Academic literature on the topic 'John Henryism'

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Journal articles on the topic "John Henryism"

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Cuffee, Yendelela L., Lee Hargraves, Milagros Rosal, Becky A. Briesacher, Jeroan J. Allison, and Sandral Hullett. "An Examination of John Henryism, Trust, and Medication Adherence Among African Americans With Hypertension." Health Education & Behavior 47, no. 1 (October 8, 2019): 162–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1090198119878778.

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Background. John Henryism is defined as a measure of active coping in response to stressful experiences. John Henryism has been linked with health conditions such as diabetes, prostate cancer, and hypertension, but rarely with health behaviors. Aims. We hypothesized that reporting higher scores on the John Henryism Scale may be associated with poorer medication adherence, and trust in providers may mediate this relationship. Method. We tested this hypothesis using data from the TRUST study. The TRUST study included 787 African Americans with hypertension receiving care at a safety-net hospital. Ordinal logistic regression was used to examine the relationship between John Henryism and medication adherence. Results. Within our sample of African Americans with hypertension, lower John Henryism scores was associated with poorer self-reported adherence (low, 20.62; moderate, 19.19; high, 18.12; p < .001). Higher John Henryism scores were associated with lower trust scores (low John Henryism: 40.1; high John Henryism: 37.9; p < .001). In the adjusted model, each 1-point increase in the John Henryism score decreased the odds of being in a better cumulative medication adherence category by a factor of 4% (odds ratio = 0.96, p = .014, 95% confidence interval = 0.93-0.99). Twenty percent of the association between medication adherence and John Henryism was mediated by trust (standard deviation = 0.205, 95% confidence interval = 0.074-0.335). Discussion. This study provides important insights into the complex relationship between psychological responses and health behaviors. It also contributes to the body of literature examining the construct of John Henryism among African Americans with hypertension. Conclusion. The findings of this study support the need for interventions that promote healthful coping strategies and patient–provider trust.
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Vargas, Emily A., Yidi Li, Ramaswami Mahalingham, Pan Hui, Grace Liu, Marissa Lapedis, and J. Rebecca Liu. "The double edge sword of John Henryism: Impact on patients’ health in the People’s Republic of China." Journal of Health Psychology 25, no. 13-14 (September 19, 2018): 2374–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1359105318800141.

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The People’s Republic of China has experienced extraordinary economic growth, which is associated with increases in chronic health stressors. We examined the impact of John Henryism—a coping mechanism—on various health indicators in a sample of patients ( n = 642) in China. John Henryism significantly related to increased medical adherence [Formula: see text] and health-promotional behaviors [Formula: see text]. John Henryism predicted several indicators of psychological health through social support. John Henryism was also related to increased alcoholism [Formula: see text]. The findings highlight the complexity and paradoxical implications of John Henryism on health. Implications are discussed in relation to China’s epidemiological and age demographic shifts.
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Robinson, Millicent N., and Courtney S. Thomas Tobin. "Is John Henryism a Health Risk or Resource?: Exploring the Role of Culturally Relevant Coping for Physical and Mental Health among Black Americans." Journal of Health and Social Behavior 62, no. 2 (June 2021): 136–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00221465211009142.

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Research shows that John Henryism, a high-effort, active coping style, is associated with poor physical health, whereas others suggest it may be psychologically beneficial. As such, it is unclear whether John Henryism represents a health risk or resource for black Americans and whether its impact varies across sociodemographic and gender groups. The present study used data from a representative community sample of black Americans (n = 627) from the Nashville Stress and Health Study (2011–2014) to clarify the physical and mental health consequences of John Henryism by assessing its relationship with depressive symptoms and allostatic load (AL). Results indicate that John Henryism is associated with increased AL scores and fewer depressive symptoms. Additionally, the association between John Henryism and AL is conditional on socioeconomic status. Study results underscore the importance of evaluating both physical and mental health to clarify the health significance of John Henryism among black Americans.
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Bernard, Donte L., Shawn C. T. Jones, and Vanessa V. Volpe. "Impostor Phenomenon and Psychological Well-Being: The Moderating Roles of John Henryism and School Racial Composition Among Black College Students." Journal of Black Psychology 46, no. 2-3 (March 2020): 195–227. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0095798420924529.

