Stu Fenton will address the many specificities of the LGBT communities and individualities through a multifaceted approach linking identity quest, painful stigmas of Chemsex and addiction, and most importantly the courage and mindfulness of a community facing its challenges with hope and determination. We have so much to learn here.
Could it well be that a Minority is actually leading the Majority by example of self-discovery and self-introspection? As Stu Fenton & al. proposed in Berlin in 2018: “Surely gay culture is not just something depressing? It’s also about self-discovery, adventure, relating to a group of peers, have meaningful relations, reaching out to others in order to lift each other up and having all sorts of primal instincts satisfied.”
Reading the Tea Leaves: Global Trends and Opportunities for Tomorrow's MuseumsRobert J. Stein
A presentation to the 2014 Communicating the Museum conference in Sydney, Australia.
As our society becomes increasingly more intertwined, it is evident that global trends that once seemed remote are having a deep impact on our local communities. These same trends play out in museums around the globe as we reflect our communities both past and present. The museum audience is inherently submerged in this current of cultural change. Without pretending to predict the entire future, there are strong signals that a few important global trends will persist. What are those trends and how can museums begin to take advantage of those likely shifts to promote, advocate, and enhance their relevance to a global audience?
Folsom Street East conducted a survey of its constituents in the summer of 2013. This deck shows high-level survey data, including information about demographics, community engagement, event participation, and organizational support.
Explore Their Stories - Creating Documentaries that Educate, Inspire and Cata...✨ Mimi Newman
Sadia Uqaili's presentation at the Conference on South Asia at UW-M on Explore Their Stories, a nonprofit film production agency that crafts stellar films that inspire, educate and catalyze social change.
Reading the Tea Leaves: Global Trends and Opportunities for Tomorrow's MuseumsRobert J. Stein
A presentation to the 2014 Communicating the Museum conference in Sydney, Australia.
As our society becomes increasingly more intertwined, it is evident that global trends that once seemed remote are having a deep impact on our local communities. These same trends play out in museums around the globe as we reflect our communities both past and present. The museum audience is inherently submerged in this current of cultural change. Without pretending to predict the entire future, there are strong signals that a few important global trends will persist. What are those trends and how can museums begin to take advantage of those likely shifts to promote, advocate, and enhance their relevance to a global audience?
Folsom Street East conducted a survey of its constituents in the summer of 2013. This deck shows high-level survey data, including information about demographics, community engagement, event participation, and organizational support.
Explore Their Stories - Creating Documentaries that Educate, Inspire and Cata...✨ Mimi Newman
Sadia Uqaili's presentation at the Conference on South Asia at UW-M on Explore Their Stories, a nonprofit film production agency that crafts stellar films that inspire, educate and catalyze social change.
The Last Keynote - The Kindness Revolution.wwTurtle
What made Silicon Valley? Why is it so hard to duplicate it around the world? “But what does symbolize Hewlett-Packard is a revolutionary attitude toward people, a belief
that people should be treated fairly." - Steve Jobs – 1984
From Mary to Modern Woman The Material Basis of MarianisMargaritoWhitt221
From Mary to Modern Woman: The Material Basis of Marianismo and Its Transformation
in a Spanish Village
Author(s): Jane F. Collier
Source: American Ethnologist, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Feb., 1986), pp. 100-107
Published by: Wiley on behalf of the American Anthropological Association
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/644588
Accessed: 08-01-2017 18:37 UTC
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted
digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about
JSTOR, please contact [email protected]
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at
http://about.jstor.org/terms
American Anthropological Association, Wiley are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and
extend access to American Ethnologist
This content downloaded from 131.94.16.10 on Sun, 08 Jan 2017 18:37:46 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
from Mary to modern woman:
the material basis of Marianismo
and its transformation in a Spanish village
JANE F. COLLIER-Stanford University
In 1963-64, the married women of Los Olivos (pseudonym), a small village in the mountains
of Huelva, southwestern Spain, seemed typical representatives of Mediterranean culture. When
housewives gathered at the public fountain to wash clothes, they wore drab, shapeless outfits,
and many wore mourning. Most were overweight. Washing clothes and attending funerals
were their most public activities. In the evenings married women stayed home or visited the
sick. Twenty years later, in the summer of 1984, the new generation of married women pre-
sented a very different picture. Instead of wearing drab, shapeless clothes, most wore outfits
that showed off their figures. And most had shapely figures. They worried about gaining weight,
although some were notably more successful at dieting than others. Married women no longer
stayed home every evening. Rather, they spent weekend evenings with their husbands in the
local bars, where they sat around tables dressed in their most fashionable outfits, with heavy
makeup and elaborate hairdos.
