Academic literature on the topic 'Iraqi poet'

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Journal articles on the topic "Iraqi poet"

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Peled-Shapira, Hilla. "Was Halabja a turning point for the poet Buland al-Haydari?" Kurdish Studies 2, no. 1 (2014): 14–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.33182/ks.v2i1.377.

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This article examines the writings of the emigré Iraqi-Kurdish poet Buland al-Haydari (1926-1996) and thus explores components of his identity as reflected in themes and motifs of his poetry, in light of the fact that Iraqis belong to a variety of ethnicities, religions and sects. This article will also address the question of whether the poet's self-perception was transformed from a complex hybrid identity with Muslim, Christian, and other influences but excluding Kurdish elements, to a "new" Kurdish identity, as an outcome of the Iraqi chemical attack on the Kurdish town of Halabja in 1988. The assumption is that although the Halabja incident was the point at which the poet began to relate to his Kurdish origins, he was still loyal to Baghdad, to Iraq and to Arab culture, rather than solely emphasising his Kurdish identity. The article will examine the thematic and aesthetic effects of the tragedy in Halabja on al-Haydari's poetry in Arabic, focusing on different forms of identity as reflected in the poetry of this political activist. Gelo Helebçe xala werçerxê bû bo helbestvan Bulend el-Heyderî?Ev gotar vekolînek e li ser nivîsên helbestvan Buland el-Heyderî (1926-1996) ku koçberekî ji Kurdên Iraqê bû. Ji ber hindê, ev gotar hêmanên nasnameya wî, yên ku di babet û motîvên helbestên wî da rengvedane, derdihîne li gel hayjêhebûna ku Iraqî xwedî nasnameyên têvel yên etnîkî, dînî û mezhebî ne. Herwisan, ev gotar dê hewl bide ku pirsekê jî bibersivîne: Gelo wekî encama êrîşa Iraqê ya kîmyayî li ser bajarê Helebçeyê di 1988ê da, xwebîniya vî helbestvanî ji nasnameya wî ya durehî ya têkel -wekî Misilmanî, Mesîhîtî û bandorên din, ji bilî hêmanên Kurdîtiyê- ber bi nasnameyeka Kurdî ya nû ve daguheriye? Pêşbînî ev e ku herçend helbestvan vegeriyaye ser rehên xwe yên Kurdîtiyê, ew pirtir maye dilsozê Bexda, Iraq û çanda Ereban, ji dêlva ku tenê pûte bi nasnameya xwe ya Kurdîtiyê bide. Ev gotar dê bandora tematîk û estetîk ya trajediya Helebçeyê li ser helbestên Haydarî yên bi Erebî vekole bi baldariyeka li ser şêweyên têvel ên nasnameyê ku rengvedane di helbestên vî aktîvîstê siyasî da. ئایا هەڵەبجە خاڵی وەرچەرخان بوو بۆ بوڵەند ئەلحەیدەریی شاعیر؟ئەم گوتارە لە نووسینەکانی شاعیری عیراقی- کوردیی کۆچبەر بوڵەند ئەلحەیدەری (١٩٢٦-١٩٩٦) ورد دەبێتەوە و بەو شێوەیەیش بەشە پێکهێنەکانی ناسنامەی وی، وەک لە بابەت و موتیفەکانی شیعرەکانیدا ڕەنگیان داوەتەوە، دەردەخات، لەبەر ڕووناکیی ئەو ڕاستییەدا کە عیراقییەکان سەر بە ئێتنیک و ئایین و کۆمەڵی جۆراوجۆرن. ئەم وتارە ڕووبەڕووی ئەو پرسیارەیش دەبێتەوە کە ئایا خۆناسینی شاعیر ئەو شێوەگۆڕییەی بەسەردا هاتووە لە ناسنامەیەکی تێکەڵاوی ئاڵۆزکاوەوە کە کارکردی موسڵمان، مەسیحی و شتی دیکەی لەسەر بووە ، بەڵام کوردی تێدا نەبووە، ببێتە ناسنامەیەکی ''نوێ''ی کوردی، وەک ئەنجامێکی ئەوەی کە عیراق شاری کوردیی هەڵەبجەی لە ١٩٨٨دا گازباران کرد؟ وا دادەنرێت کە ئەگەرچی ڕووداوەکەی هەڵەبجە ئەو نوختەیە بوو کە شاعیر لێیەوە دەستی پێ کرد بگەڕێتەوە بۆ ڕەگوڕیشەی کوردانەی خۆی، بەڵام هێشتایش هەر دڵسۆز بوو بۆ بەغدا، بۆ عیراق و بۆ فەرهەنگی عەرەب، نەک ئەوەی تەنیا ناسنامەی کوردانەی خۆی جەخت بکات. وتارەکە لە کارکردی بابەت و ئێستێتیکیی کارەساتەکەی هەڵەبجە لەسەر شیعری عەرەبیی ئەلحەیدەری ورد دەبێتەوە و پێ لەسەر شێوەی جیاوازی ناسنامە دادەگرێت وەک لە شیعری ئەم چالاکە سیاسییەدا ڕەنگی داوەتەوە.
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Walie Fattah, Assist Prof D. Yahia, and Dr Alaa Muhammad Lazem. "Iraqi Contemporary Language of Poetry: Nineties as a Model." ALUSTATH JOURNAL FOR HUMAN AND SOCIAL SCIENCES 213, no. 1 (2018): 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.36473/ujhss.v213i1.648.

