Results for 'Family discourse'

986 found
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  1. Helen Reece.Feminist Anti-Violence Discourse - 2009 - In Shelley Day Sclater (ed.), Regulating autonomy: sex, reproduction and family. Portland, Or.: Hart.
     
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  2.  6
    Account episodes in family discourse: the making of morality in everyday interaction.Laur A. Sterponi - 2003 - Discourse Studies 5 (1):79-100.
    This article investigates account episodes in Italian family dinner conversations and illustrates how sequential patterns and participation are organized in terms of preferences indexical of moral ideology and moral order. Accounts have been mostly examined as speech acts abstracted from embedding sequential environment; this article shows that different design features of the priming move in account episodes retrospectively define different aspects of a situation as problematic and prospectively activate the relevance for distinctive remedial moves. On an ideological level, narrative (...)
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  3.  6
    A Feminist Understanding on the Confucian Family Discourse - Focused on the Theory of the Abolition of the Traditional Confucian Family in Modern China -.Seseoria Kim - 2020 - EPOCH AND PHILOSOPHY 31 (1):33-60.
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  4.  18
    Work–Family Practices and Complexity of Their Usage: A Discourse Analysis Towards Socially Responsible Human Resource Management.Suvi Heikkinen, Anna-Maija Lämsä & Charlotta Niemistö - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 171 (4):815-831.
    The question of work–family practices commonly arises in both theory and daily practice as a matter of responsibility in today’s organisations. More information is needed about them for socially responsible human resource management. In this article our interest is in how work–family practices, serve as an important element of SR-HRM, constructed as helpful for employees’ work–family integration, are realised in organisational life. We investigate the discursive ways in which members of two different organisations working at different organisational (...)
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  5. Of Family Resemblances and Aesthetic Discourse.Nicholas Moutafakis - 1976 - Indian Philosophical Quarterly 3 (2):161-182.
     
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  6. Of Family Resemblances and Aesthetic Discourse.Nicholas J. Moutafakis - 1975 - Philosophical Forum 7 (1):71.
     
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  7.  33
    Discourses on Family Time: The Cultural Interpretation of Family Togetherness in Los Angeles and Rome.Tamar Kremer-Sadlik, Marilena Fatigante & Alessandra Fasulo - 2008 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 36 (3):283-309.
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  8.  23
    Discourses of silence: The construction of ‘otherness’ in family planning pamphlets.Busi Makoni - 2012 - Discourse and Communication 6 (4):401-422.
    This article explores verbal and visual language use in Zimbabwean contraceptive promotional brochures distributed from the early to mid-1980s. Drawing on recent work in critical discourse analysis of text and visual design, the article uses multimodal discourse analysis and draws from Halliday’s Systemic Functional Grammar’s transitivity analysis to analyze family planning pamphlets, focusing on the discursive construction of women as contraceptive users. The article argues that the salience of the language of risk and vulnerability, which is textually (...)
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  9.  2
    Family affections as Narrative Discourse. 김혜련 - 2007 - Korean Feminist Philosophy 7:59-86.
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  10.  16
    Discourse to Family Associations.Pope Pius Xii - 2011 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 11 (1):123-127.
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  11.  6
    Querying the Discourses of Love: An Analysis of Contemporary Patterns of Love and the Stratification of Intimacy within Lesbian Families.Jacqui Gabb - 2001 - European Journal of Women's Studies 8 (3):313-328.
    This article looks at the discourses of love through an analysis of the ‘stratification of intimacy’ within lesbian families. I suggest that traditional discourses of love effectively reify our emotions into socially prescribed categories, where ‘mature love’ is conflated with sex and desire. The love that mothers feel for their child is set apart, ‘instinctive’, wholly separate to adult love. However this ‘stratification of intimacy’ obscures the lived experiences and feelings of many parents. In this article the author argues that (...)
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  12.  3
    From property to family: American dog rescue and the discourse of compassion.Andrei S. Markovits - 2014 - Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. Edited by Katherine N. Crosby.