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The impostor phenomenon (IP), or erroneous cognitions of intellectual incompetence, is a risk factor for poor psychological adjustment among Black emerging adults. Grounded in Lazarus and Folkman’s Stress and Coping Framework, the current study investigated John Henryism’s active coping and institutional racial composition as moderators of the association between IP and indicators of psychological well-being among 266 Black students (77% women; Mage = 19.87) attending predominately White institutions (PWIs) and historically Black colleges/universities (HBCUs). Hierarchical moderation regression analyses revealed that IP was associated with decreases in well-being indicators among students attending PWIs and HBCUs. Moreover, students who attended PWIs and reported higher levels of John Henryism (+1 SD) were most vulnerable to increases in social anxiety, particularly at higher levels of IP. Results suggest that the interaction between IP, John Henrysim, and institutional racial composition may negatively influence psychological well-being. We discuss how these findings can be used to inform clinical and educational practices to best support Black college students.
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Volpe, Vanessa V., Danny Rahal, Melissa Holmes, and Susana Zelaya Rivera. "Is Hard Work and High Effort Always Healthy for Black College Students?: John Henryism in the Face of Racial Discrimination." Emerging Adulthood 8, no. 3 (October 9, 2018): 245–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2167696818804936.

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Differences in exposure to racial discrimination and in coping mechanisms can shape physiological health among emerging adults. This study, grounded in the Biopsychosocial Model, examines whether John Henryism active coping moderates the relation between exposure to racial discrimination and blood pressure in Black college students ( N = 128, M age = 19.33) attending a predominantly White institution. Analyses showed that John Henryism moderated the relation between racial discrimination and diastolic blood pressure but not systolic blood pressure. When participants reported using mean and high levels of John Henryism, more frequent exposure to racial discrimination was significantly associated with higher diastolic blood pressure, B mean = 1.70, t(92) = 2.11, p = .038; B high = 1.91, t(92) = 2.33, p = .022. Results suggest that more frequent exposure to racial discrimination, in the context of increased use of John Henryism, may be associated with greater cardiovascular risk for Black individuals during the transition to adulthood.
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Griggs, Jennifer J., and Julie B. Mallinger. "JOHN HENRYISM—THE SAME OLD SONG?" American Journal of Public Health 94, no. 10 (October 2004): 1658—a—1659. http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/ajph.94.10.1658-a.

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Flaskerud, Jacquelyn H. "Coping and Health Status: John Henryism." Issues in Mental Health Nursing 33, no. 10 (September 27, 2012): 712–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/01612840.2012.673695.

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Hill, Labarron K., and Lori S. Hoggard. "Active coping moderates associations among race-related stress, rumination, and depressive symptoms in emerging adult African American women." Development and Psychopathology 30, no. 5 (November 19, 2018): 1817–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0954579418001268.

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AbstractCross-sectional and longitudinal research has shown that race-related stress is associated with increased depressive symptoms among racial/ethnic minorities. Rumination has long been considered a maladaptive self-regulatory response to race-related stress, and growing evidence suggests that it may be an important link in the relation between race-related stress and depression. More adaptive forms of self-regulation, such as active coping, may counteract the negative impact of rumination. We examined the influence of rumination on the relation between race-related stress and depressive symptoms in a sample (N= 69) of young adult (mean age = 20 ± 1.5 years) African American women. We also considered the possible moderating effects of John Henryism, a form of persistent and determined goal striving, and vagally mediated heart rate variability, a purported biomarker of coping. Anticipatory race-related stress was indirectly associated with depressive symptoms through rumination: estimate = 0.07, 95% confidence interval [0.01, 0.16]. Both John Henryism and vagally mediated heart rate variability moderated the relationship between race-related stress and rumination; however, only John Henryism reliably influenced the indirect association between race-related stress and depression through rumination. We discuss these findings in the context of growing research examining the interplay between cultural and biological factors in the risk for poorer mental health.
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WEINRICH, SALLY P., MARTIN C. WEINRICH, JULIAN E. KEIL, PETER C. GAZES, and ELLEN POTTER. "THE JOHN HENRYISM AND FRAMINGHAM TYPE A SCALES." American Journal of Epidemiology 128, no. 1 (July 1988): 165–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a114938.

