Results for 'Vaia Tsolas'

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  1.  4
    A psychoanalytic exploration of the body in today's world: on the body.Vaia Tsolas & Christine Anzieu-Premmereur (eds.) - 2018 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    A Psychoanalytic Exploration of the Body in Today's World: On the Body examines the importance of the body in everyday psychoanalytic practice and beyond. Written by world leading clinicians and international scholars, this important book aims to relocate the psychoanalytic body in the modern, more challenging world. Bringing together perspectives from across the range of psychoanalytic schools of thought, it covers essential analytic topics such as family and parenting, sex and gender, illness and psychosomatics, and concepts of the body in (...)
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  2.  13
    Mapping environment-focused social media , audiovisual media and art, in Sweden: How a diversity of voices and issues is combined with ideological homogeneity.Vaia Doudaki & Nico Carpentier - forthcoming - Communications.
    Employing mapping research, this study mapped the populations of environment-focused social media, audiovisual media and art, in Sweden, over a one-year period. The study explored what is being communicated about the environment in Sweden in these fields, by whom, and how it circulates in diverse communicative spaces. The research identified 502 units across the three fields and a multitude of voices addressing environmental issues through these fields. These channels and voices give visibility to diverse topics and perspectives about the environment (...)
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  3.  6
    Keeping “critical” critical: A conversation from Culture on the Edge.Vaia Touna, Leslie Dorrough Smith, K. Merinda Simmons, Steven Ramey, Monica R. Miller, Russell McCutcheon & Craig Martin - 2014 - Critical Research on Religion 2 (3):299-312.
    In early March 2014, some of the members of Culture on the Edge—a scholarly research collaboration of seven scholars of religion, interested in more theoretically sophisticated studies of identity, and all of whom are at different career stages and at a variety of North American institutions—had a conversation online on the use of the terms “critique” and “critical,” terms widely used in the field today but employed in such a variety of ways that the members of the group thought it (...)
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