
Science and art might sound like vastly different disciplines, but Dr Tim Wetherell from ANU believes they are both motivated by a desire to make sense of the world in which we live.
A sculptor and a scientist, Dr Wetherell talks about his experiences working with various artists and scientists on a range of interdisciplinary projects - from the monumental sculptures of body arts to growing living cells over a computer-generated head
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Wetherell map.jpg
Within 40 square miles of the southeastern Wallowa
Mountains, Oregon, eugeosynclinal Permian and Triassic
formations comprising a section about 25,000 feet thick
have been exposed by uplift and erosion of overlying
Miocene Columbia River basalt. Deposition appears to have
been continuous from Permian into Upper Triassic, but an
apparent angular nonconformity exists between Triassic
formations. Neritic clastics of the Permian Trinity Creek
formation are overlain by mixed volcanics and elastics of
the Triassic Imnaha formation, which is terrestrial and
littoral in its lower Russel member and neritic in Its
upper Norway member. Sandstone and conglomerate of the
Upper Triassic Lower Sedimentary Series apparently rest
unconformably on deformed pillow lavas and breccias of the
Norway member.
A varied suite of small stocks Intrudes the area.
Gabbroic units of the Fish Lake complex are most widespread;
other stocks are composed of metadiorite, keratophyre,
bostonite, and trondjemlte. Varied dikes are extremely
abundant In older formations.
Marble and skarn of uncertain age, but believed
unrelated to the Imnaha or Trinity Creek formations, are
intimately associated with gabbroic stocks.
Deformation increases from east to west, and culminates
with an overturned anticline in the Upper Triassic
Lower sedimentary Series at the western margin of the
area. Faulting is minor except for the Pine Creek reverse
fault which has a minimum vertical displacement of 2500
feet.
Alpine topography resulted from Pleistocene stream
erosion and glaciation; post-Pleistocene erosion has not
been extensive
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Negotiating liveable lives: intelligibility and identity in contemporary Britain
[About the book]
Identity in the 21st Century reports from the front-line of identity studies. This collection brings together leading scholars to describe and address trends in contemporary social life. The chapters examine the current patterning of identities based on class and community, gender and generation, 'race', faith and ethnicity, and derived from popular culture. The contributors explore debates about social change, individualisation and the re-making of social class. They examine the evidence for new 'convivial multicultures' in ethnically diverse urban metropolitan centres and the manifestations of more 'fragile' white identities in the provinces. This book results from five years of sustained empirical investigation within the highly innovative Identities and Social Action programme, and this collection provides a rich account of the raw materials people draw upon to build 'liveable' lives
Dr. Donald Wetherell
Historian Dr. Don Wetherell lives in the past, the present, and the future. He is director of AU’s new Heritage Resources Management Program. He finds meaning in the remnants of the past and hope for the future. Our heritage gives us a glimpse of what it has meant, and continues to mean, to be human
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