How do we understand such a radical shift in married women's presentation of self? The
explanation offered by many ethnographers of Spanish villages-and echoed by residents of
Los Olivos-is that rural Spain has "opened up" (see Aceves and Douglass 1976). Massive
emigration from the countryside and the spread of television into remote villages have exposed
the present generation of rural Spaniards to ideas and choices not available to their parents and
grandparents. Villagers in Los Olivos, for example, say that 20 years ago their village was atra-
sado (backward). People followed outmoded customs, they say, because they did not know
any others. But now everyone has city relative ...
Culture shock essay example 600 Words - PHDessay.com. What causes culture shock? Essay - PHDessay.com. Culture shock essay writing. Culture Shock Essay Business Essay .... 008 Culture Shock Essay Example Thatsnotus. Main Causes of Culture Shock Essay Example GraduateWay. Culture shock essay writing. Free Culture Shock Essay Samples. 2022-11-09. Culture shock experience essay - bibliographysetup.x.fc2.com. Culture shock experience essay samples. Culture shock essay sample - 1358 Words - NerdySeal. Culture Shock in Japan Free Essay Example. Reflective Report On Cultural Shock Essay Example - PHDessay.com. PDF Essay on Culture Shock.pdf Snezana Djuric - Academia.edu. Cultural Shock and Adaptation Essay Example GraduateWay. Culture shock free essays free essay examples and. Culture Shock Essay Example - PHDessay.com. My Culture Shock Essay Example StudyHippo.com. Culture Shock Essay Example Topics and Well Written Essays - 1250 words. My Experience with Culture Shock in The United States: Essay Example .... Culture Shock Issues Essay Example Topics and Well Written Essays .... Culture shock essay example - 554 Words - NerdySeal. Culture Shock Essay Essay About Culture Shock Its and Stages and .... Culture Shock Three Part Essay. Causes of culture shock essay. Main Causes of Culture Shock Essay .... Culture Shock Essay MGM 3101 - Principles Of Management - UPM Thinkswap. Culture shock essay - College Homework Help and Online Tutoring.. Definition of culture shock essay 300 Words - PHDessay.com. The 5 Stages of Culture Shock: Essay Example, 323 words EssayPay. Essay quot;Cultural Analysis / Going Abroad Culture Shockquot; - Presentation .... Culture Shock Essays: I.C. Moore: 9780932693044: Amazon.com: Books Culture Shock Essay Culture Shock Essay
iCAAD Paris 2019 - Dr Colleen Kelly - Addiction and families - the solution i...iCAADEvents
How does the alcoholic or addicted individual effect the family and community? In what way do they equally become sick? What does intervention, treatment and aftercare look like for the family and how does this effect the individual with addiction?
This masterclass will examine the origins of addiction throughout a family’s history and find new ways to transform those old stories of shame and blame to survival and resilience. Participants will be provided a number of key points aimed at enhancing professional knowledge and performance. We will examine alternative ways to think beyond individual treatment, which include the entire family not only though current Family Therapy models, but by examining the stories and pain of past generations. This cutting-edge thinking regarding family work can transform the lives of generations yet to come who may escape the prison of addiction due to our ability to stand with our clients in their multigenerational story of trauma and adaptation. In conclusion, participants will examine how family therapy techniques including examining generations of Transgenerational Grief provide an opportunity for feelings that have been previously denied and lost in the family story can be named, explored, reframed and viewed as strength and hope.
iCAAD Paris 2019 - Chris John - Understanding the impact of transgenerational...iCAADEvents
This presentation will explain what transgenerational trauma is and highlight how parent-to-child carried emotional dynamics impact the child development and lead to mental health issues and addiction in adulthood. 64% of addicts had severe adverse childhood experience, abuse and trauma. Using the Adverse Childhood Experience Study (ACE) and its findings, participant will be presented with assessment and intervention tools directly applicable to their clinical and psychosocial work and practice. “It’s never too late to have a happy childhood”.