    In the wake of the considerable cultural changes and social shifts that the United States and all advanced industrial democracies have experienced since the late 1960s and early 1970s, social discourse around the disempowered has changed in demonstrable ways. In From Property to Family: American Dog Rescue and the Discourse of Compassion, Andrei Markovits and Katherine Crosby describe a “discourse of compassion” that actually alters the way we treat persons and ideas once scorned by the social (...)
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  13.  13
    "Maman-France Doudou": Family Images in French West Indian Colonial Discourse.Richard De Burton - 1993 - Diacritics 23 (3):69.
  14.  4
    ‘ACE Boys’: Gender Discourses and School Effects in How First-in-Family Males Aspire to Australian University Life.Garth Stahl & John Young - 2019 - In Hernan Cuervo & Ana Miranda (eds.), Youth, Inequality and Social Change in the Global South. Singapore: Springer Singapore. pp. 67-81.
    Currently, boys growing up in urban poverty remain severely under-represented in Australian higher education. To explore this phenomenon, we draw on recent research with boys in Year 12 who will potentially be first-in-family as well as their teachers. The overarching research question framing the chapter is: “How do the school experiences of marginalized young men, living in one of the poorest urban regions in Australia, influence their transition to university?” Research on social mobility has documented that schooling plays a (...)
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  15. The naturalness of the family (from the second discourse).Jean-Jacques Rousseau - 2009 - In Rousseau on women, love, and family. Hanover, N.H.: Dartmouth College Press.
     
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  16.  7
    Reproducing the national family: kinship claims, development discourse and migrant caregivers in Palestine/israel.Rachel H. Brown - 2019 - Feminist Theory 20 (3):247-268.
    This article probes the politics of the migrant caregiver/citizen-employer relationship in Palestine/israel as it unfolds within the Jewish-Israeli home. Based on interviews with migrants from the Philippines, Nepal, India and Sri Lanka and their Jewish-Israeli employers, I examine how Israel’s ethno-racially hierarchical citizenship regime and the transnational gendering and racialisation of carework manifest in this relationship. I begin by situating migrant women working as caregivers within the legal and political context of Palestine/israel, delineating how gendered constructions of the Jewish-Israeli woman (...)
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  17.  34
    Who gets involved with what? A discourse analysis of gender and caregiving in everyday family life with depression.Jeppe Oute & Lotte Huniche - 2017 - Outlines. Critical Practice Studies 18 (1):05-27.
    The recent process of deinstitutionalization of the psychiatric treatment system, in both Denmark and other European countries, has relied heavily on the involvement in treatment and recovery of cohabitant relatives of diagnosed people. However, political objectives regarding depression and involvement rely on a limited body of knowledge about people’s ways of managing illness-related problems in everyday life. Drawing on a discursive notion of gender laid out by Raewyn Connell, the aim of the article is to elucidate how the involvement of (...)
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  18.  41
    Broadening the Circumference: A Socio-Historical Analysis of Family Enactments of Literacy and Numeracy within the Official Script of Middle Class Early Childhood Discourse.Marilyn Fleer & Jill Robbins - 2004 - Outlines. Critical Practice Studies 6 (2):17-34.
    Informed by s socio-historical theory, this paper will report on a study that sought to document the literacy and numeracy outcomes for children living in low socio-economic circumstances in a region south-east of Melbourne, Australia. The research focused on children in preschool and child care centres in the year prior to beginning school, and was designed to map literacy and numeracy experiences of children in the home and in the early childhood centre. In this paper an analysis of the cultural (...)
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  19.  22
    Incompatible with Care: Examining Trisomy 18 Medical Discourse and Families’ Counter-discourse for Recuperative Ethos.Megan J. Thorvilson & Adam J. Copeland - 2018 - Journal of Medical Humanities 39 (3):349-360.
    Parents whose child is diagnosed with a serious disease such as trisomy 18 first rely on the medical community for an accurate description and prognosis. In the case of trisomy 18, however, many families are told the disease is “incompatible with life” even though some children with the condition live for several years. This paper considers parents’ response to current medical discourse concerning trisomy 18 by examining blogs written by the parents of those diagnosed. Using interpretive humanistic reading and (...)