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Poetic language is the only a movement based mostly on the stereotypes and pugnacity what is prevalent in the language communicative by eluding and escape from him towards the level of performance of works on raising the effectiveness of the speech and poetic Anashha a lot of surprises and variations in say poetic ; So whatever ventured poet order behind the new technology , no matter what type of Ajthadath performance , the poem remains a creative effort embodied in the language first , and which seeks to demonstrate the usefulness and vitality of a second. The turnaround grand poem nineties embodied in it restored the poem to the Kingdom of hair after that has been lost in the paths of formality purely by Althmanyen dropping more open to the lattice actually fashionable and idler margin after it abandoned tower (Teleological language) and (the absence of meaning), which characterized them poem eighties .This study aims to identify the most prominent benchmarks key that is characterized by the language of poetry Altsaina level compositional and visibility and detection charms aesthetic embodied in Artaadha new areas mission did not pay attention to it before and did not mean the Iraqi poet previously as not involving any poetry by perspective poetic traditional.
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Ghani, ’Hana Khalief. "Mapping the Digital performance of Violence as a tool of Resistance in Iraqi Poetry ‘Militia of Culture’." لارك 1, no. 32 (2018): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.31185/lark.vol1.iss32.1253.

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I.Poetry, Politics, and Technology: The poetic scene in Iraq underwent significant changes following the collapse of the ruling regime and the invasion of the country by the International Coalition headed by the United States of America in 2003. These changes mainly took place on two levels: political and technological.
 In post-2003, normal existence became impossible for the Iraqi people as their country plunged into an unprecedented and wholesale waves of destruction and violence. In “As Iraqis See It,” Messing concisely described the situation of Iraqis ‘expressing anger and gloom, exasperation and despair.’ He says:
 The overwhelming sense is that of a society undergoing a catastrophic breakdown from the never-ending waves of violence, criminality, and brutality inflicted on it by insurgents, militias, jihadis, terrorists, soldiers, policemen, bodyguards, mercenaries, armed gangs, warlords, kidnappers and everyday thugs. ‘Inside Iraq’ … suggests how the relentless and cumulative effects of these various vicious crimes have degraded virtually every aspect of the nation’s social, economic, professional, and personal life. (qtd in Adelman, 2008, p.184)
 What happened in 2003 onward, however, is not strange or unexpected. It is a culmination of a long history of blood shedding, politically-motivated murders, several coups d’états, a wearing war with Iran(1980-1988), thirteen years of tiring and exhausting economic sanctions imposed by the United Nation after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait(1991-2003), and a ruthless totalitarian system that makes Iraq “suitable for nothing,” in the words of the Iraqi poet Adnan Al-Sayegh(2004, p.209). (For more information about the modern history of Iraq, see Al-Athari,2008 and Anderson and Stanfield, 2004)
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Assadi, Jamal, and Mahmoud Naamneh. "Intertextuality in Arabic Criticism: Saadi Yousef’s Mobile Model as an Example." Advances in Language and Literary Studies 9, no. 6 (2018): 49. http://dx.doi.org/10.7575/aiac.alls.v.9n.6p.49.

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This article traces the development of the notion of intertextuality among modern Arab critics back to its roots in the Western critical theory. It also studies the hypothesis, which supports the presence of a special mythological intertextuality in the poetry of Saadi Yousef, the modern Iraqi poet. His mythological intertextuality is manifested in the composition, and content of his poetry. In the process of employing the device of intertextuality, Saadi invests ancient Iraqi myths. This article, in which we will discuss the famous Babylonian myth known as Gilgamesh Epic, will refer to Saadi’s use of this device as “the intertextuality of the mobile model.” Compared with conventional types of intertextuality, this type combines between the past text, that is the myth, and the present text, i. e. the poem through three axes. First, the investment of a past myth to serve present purposes; second, the employment of a past myth to read the present and the third axis entails the use of the present for the sake of influencing the present text. The purpose is to illustrate the benefits of the past myths and the mechanisms employed by Saadi Yousef and to examine the goals that have motivated the poet to choose one of the most ancient texts written at all.
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Hasan, Muna Salah. "Review on the Child in Modern Iraqi Poetry." Indian Journal of Language and Linguistics 2, no. 2 (2021): 18–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.34256/ijll2123.