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James, Sherman A. "John Henryism and the health of African-Americans." Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry 18, no. 2 (June 1994): 163–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf01379448.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "John Henryism"

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Barnett, Kierra. "John Henryism, Socioeconomic Status and Health Behaviors among African Americans." The Ohio State University, 2020. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu157798346880613.

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Brumley, Jessica. "Testing a Model of Bacterial Vaginosis among Black Women." Scholar Commons, 2012. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/3995.

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Bacterial Vaginosis is an inbalance of vaginal flora which has been associated with increased risk of numerous gynecological and obstetric morbidities including increased risk of acquisition of HIV from an infected partner and increased risk of preterm delivery. Black race has been consistently identified as a risk factor for BV. Black women also suffer from significant disparities in most of the morbidities also associated with BV when compared to women of other ethnicities and races. Traditional predictors of BV such as douching practices and sexual behaviors do not fully account for the racial disparities in BV prevalence. Researchers have begun to explore the potential relationship between stress and BV. Also, perceived racism has been identified as a potential stressor contributing to the health outcomes of Black women. The purpose of this study was to test a predictive model of bacterial vaginosis among Black women. The Allostatic Load Model was the theoretical framework. Participants (N=94) completed a self administered questionnaire and interview including measures of perceived stress, preceived racism, behavioral responses to stress and specific behavioral responses to racism along with traditional predictors of BV. Measurement scales included the Cohen Perceived Stress Scale, the John Henryism Scale of Active Coping, the Everyday Perceived Racial Discrimination Index, the Experiences of Discrimination Scale and the Vines Telephone Administered Perceived Racism Scale (TPRS) which included a behavioral responses to racism subscale. Bacterial vaginosis was diagnosed utilizing a self-collected vaginal swab which was analyzed utilizing the BVBlue point of care testing kit. Twenty percent (N=19) of participants screened positive for bacterial vaginosis. Douching and sexual activity in the last three months and education were significantly associated with bacterial vaginosis. Age, income, hormonal contraceptive use and condom use were not associated with BV. Neither perceived stress nor perceived racism were associated with bacterial vaginosis. After logistic regression analysis, only education continued to be a significant predictor of BV. The lack of an association between BV and the main study variables may have been related to young age of the sample or the low rates of high perceived stress and high perceived racism. Perceived stress was positively associated with perceived racism and behavioral responses to stress. This association is likely a reflection of the stressful nature of perceived racism. Further research is needed to better understand how the stressful nature of racism and behavioral responses to stressors may influence health outcomes and if interventions can be utilized to promote adaptive behavioral responses.
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Books on the topic "John Henryism"

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John Henry's partner speaks: Poems. Cincinnati, OH: WordTech Editions, 2008.

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Abercrombie, John Henry. John Henry's backyard grilling and barbecuing. Houston, TX: John Henry's Press, 2000.

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Shakespeare, William. HenryIV, part one. Edited by Bevington David, Kastan David Scott, Hammersmith James P, and Turner Robert Kean. New York: Bantam Books, 1988.

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Sherman James on John Henryism. 1 Oliver's Yard, 55 City Road, London EC1Y 1SP United Kingdom: SAGE Publications Ltd., 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781529776980.

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Weinrich, Sally Powers. THE JOHN HENRYISM AND THE FRAMINGHAM TYPE A SCALES: RELATIONSHIPS WITH BLOOD PRESSURE IN BLACK AND WHITE ELDERLY INDIVIDUALS (HARD-DRIVING, PERSONALITY, SOUTH CAROLINA). 1986.

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Pool, John Henry. John Henry's Parade of Pet Poems. Vanguard Press, 2004.