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  20.  20
    Accommodation and resistance to the dominant cultural discourse on psychiatric mental health: oral history accounts of family members.Geertje Boschma - 2007 - Nursing Inquiry 14 (4):266-278.
    Oral history makes a critical contribution in articulating the perspectives of people often overlooked in histories written from the standpoint of dominating class, gender, ethnic or professional groups. Using three interrelated approaches — life stories, oral history, and narrative analysis — this paper analyzes family responses to psychiatric care and mental illness in oral history interviews with family members who experienced mental illness themselves or within their family between 1930 and 1975. Interviews with three family members (...)
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  21.  4
    Three Thinkers on Television, Schools, the Family, and Public Discourse.Robert Leone & Peter Goldstone - 1998 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 18 (3):160-173.
    The authors examine the conceptual frameworks and substantive ideas of three authors, Lawrence Cremin, Neil Postman and Christopher Lasch, all of whom view technologies as educators. The authors focus on the television as educator and exposit these thinkers' views about relations between television's education and the education of schools, families and communities. The broader social significance involves an examination of the extent to which television's education impoverishes public discourse, the lifeblood of democracy; and the extent to which television's education (...)
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  22.  8
    Neoliberal privatisation of the public discoursefamily in the face of post-transformation changes.Barbara Więckowska - 2019 - Nowa Krytyka 42:189-236.
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  23.  22
    Confucian family ideal and same-sex marriage: A feminist Confucian perspective.Sor-Hoon Tan - unknown
    This article engages the views of PRC Confucian scholars who responded to the United States Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy's citing of Confucius in his majority opinion on same-sex marriage in 2015. It questions their separation of tolerance for homosexuality from legalization of same-sex marriage and argue that tolerance is not enough. The arguments in the mainland Confucian discourse about same-sex marriage highlights the historical and persistent entanglement of Confucianism with patriarchy. Instead of reviving traditional patriarchal society, further entrenching (...)
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  24.  2
    Family Strategies, Guanxi, and School Success in Rural China.Ailei Xie - 2016 - Routledge.
    Research in school success in contemporary China has argued that market reforms have reproduced the advantages for children from the cadre and the professional families while simultaneously creating new opportunities for children of the new arising economic elites. However, it has performed less for traditional peasant families. This book places a special emphasis on how rural parents from different social backgrounds use _guanxi_ to maintain the interconnectedness between their families and schools to create advantages for their children in school success. (...)
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  25.  33
    Reflection on family consent: Based on a pregnant death in a beijing hospital.Xinqing Zhang - 2011 - Developing World Bioethics 12 (3):164-168.
    The ‘family consent’ process has been placed at the centre of Chinese clinical practice. Although there has been critical analysis of how the process functions in relation to the autonomy and rights of patients, there has been little examination of the perceptions and attitude of patients and their families and the medical professionals, in relation to moral dilemmas that arise in real cases in the bioethical discourse. When faced with a consent form in an emergency situation, the (...) member's capacity to act is reduced, as he/she becomes enmeshed in the hospital structure of tacit, socially-imposed rules. In a questionnaires based on a real death case in 2008, 70.9% of the surveyed medical professionals (n = 3,665) disagreed with performing surgery without the consent of the family even if the patient's life was in danger, while 36.6% of the surveyed patients (n = 1,198) hold the same position. This work demonstrates the weakness of the family consent process as a safeguard of patient's autonomy. Finally, I argue that saving the patient's life should be the overriding obligation rather than the respect for the surrogate's autonomous choice at such a decisive moment. (shrink)
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  26.  32
    Family Resemblances: Human Reproductive Cloning as an Example for Reconsidering the Mutual Relationships between Bioethics and Science Fiction.Solveig L. Hansen - 2018 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 15 (2):231-242.
    In the traditions of narrative ethics and casuistry, stories have a well-established role. Specifically, illness narratives provide insight into patients’ perspectives and histories. However, because they tend to see fiction as an aesthetic endeavour, practitioners in these traditions often do not realize that fictional stories are valuable moral sources of their own. In this paper I employ two arguments to show the mutual relationship between bioethics and fiction, specifically, science fiction. First, both discourses use imagination to set a scene and (...)