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The image of the child in its various shades is one of the common images in Arabic poems from the pre-Islamic era to the modern era, but it did not receive the attention of scholars, and it was not studied in depth showing its connotations and symbols. Hence came my study entitled "The Child in Contemporary Iraqi Poetry", which is an attempt to clarify the symbols of the word (the child) and what it indicates according to the context in which they are mentioned, as well as the statement of the aesthetic aspects of how to employ these symbols through the selection of poetic texts of modern poets in which the image of the child was mentioned Where this image was linked to the intellectual and political framework of the trends of Iraqi poets to create with it multiple connotations that were in harmony with the successive conflicts and revolutions that the poet employed to express intellectual, political and artistic positions. Modern Iraqi poetry by this expression means what many poets wrote in a non-traditional or traditional (classical) poetry curriculum in the literature of their languages. It appeared in Arabic literature at the end of the first half of the twentieth century, especially at the hands of Al-Rihani, Al-Sayyab, the angels and the Arab diaspora in a number of European countries that they went to settle in, especially Italy, France, Britain and then the American states. One of the most prominent differences raised by this trend was what was raised about (authenticity and contemporary) in his book and its production, over decades of years, which lasted about a century.
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Peled-Shapira, Hilla. "Days like Nights Indeed?" Welt des Islams 53, no. 1 (2013): 76–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700607-0004a0004.

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This paper deals with the methods which the Kurdish-Iraqi expatriate poet Buland Akram al-Ḥaydarī (1926 Baghdad–1996 London) used to express his experiences and feelings of exile as the representative of an entire generation of writers, and describes the relationship between intellectuals and the regime in Iraq in the mid-20th century. It analyzes the manner in which these methods contribute to the dissemination of his message in the process of literary communication. The main artistic method which will be examined is that of patterns and themes of time in his poems and their meanings, based on the collection Khuṭuwāt fī l-ghurba (Steps in Exile), in addition to other artistic devices found in his other works, in order to show how they contribute to understanding the evolution of ways of expression in Modern Iraqi literature versus Classical Arabic compositions. The paper consists of three sections: an introduction to cultural life in Iraq in the mid-20th century and the exile experienced by leftist writers; the unique artistic devices used by al-Ḥaydarī in his poems; and a comparison between expressions of time in Classical Arabic poetry and in the works of al-Ḥaydarī and his contemporaries, as a result of their relations with the regime.
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Mossaki, Nodar. "In memoriam: Izzaddin Mustafa Rasul (1934-2019), Iraqi Kurdish man of letters and Soviet-trained scholar." Kurdish Studies 9, no. 1 (2021): 113–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.33182/ks.v9i1.639.

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The literary scholar Izzaddin Mustafa Rasul (1934-2019) was one of the greatest Iraqi Kurdish scholars trained in the Soviet Union. He was one of a cohort of Iraqi students who received scholarships for study in the USSR in the wake of the 1958 coup that overthrew the Iraqi monarchy, and his time in the USSR coincided with the period of flourishing of Kurdish studies there. Rasul’s PhD dissertation analyzed the development of Kurdish literature within a schematic Marxist-Leninist developmental framework. In his major work, however, which focused on Ahmed Khani and his Mem û Zîn, he went well beyond the standard Soviet treatment of literary works and focused especially on the dimensions of Sufi theosophy and other Islamic content in the work. In this respect, Rasul’s work stands out as a rare exception in Soviet Oriental studies. It remains one of the most ambitious studies of the early modern Kurdish poet Khani.
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Alddin, Assist Prof Dr Israa Amer Shams. "Refusal Phylosoph , Semantics Dimensions in Fawzi Karim Poetry." ALUSTATH JOURNAL FOR HUMAN AND SOCIAL SCIENCES 221, no. 1 (2018): 1–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.36473/ujhss.v221i1.422.

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The research Title is (Refusal Phylosoph , Semantics Dimensions in Fawzi Karim Poetry ). He is an Iraqi Poet, Writer & Painter at Sixteenth decade. He left to London at seventeenth Last Century & Stayed there.He Published his Poetry in two Parts from Dar Al-Mada . I Prefered to Study his poetry semantically to refuse the philosophy of motherland & alienation effects. Because of combination of negative pattern with speech vocabulary.
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Mehta, Brinda. "Staging Tahrir: Laila Soliman’s Revolutionary Theatre." Review of Middle East Studies 47, no. 1 (2013): 49–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s2151348100056329.