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Similar to iCAAD Paris 2019 - Stuart Fenton - LGBT, the Courageous Communitiy: from stigma to identity, from pain to hope
The Last Keynote - The Kindness Revolution.wwTurtle
What made Silicon Valley? Why is it so hard to duplicate it around the world? “But what does symbolize Hewlett-Packard is a revolutionary attitude toward people, a belief
that people should be treated fairly." - Steve Jobs – 1984
From Mary to Modern Woman The Material Basis of MarianisMargaritoWhitt221
From Mary to Modern Woman: The Material Basis of Marianismo and Its Transformation
in a Spanish Village
Author(s): Jane F. Collier
Source: American Ethnologist, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Feb., 1986), pp. 100-107
Published by: Wiley on behalf of the American Anthropological Association
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/644588
Accessed: 08-01-2017 18:37 UTC
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted
digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about
JSTOR, please contact [email protected]
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at
http://about.jstor.org/terms
American Anthropological Association, Wiley are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and
extend access to American Ethnologist
This content downloaded from 131.94.16.10 on Sun, 08 Jan 2017 18:37:46 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
from Mary to modern woman:
the material basis of Marianismo
and its transformation in a Spanish village
JANE F. COLLIER-Stanford University
In 1963-64, the married women of Los Olivos (pseudonym), a small village in the mountains
of Huelva, southwestern Spain, seemed typical representatives of Mediterranean culture. When
housewives gathered at the public fountain to wash clothes, they wore drab, shapeless outfits,
and many wore mourning. Most were overweight. Washing clothes and attending funerals
were their most public activities. In the evenings married women stayed home or visited the
sick. Twenty years later, in the summer of 1984, the new generation of married women pre-
sented a very different picture. Instead of wearing drab, shapeless clothes, most wore outfits
that showed off their figures. And most had shapely figures. They worried about gaining weight,
although some were notably more successful at dieting than others. Married women no longer
stayed home every evening. Rather, they spent weekend evenings with their husbands in the
local bars, where they sat around tables dressed in their most fashionable outfits, with heavy
makeup and elaborate hairdos.
How do we understand such a radical shift in married women's presentation of self? The
explanation offered by many ethnographers of Spanish villages-and echoed by residents of
Los Olivos-is that rural Spain has "opened up" (see Aceves and Douglass 1976). Massive
emigration from the countryside and the spread of television into remote villages have exposed
the present generation of rural Spaniards to ideas and choices not available to their parents and
grandparents. Villagers in Los Olivos, for example, say that 20 years ago their village was atra-
sado (backward). People followed outmoded customs, they say, because they did not know
any others. But now everyone has city relative ...
Culture shock essay example 600 Words - PHDessay.com. What causes culture shock? Essay - PHDessay.com. Culture shock essay writing. Culture Shock Essay Business Essay .... 008 Culture Shock Essay Example Thatsnotus. Main Causes of Culture Shock Essay Example GraduateWay. Culture shock essay writing. Free Culture Shock Essay Samples. 2022-11-09. Culture shock experience essay - bibliographysetup.x.fc2.com. Culture shock experience essay samples. Culture shock essay sample - 1358 Words - NerdySeal. Culture Shock in Japan Free Essay Example. Reflective Report On Cultural Shock Essay Example - PHDessay.com. PDF Essay on Culture Shock.pdf Snezana Djuric - Academia.edu. Cultural Shock and Adaptation Essay Example GraduateWay. Culture shock free essays free essay examples and. Culture Shock Essay Example - PHDessay.com. My Culture Shock Essay Example StudyHippo.com. Culture Shock Essay Example Topics and Well Written Essays - 1250 words. My Experience with Culture Shock in The United States: Essay Example .... Culture Shock Issues Essay Example Topics and Well Written Essays .... Culture shock essay example - 554 Words - NerdySeal. Culture Shock Essay Essay About Culture Shock Its and Stages and .... Culture Shock Three Part Essay. Causes of culture shock essay. Main Causes of Culture Shock Essay .... Culture Shock Essay MGM 3101 - Principles Of Management - UPM Thinkswap. Culture shock essay - College Homework Help and Online Tutoring.. Definition of culture shock essay 300 Words - PHDessay.com. The 5 Stages of Culture Shock: Essay Example, 323 words EssayPay. Essay quot;Cultural Analysis / Going Abroad Culture Shockquot; - Presentation .... Culture Shock Essays: I.C. Moore: 9780932693044: Amazon.com: Books Culture Shock Essay Culture Shock Essay
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How does the alcoholic or addicted individual effect the family and community? In what way do they equally become sick? What does intervention, treatment and aftercare look like for the family and how does this effect the individual with addiction?