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  27.  18
    Family Values, Social Capital and Contradictions of American Modernity.Philip Webb - 2011 - Theory, Culture and Society 28 (4):96-123.
    Contemporary American social and political discourses have integrated concerns about family values into the realm of debates about the associational life of social capital. In these discussions, theoretical and historical confusions about the relations between family and civil society run rampant. In this article, I first bring theoretical clarity to these social structures and the type of relations upon which they are predicated and, second, briefly historicize the relationships between an American idea of family and civil society. (...)
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  28.  10
    Family Business and the 1%.Robert S. Nason & Michael Carney - 2018 - Business and Society 57 (6):1191-1215.
    Growing concern about economic inequality has generated a polarized narrative regarding the causes and consequences of extreme wealth. We contend that divided ideological positions obscure a more mundane reality about the typical wealthiest 1% households. Using data from the triennial survey of consumer finance, we demonstrate that there is substantial heterogeneity within the 1%. Contrary to public discourse, the typical 1% household does not have wealth reflective of popular rich lists, but derives a significant share of its wealth from (...)
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  29.  28
    Familial Communication of Research Results: A Need to Know?Lee Black & Kelly A. McClellan - 2011 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 39 (4):605-613.
    In recent years, the research participant’s family’s need, if not right, to know their disease risk has comprised a great deal of the genetic testing discourse. This most often arises in the context of clinical genetic tests for hereditary cancers, especially colorectal and breast cancer, and other genetic disorders where the presence of a genetic mutation greatly increases the likelihood of the disease’s manifestation. However, this discussion has not led to comprehensive or cohesive guidance for health care professionals (...)
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  30.  3
    Book Review: Locked in the Family Cell: Gender, Sexuality and PoliticalAgency in Irish National Discourse[REVIEW]Breda Gray - 2006 - Feminist Review 83 (1):161-165.
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  31.  3
    Book Review: Locked in the Family Cell: Gender, Sexuality and PoliticalAgency in Irish National Discourse[REVIEW]Breda Gray - 2006 - Feminist Review 83 (1):161-165.
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  32.  13
    Ties That Bind: Maternal Imagery and Discourse in Indian Buddhism by Reiko Ohnuma, and: Family Matters in Indian Buddhist Monasticism by Shayne Clark, and: Family in Buddhism ed. by Liz Wilson, and: Little Buddhas: Children and Childhoods in Buddhist Texts and Traditions ed. by Vanessa R. Sasson. [REVIEW]Rita M. Gross - 2016 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 36 (1):225-231.
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  33.  17
    Explorations about the Family’s Role in the German Transplantation System: Epistemic Opacity and Discursive Exclusion.Iris Hilbrich & Solveig Lena Hansen - 2022 - Social Epistemology 36 (1):43-62.
    With regard to organ donation, Germany is an ‘opt-in’ country, which requires explicit consent from donors. The relatives are either asked to decide on behalf of the donors’ preferences, if these are unknown or if the potential donor has explicitly transferred the decision to them. At the core of this policy lies the sociocultural and moral premise of a rational, autonomous individual, whose rights require legal protection in order to guarantee a voluntary decision. In concrete transplantation practices, the family (...)
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  34.  15
    Family Law Reform in Australia, or Frozen Chooks Revisited Again?Reg Graycar - 2012 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 13 (1):241-269.
    This Article focuses both on the changes that have been made to the legal framework governing post-separation parenting of children in Australia, as well as the processes and discourses via which these matters have been dealt with and debated. Alone among comparable common law jurisdictions such as Canada, the United States, and England, Australia’s family law legislation, and the significant changes made to it in the past fifteen years, can be seen to have been particularly responsive to the lobbying (...)
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  35.  11
    Stop family destruction!: ideologies concerning family destruction metaphors in same-sex marriage debates.Anita Yen Chiang & Hsi-Yao Su - 2024 - Critical Discourse Studies 21 (3):237-253.
    The study investigates the conceptualizations and ideologies concerning family destruction metaphors in same-sex marriage debates. With data from the official websites of two opposing camps in Taiwan, we explore the ways conceptual metaphors can be adopted along with other linguistic resources to shape, redefine and negotiate new meanings of family. Drawing concepts from critical metaphor analysis (CMA), this study shows that the same conceptual metaphor can be used in different contexts to construct and promote seemingly binary ideologies. The (...)