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If one day, a people desire to live, Then fate will answer their call And their night will then begin to fade, And their chains break and fall.“Will to Live” Abī al-Qāsim al-ShābīOne of the most inspiring aspects of the Egyptian revolution was the outpouring of creative expression that accompanied the uprising’s social and political movements in the form of protest songs, poetry, slogans, chants, graffiti and installation art, street theatre, cartoons, among other forms of artistic inventiveness. Creative dissidence has always been an integral part of protest movements, as argued by Iraqi poet Sinan Antoon (2011): Poetry, novels and popular culture have chronicled and encapsulated the struggle of peoples against colonial rule and later, against postcolonial monarchies and dictatorships, so the poems, vignettes, and quotes from novels were all there in the collective unconscious.... The revolution introduced new songs, chants and tropes, but it refocused attention on an already existing, rich and living archive.... Contrary to all the brouhaha about Twitter and Facebook, what energized people in Tunisia and Egypt and elsewhere, aside from sociopolitical grievances and an accumulation of pain and anger, was a famous line of poetry by a Tunisian poet, al-Shabbi.Antoon evokes Abū al-Qāsim al-Shābī, whose poem “The Will to Live,” referenced in the epigraph, symbolized the battle cry of Tunisians in the anti-colonial struggles of the early 1900s. Refrains from the poem echoed in both Tunisia and Egypt during the Arab spring uprisings over one century later, thereby highlighting the intimate synergies between the creative imaginary and revolutionary action.
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Rahmani, Assist Prof Abdolrazagh, Associate Prof Eshagh Rahmani, and ,. MA student ,. Zahra Sakhaei manesh. "The impact of the quartets Omar Khayyam in the poetic experience of the Iraqi poet Zahawi." ALUSTATH JOURNAL FOR HUMAN AND SOCIAL SCIENCES 226, no. 3 (2018): 475–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.36473/ujhss.v226i3.106.

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The universality of literature has had great effects on literary unity. In this area, the effects of Arabic and Persian reflect the development of in-kind modeling of literary and literary overlap and become a wide field of comparative studies. Khayyam is considered to be one of the greatest men of the fifth century AH and has left a great literary imprint in the world of art and literature. One of the most famous of its variants is the reference to its quartets, which seem to have conflicting views of the universe and the Creator at first sight. This duplication, which we find in the quartets of the tents has produced many studies over the ages, including those Zahawi contemporary Iraqi poet, who was affected by the tents clearly. We find this effect when the quartets of the tents express the prose and the system, and also when it regulates its quadrilateral. We find that his idea inspired much of the quartets of tents. Here is the importance of studying the comparison between them through the quartets. And their cultural influences between them and this research includes common aspects between the quartets of these poets. The most important results we have reached in this study can be summarized as follows: Al-Zahawi was influenced by his quartets of the ideas and quartets of tents. The tents look at life and the universe with a pessimistic look and call for forgetting the melancholy of the world and its depression, while also drinking alcohol and Zahawi. The Arabization of the quartets of the tents by the Zahawi and the similarity of the contents of their quartets due to the cultural context common to them as a result of the knowledge of the Arab world on the ideas of tents. Such study confirms the connection and friction of both Arabic and Persian cultures.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Iraqi poet"

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Al-Athari, Lamees. ""This rhythm does not please me" : women protest war in Dunya Mikhail's poetry." Thesis, Manhattan, Kan. : Kansas State University, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/865.

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Gray, Chase W. "Petrocapitalism in Iraqi Kurdistan: Leveraging Oil and Gas Firms in Post-War Iraq." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2012. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/337.

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In the absence of a continued military presence in Iraq, the United States must use alternative means to achieve its foreign policy goals. Stated goals include maintaining influence, increasing stability in Iraq, Iran, and the Arabian Peninsula, and ensuring Iraq's territorial integrity. This paper suggests leveraging the power of American oil and gas firms operating in Iraqi Kurdistan given the relative ineffectiveness of the embassy in Baghdad and the hostility many Iraqis exhibit toward American diplomats. It first outlines American policy toward Iraqi Kurdistan from the end of the Gulf War to the present. Next it provides a brief overview of the current state of affairs in Iraqi politics and Iraq's oil and gas industry. Then the paper describes four specific ways in which supporting American oil and gas firms in Iraqi Kurdistan can help the United States achieve its foreign policy goals. First, it can check undue Shi'a centralization of power and keep Iraq from drifting too far into the Iranian sphere. Second, it can strengthen the Kurdish bargaining position with Baghdad and push Iraq toward resolving the status of Kirkuk and enacting a comprehensive hydrocarbons law. Third, oil and gas extraction through profit sharing contracts (PSCs) rather than technical services agreements (TSAs) would promote foreign direct investment and spur economic growth. Finally, private sector oil and gas companies could be a critical component in maintaining American influence with the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and the Government of Iraq (GOI) through their strong local ties. The last chapter is devoted to policy prescriptions for achieving the aforementioned goals.
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Erturk, Sait. "Reintegration of the Iraqi military in post-conflict era." Thesis, Monterey, Calif. : Springfield, Va. : Naval Postgraduate School ; Available from National Technical Information Service, 2005. http://library.nps.navy.mil/uhtbin/hyperion/05Mar%5FErturk.pdf.