This masterclass will examine the origins of addiction throughout a family’s history and find new ways to transform those old stories of shame and blame to survival and resilience. Participants will be provided a number of key points aimed at enhancing professional knowledge and performance. We will examine alternative ways to think beyond individual treatment, which include the entire family not only though current Family Therapy models, but by examining the stories and pain of past generations. This cutting-edge thinking regarding family work can transform the lives of generations yet to come who may escape the prison of addiction due to our ability to stand with our clients in their multigenerational story of trauma and adaptation. In conclusion, participants will examine how family therapy techniques including examining generations of Transgenerational Grief provide an opportunity for feelings that have been previously denied and lost in the family story can be named, explored, reframed and viewed as strength and hope.
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Normal defecation is painless, resulting in passage of soft, formed stool
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DIARRHEA
Diarrhea is an increase in the number of stools and the passage of liquid, unformed feces. It is associated with disorders affecting digestion, absorption, and secretion in the GI tract. Intestinal contents pass through the small and large intestine too quickly to allow for the usual absorption of fluid and nutrients. Irritation within the colon results in increased mucus secretion. As a result, feces become watery, and the patient is unable to control the urge to defecate. Normally an anal bag is safe and effective in long-term treatment of patients with fecal incontinence at home, in hospice, or in the hospital. Fecal incontinence is expensive and a potentially dangerous condition in terms of contamination and risk of skin ulceration
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This includes tasks like:
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Administering medications and treatments.
Performing procedures as directed by doctors.
Assisting with daily living activities (bathing, feeding).
Providing emotional support and pain management.
2. Health Promotion and Education:
Objective: Promote healthy behaviors and educate children, families, and communities about preventive healthcare.
This includes tasks like:
Administering vaccinations.
Providing education on nutrition, hygiene, and development.
Offering breastfeeding and childbirth support.
Counseling families on safety and injury prevention.
3. Collaboration and Advocacy:
Objective: Collaborate effectively with doctors, social workers, therapists, and other healthcare professionals to ensure coordinated care for children.
Objective: Advocate for the rights and best interests of their patients, especially when children cannot speak for themselves.
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Identifying and addressing potential risks to child welfare.
Educating families about their child's condition and treatment options.
4. Professional Development and Research:
Objective: Stay up-to-date on the latest advancements in pediatric healthcare through continuing education and research.
Objective: Contribute to improving the quality of care for children by participating in research initiatives.
This includes tasks like:
Attending workshops and conferences on pediatric nursing.
Participating in clinical trials related to child health.
Implementing evidence-based practices into their daily routines.
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iCAAD Paris 2019 - Stuart Fenton - LGBT, the Courageous Communitiy: from stigma to identity, from pain to hope
1. Could a Minority be leading
the majority when it comes to
Self Discovery and Introspection?
“The Courageous LGBT+ community – journey
from stigma to identity and from pain to hope.”
2. Pride in London celebrates 50 years since Stonewall Riots with Jubilee theme: https://www.thedrum.com/news/2019/04/09/pride-london-celebrates-50-years-stonewall-riots-with-jubilee-theme
4. “surely gay culture is not something depressing? It is also about discovery,
adventure, relating to a group of peers, having meaningful relations, reaching
out to others in order to lift each other up and having all sorts of primal
instincts satisfied.”
21. Joe Kort -
Alan Downes -
Rob Weiss -
David Fawcett -
Matthew Todd -
Ten Smart Things Gay Men Can Do To Improve Their Lives
The Velvet Rage
Cruise Control
Lust Men and Meth – A gay men’s guide to sex and recovery
Straightjacket – Overcoming Society’s Legacy of gay shame.
24. “They came from all over the Bay Area: young and old; black and brown and white;
gay and straight; immigrant and native born; men and women and children of all
backgrounds streaming into Castro Street – Harvey’s Street – faces wet with his
hand clutching candles. Hundreds and thousands and tens of thousands of fill the
street and begin the long slow march down Market Street to City Hall, a river of
candlelight moving in total silence through the center of the city.”