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  36.  25
    “Eat your Hamburger!”—“No, I don’t Want to!” Argumentation and Argumentative Development in the Context of Dinner Conversation in Twenty Swedish Families.Åsa Brumark - 2008 - Argumentation 22 (2):251-271.
    The aim of the present study was to analyse family dinners as context of argumentation and argumentative development by using a context-sensitive model of basic argumentative structures in every day conversations. The data consisted of 40 argumentative sequences in dinner conversations in twenty Swedish families with children aged 7 to 17 years. The families were divided in two groups depending on the children's ages (10–11 years with younger siblings and 10–12 years with older siblings). The model revealed characteristic structures (...)
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  37.  15
    ‘Real’ families.Kit W. Myers - 2014 - Critical Discourse Studies 11 (2):175-193.
    This essay examines a New York Times special transnational/racial adoption blog series, ‘Relative Choices’, to interrogate how statements of love in adoption discourse engender symbolic violence in order to narrowly define ‘real’ family. The blogs are an important site of inquiry because of the ways in which new technology enables individuals with access to the Internet the ability to contribute to knowledge production. These transnational/racial adoption blog entries generated more than 1000 comments by adoptees, adoptive parents, and interested (...)
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  38.  64
    Legitimizing Immigration Control: A Discourse-Historical Analysis.Ruth Wodak & Theo van Leeuwen - 1999 - Discourse Studies 1 (1):83-118.
    Austrian immigration authorities frequently reject the family reunion applications of immigrant workers. They justify their decisions not only on legal grounds but also on the basis of their own often prejudiced judgements of the applicants' ability to `integrate' into Austrian society. A discourse-historical method is combined with systemic-functionally oriented methods of text analysis to study the official letters which notify immigrant workers of the rejection of their family reunion applications. The systemic-functionally oriented methods are used in a (...)
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  39.  45
    Religious discourse and postmodern rationality in bioethics.Radu Cristian - 2012 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 11 (31):206-222.
    Review of Ștefan Iloaie, Cultura vieții. Aspecte morale în bioetică (Culture of life. Moral aspects in bioethics) (Cluj -Napoca: Editura Renașterea, 2009).
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  40.  14
    The Complete Works: Handbook, Discourses, and Fragments.Robin Waterfield (ed.) - 2022 - University of Chicago Press.
    The complete surviving works of Epictetus, the most influential Stoic philosopher from antiquity. “Some things are up to us and some are not.” Epictetus was born into slavery around the year 50 CE, and, upon being granted his freedom, he set himself up as a philosophy teacher. After being expelled from Rome, he spent the rest of his life living and teaching in Greece. He is now considered the most important exponent of Stoicism, and his surviving work comprises a series (...)
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  41.  32
    The European Family and Athenian Fatherland: Political Metaphors Ancient and Modern.Jakub Filonik - 2018 - The European Legacy 23 (1-2):25-46.
    This article explores the role and modes of operation of metaphorical framing in ancient Greek and modern European and American political discourse. It looks at how concepts such as citizenship, ownership, family, morality, finance, sport, war, domination, human life, and animals are used to reframe political issues in ways promoted by the speaker, and how they may continue to be reshaped in the ongoing political discourse. The analysis of examples of ancient Athenian public rhetoric and of modern (...)
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  42.  19
    Narrative introductions: discourse competence of children with autistic spectrum disorders.Olga Solomon - 2004 - Discourse Studies 6 (2):253-276.
    This article examines the discourse competence of high-functioning children with autistic spectrum disorders to participate in narrative introduction sequences with family members. The analysis illuminates the children’s own efforts to launch narratives, as well as their ability to build upon the contributions of others. Ethnographic, discourse analytic methodology is integrated with the theory of discourse organization and the weak central coherence account of autism. Introductions of both personal experience narratives as well as fictional narratives are examined. (...)
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  43.  4
    Discourse studies in Thailand.Somsonge Burusphat - 2002 - Discourse Studies 4 (4):501-510.