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Thesis (M.A. in National Security Affairs)--Naval Postgraduate School, March 2005.<br>Thesis Advisor(s): Vali Nasr, Karen Guttieri. Includes bibliographical references (p. 125-134) Also available online.
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Farag, George. "Diaspora and transitional administration Shiite Iraqi diaspora and the administration of post-Saddam Hussein Iraq /." Related electronic resource: Current Research at SU : database of SU dissertations, recent titles available full text, 2007. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/syr/main.

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Saeed, Jabbar H. "Iraqi perspectives on post-invasion Iraq : a study of Iraqi views on the state of human rights, security, economy, democracy and sovereignty, 2003-2009." Thesis, University of Leicester, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/2381/33467.

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The aim of this study is to make an overall assessment of US policies in Iraq from the Iraqi perspective, taking the year 2003 as the launching point. That year witnessed the beginning of a chain of major events in the country’s history; the first was the decision by the US to wage war on Iraq on the 19th March, 2003, while the second was the collapse of Saddam’s regime on the 9th April, 2003. Concurrently, the country came under US and UK occupation according to UN Resolution 1483. This thesis seeks to explore the different views expressed by Iraqis regarding US policies towards Iraq subsequent to 2003, and to offer an analytical argument on the matter. Five major issues are examined closely, including: human rights, security, sovereignty, democracy and the economy; we believe problems surrounding these issues in the post-war period have had an adverse effect on the well-being of Iraqi society, thus they provide the central argument of this thesis. The primary source for the study is data collected from the Iraqi elite and the general public. The three areas in which the fieldwork for the study was carried out were Baghdad Fallujah and Unbar. Two main techniques have been applied in order to achieve the objective of this study. The results of the research suggest that Iraqis are of the view that economic factors are primarily the motive behind the invasion of Iraq given the natural abundance of oil resources in the nation. Iraqis are also of the opinion that, contrary to US claims of protecting human rights and democracy in Iraq, their hidden agenda was the security of the United States and Israel in the region.
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Maţoi, Ecaterina-Elena C. [Verfasser]. "Challenges of State-Building in Iraq : The Case of the Iraqi Army in Post-Saddam Era / Ecaterina-Elena C. Matoi." Bern : Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, 2021. http://d-nb.info/1228748721/34.

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Angeli, Nicolle C. "Adherence to Psychotherapy for Post-Traumatic Stress in Veterans of Military Combat in Afghanistan (Operation Enduring Freedom) and Iraq (Operation Iraqi Freedom)." Digital Archive @ GSU, 2009. http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/psych_diss/82.

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Elucidating factors associated with adherence to treatment for physical and mental health conditions is important, given well-documented associations between non-adherence and poor treatment outcomes. Researchers have worked to identify such factors; however, most studies focus on adherence to medical, rather than, psychological treatments. Clarifying variables that predict adherence to psychotherapy is particularly important for individuals with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), for whom treatment, which typically involves exposure to trauma-related stimuli and imagery, can be aversive. It may consequently be associated with high nonadherence rates, even though studies indicate that greater adherence to PTSD treatment relates to better treatment outcomes. Research needs to identify factors that increase or decrease the likelihood that affected individuals will enter and complete therapy. Although several studies to date have examined adherence to treatment for PTSD, this literature is limited on several fronts. First, studies on psychotherapy adherence have identified few consistent predictors of treatment adherence. Second, adherence to psychotherapy is rarely a central focus of treatment-related research; more typically, researchers treat adherence as secondary in importance to treatment outcomes. Third, little research on psychotherapy adherence has been theoretically driven. Fourth, little adherence research has focused on combat veterans with PTSD, who tend to have particularly poor treatment outcomes. Especially lacking is knowledge about predictors of adherence in veterans who have recently returned from combat; most research focuses on veterans of the Vietnam War, many of whom were initially traumatized decades earlier. The study tested the hypothesis that elevated reports of a specific type of PTSD symptom--avoidance/emotional numbing-- predicted poorer adherence to treatment in 160 veterans who received psychotherapy. No significant associations between avoidance and emotional numbing symptoms and adherence were found. However, emotional numbing was negatively related to psychotherapy adherence. Other variables typically related to PTSD and treatment outcomes were found to be important predictors of psychotherapy adherence and completion/noncompletion of therapy.
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Al-Baldawi, Hassan. "The right to freedom of peaceful assembly in post-invasion Iraq." Thesis, Umeå universitet, Juridiska institutionen, 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-184530.

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Hadhum, Haider S. "The media in transition : the rise of an 'independent' press in Post-Invasion Iraq and the American role in shaping the Iraqi press 2003-2005." Thesis, City University London, 2012. http://openaccess.city.ac.uk/1730/.