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Littke, Lael. Olympia Odette presents John Henry's nails, rails, and donkey tails. Thinking Well, 1991.

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McNeil, Bryan T. Conclusion: John Henry, Efficiency, and Community. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036439.003.0010.

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This chapter discusses the origin of the John Henry legend and how it has been attributed to West Virginia around the time railroads expanded into the new frontier, seeking the region's rich raw materials. Though there are many interpretations of the legend, John Henry still serves as a parable for the shift to modern industrial society and its ramifications. The social struggles represented by the conflict over mountaintop removal belong not to John Henry's era, but to a subsequent social shift that West Virginians and Americans in general struggled with at the turn of the twenty-first century. Nevertheless, the relationships between corporate efficiency and community bonds are similar enough to warrant revisiting the parable.
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Dunaway, Billy. Duns Scotus’s Epistemic Argument against Divine Illumination. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198798705.003.0004.

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Theories of “divine illumination” were popular from St Augustine through the Middle Ages. Henry of Ghent is traditionally thought of as providing one of the last and most sophisticated theories of Divine Illumination. This chapter examines one of John Duns Scotus’s main arguments against Henry’s theory of Divine Illumination. The chapter reads Scotus as claiming that Henry’s theory aims, but fails, to avoid skepticism—the conclusion that we can’t have any knowledge on the basis of sensation. It shows how this argument can be understood formally on the basis of an analogy with modal logic, which Scotus explicitly calls attention to. The chapter argues that this way of understanding Scotus’s argument points toward some important refinements that contemporary anti-risk principles in epistemology will need to account for.
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Gunn, Steven. Caitiffs and villains of simple birth. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199659838.003.0001.

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The central role played in Henry VII’s government by low-born lawyers, financial officials, and household men was recognized by contemporaries and has been stressed by historians. Yet, with a few exceptions, their careers have not been examined in detail. This chapter introduces those of Henry’s ‘new men’ already well known from the work of other scholars—Sir Reynold Bray, Edmund Dudley, and Sir Richard Empson—and others who demand further investigation. These include financial officers and household administrators such as Sir Thomas Lovell, Sir Henry Wyatt, Sir Andrew Windsor, Sir John Hussey, and Sir Robert Southwell; courtiers, military commanders, and diplomats like Sir Edward Poynings and Sir Thomas Brandon; and servants of Prince Henry like Sir Henry Marney.
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Book chapters on the topic "John Henryism"

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Neighbors, Harold W., Darrell L. Hudson, and Kai McKeever Bullard. "The Challenge of Understanding the Mental Health of African Americans: The Risks and Rewards of Segregation, Support, and John Henryism." In Handbook of Race and Development in Mental Health, 45–66. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-0424-8_4.

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Long, David E. "Darwin’s Hammer and John Henry’s Hammer." In Cultural Studies of Science Education, 149–66. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-1808-1_8.

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James, Sherman A. "8. John Henryism, Structural Racism, and Cardiovascular Health Risks in Black Americans." In Racism: Science & Tools for the Public Health Professional. American Public Health Association, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/9780875533049ch08.

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"“THE LEGEND OF JOHN HENRY’S HAMMER”." In Trains, Jesus, and Murder, 95–106. 1517 Media, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvcb5bhm.12.

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"The bibliography of John F. Henry’s writings." In Marx, Veblen, and the Foundations of Heterodox Economics, 343–50. Routledge, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315756868-26.

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Carpenter, David. "From Henry’s Birth to the End of the Minority 1207–1227." In Henry III, 1–57. Yale University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300238358.003.0001.

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This chapter discusses the period from Henry III's birth to the end of the minority. Henry was born on October 1, 1207, in the royal castle of Winchester. Henry's birth strengthened King John's immediate political position and secured the future of his dynasty, what he later called ‘our perpetual hereditary succession’. Around 1211 or 1212, John made a major decision about Henry's future by entrusting him to the guardianship of Peter des Roches, bishop of Winchester. Bishop Peter was still impacting on Henry's life and envenoming English politics more than twenty years later. The chapter then details Henry's accession to the throne, after which his governors issued a new version of Magna Carta.
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Walker, Greg. "Discord, Dissent, and Division." In John Heywood, 207–25. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198851516.003.0010.