    This article discusses the status of discourse studies in Thailand, including research on the Tai-Kadai, Austroasiatic, Tibeto-Burman and Hmong-Mien language families and Thai textbooks. Most previous discourse studies on the Tai-Kadai language family are focused on written forms. Theme and cohesion seem to be the most studied topics. In more recent years, the trend of discourse analysis has moved towards conversation, pragmatics and cognitive analysis. Few research projects have focused on sociolinguistic aspects of discourse. There (...)
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  44.  19
    Transgressing feminist theory and discourse: advancing conversations across disciplines.Jennifer C. Dunn & Jimmie Manning (eds.) - 2018 - New York: Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group.
    Despite decades of activism, resistance, and education, both feminists and gender rebels continue to experience personal, political, institutional, and cultural resistance to rights, recognition, and respect. In the face of these inequalities and disparities, Transgressing Feminist Theory and Discourse seeks to engage with, and disrupt the long-standing debates, unquestioned conceptual formations, and taboo topics in contemporary feminist studies. The first half of the book challenges key concepts and theories related to feminist scholarship by advocating new approaches for theorizing interdisciplinarity, (...)
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  45. Affective family law.Clare Huntington - 2016 - In Heather Conway & John Stannard (eds.), The emotional dynamics of law and legal discourse. Portland, Oregon: Hart Publishing.
     
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  46.  6
    Negotiating power, identity, family, and community: Women's community participation.Naomi Abrahams - 1996 - Gender and Society 10 (6):768-796.
    Women's community participation re community and identity. In this article, the author explores the collective identities that are built around motherhood, rape-crisis work, Latino empowerment, and political activism for 39 Anglo and 11 Latina women. The reflexive relationship between communities and identities in relation to class background, gender, age, generation, and race-ethnicity are examined. It is argued that women embrace—as well as negotiate—cultural expectations of mothers, homemakers, and elders through their community participation. The author explores work in the community as (...)
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  47.  29
    Liberal family law in the making: Nordic and European harmonisation. [REVIEW]Anu Pylkkänen - 2007 - Feminist Legal Studies 15 (3):289-306.
    This paper discusses the past and contemporary legal harmonisation exercises of family law in the Nordic countries and Europe. The critique is that the harmonised ‹European family law’ only entrenches the status quo and reiterates traditional family patterns, the male norm, heteronormativity, and a public/private divide represented in the neutral guise of a liberal rights discourse. Furthermore, the critics point out that the political economy of legal harmonisation is, to a large extent, ignored. In the Nordic (...)
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  48.  33
    Muslim Discourse on Rebellion.John Kelsay - 2013 - Ethics and International Affairs 27 (4):379-391.
    We can begin with a story. In his account of the reign of Harun al-Rashid, al-Tabari spends considerable time on the matter of Yahya ibn Abdallah. Scion of the family of ‘Ali ibn Abi Talib, Yahya was the leader of a group active in Daylam, a region in present-day Iran. Al-Rashid and other Abbasid leaders laid claim to the territory, but at the time (the 790s) they did not have effective control over it. Ever-sensitive to the challenge presented by (...)
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  49.  19
    Three Discourses. [REVIEW]Paul Clark - 1999 - Review of Metaphysics 52 (3):686-688.
    The three discourses collected in this volume are from a collection of twelve essays published anonymously in 1620, which were associated with the Cavendish family—the family that served as patron and employer of Hobbes for many years. It was not until Leo Strauss discovered a manuscript version of these essays in Hobbes’s own hand that it began to be suspected that the essays might have been the work of a young Hobbes. Computer analysis of the text, comparing the (...)
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  50.  20
    Introducing the Political Family: A New Road Map for Critical Family Law.Zvi Triger - 2012 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 13 (1):361-384.
    All families are political, each in its own way. Nevertheless, the diversity of family politics has not negated, by and large, patriarchal influence on the Political Family. This Article introduces the Political Family as a key concept in a scholarly and activist movement in family law studies which I identify as Critical Family Law. In Part I a reminder is offered that “alternative families” have existed since the dawn of history. However, I argue that despite (...)
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