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This thesis covers the situation of the Iraqi press landscape after the toppling of Saddam’s regime on the 9th of April 2003. In particular, it attempts to disclose American interventions in the work of the Iraqi press in the period 2003-2006. It examines three main aspects of these interventions, as briefly summarized below: press legislation; planning and construction of new press entities; and attempts to influence pro-American press coverage following the invasion. Within a few weeks of the fall of Saddam’s regime, Iraq witnessed the launch of many newspapers, after many decades of government oppression and censorship. The phenomenal mushrooming of Iraqi local newspapers was used by the U.S government as an indication of success in democratizing a country in which the local press had suffered from the oppression of different military governments, and finally of Saddam Hussein and his notorious son Uday. However, this thesis shows that the flood of newspapers caused anarchy in the press market. As a result there was confusion among many readers about the credibility of the new press, because of the lack of professionalism in its coverage. - The existing, laws active in Iraq restricted the freedom of the press, and there was a need to establish a new legal framework for the media. The U.S Army’s first reforms abolished several articles of the press laws. This study shows, however, that these reforms had questionable practical effect. The reforms abolished laws relating to the Ba’ath regime and Saddam Hussein, which were in fact already redundant, given the collapse of the regime. Meanwhile other articles in the Iraqi penal code, prescribing measures to punish newspapers, journalists or editors, were left intact when they should have been changed or cancelled. In addition, the Coalition Provisional Authority added an article that gave the head of the CPA the right to close or to punish any media entity if they violated certain conditions. - The thesis shows that the Americans’ early plans to shape the Iraqi press were mostly motivated by the need to create a press friendly to the American occupation, and to confront anti American messages or campaigns. The Department of Defense handled the early plans to “build” such media entities, but the Pentagon was not successful, as the main contractor was oriented more towards information control, and lacked experience in building media organizations. As a result of this the U.S plans for the Iraqi media in general stumbled, and did not make the expected progress. - American intervention in the Iraqi press was not limited to attempts to create an official “friendly” press, but extended into persistent efforts to influence the local “independent” press. This thesis uses evidence based on original interviews with leading figures from the Iraqi press to build up a detailed picture of these attempts. Different American military units or institutions used different procedures to pass messages that were directed to helping polish the image of the American soldiers, and at the same time demonize their “enemies”. One of these procedures was to create friendly “independent” newspapers, covering certain events that would show the U.S Army as helping to establish new public services. The other favoured procedure was to bribe local journalists to cover such events and publish them in existing newspapers, or to pay newspapers to publish articles written by American soldiers and then translated into Arabic.
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Moody, Janice Lynn, and Ron Robinson. "Operation Iraqi freedom and mental health of Vietnam veterans." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 2005. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/2920.

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The purpose of this study was to provide a clear conceptualization of how Vietnam veterans who have previously been diagnosed with PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder) respond and cope with the emotional and psychological effects presented by the present war in Iraq.
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Books on the topic "Iraqi poet"

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DeYoung, Terri. Placing the poet: Badr Shakir al-Sayyab and postcolonial Iraq. State Unversity of New York Press, 1998.

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Wounded: A legacy of Operation Iraqi Freedom. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2013.

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Chuck, Dean, ed. Down range: To Iraq and back. WordSmith Publishing, 2005.

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Lally, Michael. March 18, 2003: A poem. Libellum, 2004.

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March 18, 2003: A poem for peace. Edizione Charta, 2006.

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Dōtonbori no ame ni wakarete irai nari: Senryū sakka Kishimoto Suifu to sono jidai. Chūō Kōronsha, 1998.

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Army of one: Six American veterans after Iraq. Scheidegger & Spiess, 2013.

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Veterans' journeys home: Life after Afghanistan and Iraq. Paradigm Publishers, 2011.

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At war with PTSD: Battling post traumatic stress disorder with virtual reality. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012.

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al- Bīʼah al-adabīyah fī al-Ḥīrah fī ẓilāl dawlat al-Manādhirah. Ibrāhīm ʻAbd Allāh Ḍuḥayyān al-Ḍuḥayyān, 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Iraqi poet"

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Gupta, Suman. "‘Laws’ for Poets: Poetry Anthologies." In Imagining Iraq. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230298118_2.

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Fiddes, James F. D. "Iraq: reality bites." In Post-Cold War Anglo-American Military Intervention. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429397554-9.

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Moore, Michele, and Heather Brunskell-Evans. "Nobel Prizes for Iraqi Researchers?" In Reimagining Research for Reclaiming the Academy in Iraq: Identities and Participation in Post-Conflict Enquiry. SensePublishers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6091-897-1_1.

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Kumral, Mehmet Akif. "Post-Script: Perpetuation of Partial Cooperation." In Rethinking Turkey-Iraq Relations. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-55193-1_7.

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Eriksson, Jacob. "International and Regional Dimensions of Iraq’s Post-ISIS Recovery." In Iraq After ISIS. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-00955-7_8.