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Even if we cannot follow Heywood’s engagement with the fine details of political events in his work in these years in quite the way that we could through his earlier interludes, it is nonetheless possible, and important, to track his path against the wider picture of English Reformation politics, the advance of royal policy and the reactions it provoked, in order to see how the twists and turns of Fortune’s favour affected him, his family, and influential patrons such as Mary Tudor, and how and why Heywood was brought to his own crisis of conscience in the winter of 1543. This chapter examines Heywood’s fortunes in the years following More’s death against the curious contortions of Henry VIII’s religious policy, describing the evolution of Henry’s Erasmian ‘middle way’ in religion, and the tensions that it permitted and exacerbated, setting the scene for Heywood’s condemnation for treason for denying the Royal Supremacy in 1542.
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Carpenter, David. "The Last Years of the Personal Rule 1255–1257." In Henry III, 611–74. Yale University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300238358.003.0012.

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This chapter reflects on the last years of Henry III's personal rule. After Henry's return to England, a degree of political calm is suggested by the paucity of notes on the chancery rolls stating on whose authority letters had been issued. The almost blanket coverage of such notes had lapsed during the course of 1253 and was not revived. Henry was also working with his council. How frequently and formally it met is unknown, but it was certainly involved in a wide variety of business. Indeed, in 1257 it attempted to reform the king's finances and lay down rules for its own conduct. Some of its membership is clear: the king's foreign relatives, the bishop of Worcester, Richard of Cornwall, Richard de Clare, John fitzGeoffrey, Hugh Bigod (Roger Bigod's brother), John Mansel, the household stewards, and the king's senior judges, with Henry of Bath now returning to head the court coram rege. Yet there was also, in Henry's relations with his council, something which foreshadowed the crash to come. For Henry remained quite able to disregard its advice and forge ahead on his own. Over the Sicilian affair he did so with cataclysmic consequences.
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Comstock, Anna Botsford. "Return to Cornell." In The Comstocks of Cornell-The Definitive Autobiography, edited by Karen Penders St Clair, 153–80. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501716270.003.0007.

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This chapter recounts Anna Botsford and John Henry Comstock's return to Ithaca, as well as Henry's return to entomology at Cornell University. Henry was given a new laboratory on the second floor of McGraw Hall. In November of 1881, the University raised the salaries of the assistant professors, which allowed the Comstocks to pay the mortgage of their house. It was about this time that Henry began seriously to write a textbook for use in his classes. In March of 1882, he made an address before a Teachers' Institute held in Ithaca, asking teachers to interest the children in their natural environment. Listening to this address inspired Anna to pursue nature study work.
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Comstock, Anna Botsford. "Entomologist to U. S. Department of Agriculture." In The Comstocks of Cornell-The Definitive Autobiography, edited by Karen Penders St Clair, 117–52. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501716270.003.0006.

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This chapter describes Anna Botsford and John Henry Comstock's life in Washington, the entomologists who worked with the Comstocks there, and their social connections. On May 1, 1879, Henry became the U.S. Commissioner of Agriculture. Thus, he entered upon his duties as entomologist to the Department of Agriculture and into a very cordial association with Commissioner William G. Le Duc. Following his appointment, Henry asked for a two-year leave of absence from Cornell University. This was granted on the condition that he return for a fortnight in May to complete his course of lectures. As soon as they were settled in Washington, Anna went to Henry's office every day to help him with the many details of the department. As a result of this, she was offered a position to work for her husband.
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Conference papers on the topic "John Henryism"

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Jones, M. Brandon, Dena M. Smith, Margaret Fraiser, Aisha Morris, and Cheryl L. B. Manning. "JOHN HENRYISM: THE IMPACTS OF TOXIC RESEARCH ENVIRONMENTS ON WELL BEING AND SCIENTIFIC PRODUCTIVITY." In GSA Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona, USA - 2019. Geological Society of America, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2019am-339465.

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