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Efrati, Noga. "Women under the Monarchy: A Backdrop for Post-Saddam Events." In Iraq Between Occupations. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230115491_7.

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Eppel, Michael. "Kurdish Leadership in Post-Saddam Iraq: National Challenges and Changing Conditions." In Iraq Between Occupations. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230115491_5.

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Dieck, Helene. "The Iraq Surge." In The Influence of Public Opinion on Post-Cold War US Military Interventions. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137519238_10.

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Sassoon, Joseph. "Management of Iraq’s Economy Pre and Post the 2003 War: An Assessment." In Iraq Between Occupations. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230115491_12.

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Černy, Hannes. "Iraqi Kurdistan and the PKK in the post-2003 Middle East." In Iraqi Kurdistan, the PKK and International Relations. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315560212-9.

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Conference papers on the topic "Iraqi poet"

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Ostbo, Bruce I., and Robert E. Hunt. "Wartime Assessment of the Port of Umm Qasr, Iraq." In Ports Conference 2004. American Society of Civil Engineers, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/40727(2004)18.

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Jahjah, Dr Munzer, Prof Carlo Ulivieri, Prof Antonio Invernizzi, and Arch Roberto Parapetti. "Archaeological remote sensing application pre-post war situation of Babylon archaeological site - Iraq." In 57th International Astronautical Congress. American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.2514/6.iac-06-b1.4.01.

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Zaid, A. M., and D. L. Whitman. "Oil Supply and Demand Analysis: A Price Forecast for the Post-Iran-Iraq War Period." In SPE Hydrocarbon Economics and Evaluation Symposium. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/18916-ms.

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Kwon, Jiwoon, Sung J. Lee, Ghatu Subhash, Michael King, and Malisa Sarntinoranont. "Shock Induced Deformation and Damage in Rat Brain Slices." In ASME 2010 Summer Bioengineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/sbc2010-19448.

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Shock-induced traumatic brain injury (TBI) and post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) have received increasing attention because many soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan suffer from these disorders. The shock loading duration is typically on the order of few hundred microseconds and hence the strain rate of deformation is very high. Therefore, in the current study, high-rate loading experiments were conducted on brain tissue slices which mimic loading durations encountered in shock loading [1]. The polymer split Hopkinson pressure bar (PSHPB) was used to generate high rate loading as a high speed digital camera captured the deformation of brain tissue. To further clarify initial injury events, post-test damage was assessed through histological studies. This experimental model provides the opportunity for time-resolved visualization of actual tissue deformation thus allowing improved ability to isolate damage-sensitive tissue regions.
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Woollard, Christopher C. "An IIF Based Post Production Infrastructure Developed for Feature Film Production and Higher Education in Iraq." In SMPTE Technical Conference. IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5594/m001508.

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Istepanian, Robert S. H., Alaa Mousa, Nazar Haddad, et al. "The potential of m-health systems for diabetes management in post conflict regions a case study from Iraq." In 2014 36th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/embc.2014.6944414.

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Rizzo, Albert A., Ken Graap, Robert N. Mclay, et al. "Virtual Iraq: Initial Case Reports from a VR Exposure Therapy Application for Combat-Related Post Traumatic Stress Disorder." In 2007 Virtual Rehabilitation. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icvr.2007.4362152.

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Montgomery, Louise. "Bush, the Media & the New American Way." In 2003 Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/2726.

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The run-up to a full-scale U.S. military attack on Iraq - “shock and awe” -- provided an unusual and ideal test the effectiveness of a parsimonious content analysis methodology designed to determine when a national leader made or would make a decision to go to war. As W. Ben Hunt’s work that is the model for this study anticipated, editorials in The Wall Street Journal clearly ramped up war fever with not only the number of “get to it, George” editorials but also with the language. Critical editorials ad-vised/urged/demanded Bush to get on with the second phase of the long-planned remaking of the Middle East -- taking out Saddam Hussein. The paper links several aspects of post-Cold War, postmodern American life -- low levels of knowledge, use of poll data throughout society, declining news consumption and others -- to paint a picture of a newly vulnerable society, one willing - polls would indicate - to listen to and follow clear, perhaps simplistic, policies even to the point of a pre-emptive strike on a small nation that many could not locate on a map.
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Serres, Jennifer L., Dan V. Jones, Rabih E. Tannous, Nathan Dau, and Cynthia A. Bir. "Evaluation of Lower Limb Injury Mitigation Techniques for High Velocity Impacts With the Mil-LX." In ASME 2011 Summer Bioengineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/sbc2011-53269.

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Improvised Explosive Devices (IED) and landmines present a significant threat to mounted troops currently serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. As a result of these threats, a substantial number of lower limb injuries are sustained by service members. Due to this reality, a critical factor in military vehicle design is the mitigation of lower limb trauma. Past studies have shown that the standard Hybrid III and THOR-LX are not biofidelic in military axial loading conditions (up to 12 m/s). Both of these surrogates over predict axial forces compared to Post Mortem Human Specimens (PMHS) [1]. As a result, a new surrogate was developed, Mil-LX (Military Lower Extremity), that matches the PMHS response for axial loading of the lower leg up to 12 m/s [2,3]. While injury mitigation techniques, such as energy absorbing mats, foot rests, and isolation floors, have been effective in reducing lower extremity injuries in live fire test events, there are several variants of each of these methods. Additionally, it has also been suggested that the positioning of the lower limbs may affect the load sustained by these extremities [4].
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Ganpule, Shailesh, Robert Salzar, and Namas Chandra. "Response of Post-Mortem Human Head Under Primary Blast Loading Conditions: Effect of Blast Overpressures." In ASME 2013 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2013-63910.

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Blast induced neurotrauma (BINT), and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are identified as the “signature injuries” of recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. The occurrence of mild to moderate traumatic brain injury (TBI) in blasts is controversial in the medical and scientific communities because the manifesting symptoms occur without visible injuries. Whether the primary blast waves alone can cause TBI is still an open question, and this work is aimed to address this issue. We hypothesize that if a significant level of intracranial pressure (ICP) pulse occurs within the brain parenchyma when the head is subjected to pure primary blast, then blast induced TBI is likely to occur. In order to test this hypothesis, three post mortem human heads are subjected to simulated primary blast loading conditions of varying intensities (70 kPa, 140 kPa and 200 kPa) at the Trauma Mechanics Research Facility (TMRF), University of Nebraska-Lincoln. The specimens are placed inside the 711 mm × 711 mm square shock tube at a section where known profiles of incident primary blast (Friedlander waveform in this case) are obtained. These profiles correspond to specific field conditions (explosive strength and stand-off distance). The specimen is filled with a brain simulant prior to experiments. ICPs, surface pressures, and surface strains are measured at 11 different locations on each post mortem human head. A total of 27 experiments are included in the analysis. Experimental results show that significant levels of ICP occur throughout the brain simulant. The maximum peak ICP is measured at the coup site (nearest to the blast) and gradually decreases towards the countercoup site. When the incident blast intensity is increased, there is a statistically significant increase in the peak ICP and total impulse (p&lt;0.05). Even after five decades of research, the brain injury threshold values for blunt impact cases are based on limited experiments and extensive numerical simulations; these are still evolving for sports-related concussion injuries. Ward in 1980 suggested that no brain injury will occur when the ICP&lt;173 kPa, moderate to severe injury will occur when 173 kPa&lt;ICP&lt;235 kPa and severe injury will occur when ICP&gt;235 kPa for blunt impacts. Based on these criteria, no injury will occur at incident blast overpressure level of 70 kPa, moderate to severe injuries will occur at 140 kPa and severe head injury will occur at the incident blast overpressure intensity of 200 kPa. However, more work is needed to confirm this finding since peak ICP alone may not be sufficient to predict the injury outcome.
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Reports on the topic "Iraqi poet"

1

Hatch, Richard O. Restoring the Rule of Law in Post-War Iraq: Steps, Missteps and a Call to Maximize International Support for Iraqi-Led Processes. Defense Technical Information Center, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada424378.

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Habel, Gregg T. The Future of NATO in the Post Operation Iraqi Freedom World. Defense Technical Information Center, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada441622.

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van den Toorn, Christine, Mohammed Hussein, and Ahmed Ali. IRIS Booklet: March 2017 POST - ISIS IRAQ. American University of Iraq, Sulaimani, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.26598/auis_iris_2017_03_01.

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Mendenhall, Robert K. Pre-War Planning for a Post-War Iraq. Defense Technical Information Center, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada432654.

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Blank, Stephen J. Strategic Effects of the Conflict with Iraq. Post-Soviet States. Defense Technical Information Center, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada414398.

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Klingelhoefer, Mark D. Captured Enemy Ammunition in Operation Iraqi Freedom and Its Strategic Importance in Post-Conflict Operations. Defense Technical Information Center, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada431848.

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Kadhim, Abbas. A Plan for Post-Surge Iraq. Strategic Insights, Volume 6, Issue 6. Defense Technical Information Center, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada519761.

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Diaz del Rio, Arsenio. Rebuilding the Transatlantic Partnership: US-EU Relations in the Post-Iraq Era. Defense Technical Information Center, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada480713.

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Howard, James R. Preparing for War, Stumbling to Peace. Planning for Post-Conflict Operations in Iraq. Defense Technical Information Center, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada430508.

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Terrill, W. A. Nationalism, Sectarianism, and the Future of the U.S. Presence in Post-Saddam Iraq. Defense Technical Information Center, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada416597.

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