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1

Polak, Sara, and Daniel Trottier, eds. Violence and Trolling on Social Media. Amsterdam University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789462989481.

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‘Trolls for Trump’, virtual rape, fake news — social media discourse, including forms of virtual and real violence, has become a formidable, yet elusive, political force. What characterizes online vitriol? How do we understand the narratives generated, and also address their real-world — even life-and-death— impact? How can hatred, bullying, and dehumanization on social media platforms be addressed and countered in a post-truth world? Violence and Trolling on Social Media: History, Affect, and Effects of Online Vitriol unpacks discourses, metaphors, dynamics, and framing on social media, in or
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Česálková, Lucie, Johannes Praetorius-Rhein, Perrine Val, and Paolo Villa. Non-Fiction Cinema in Postwar Europe. Amsterdam University Press, 2024. https://doi.org/10.5117/9789463725583.

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After WWII, cinema was everywhere: in movie theatres, public squares, factories, schools, trial courts, trains, museums, and political meetings. Seen today, documentaries and newsreels, as well as the amateur production, show the kaleidoscopic portrait of a changing Europe. How did these cinematic images contribute to shaping the new societies emerging from the ashes of war, both in the Western and in the Eastern bloc? Why were they so crucial in framing and regulating new places and practices, political systems, economic dynamics, educational frameworks, and memory communities? This edited vo
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Vreese, Claes H. de, and Sophie Lecheler. News Framing Effects. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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Vreese, Claes H. de, and Sophie Lecheler. News Framing Effects. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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Vreese, Claes H. de, and Sophie Lecheler. News Framing Effects. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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Vreese, Claes H. de, and Sophie Lecheler. News Framing Effects. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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7

News Framing Effects. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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8

Lecheler, Sophie, and Claes H. De Vreese. Introduction to News Framing Effects Research: Theory and Practice. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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9

Dekavalla, Marina. Framing referendum campaigns in the news. Manchester University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526119896.001.0001.

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This book discusses the framing of referendum campaigns in the news media, focusing particularly on the case of the 2014 Scottish independence referendum. Using a comprehensive content analysis of print and broadcast coverage as well as in-depth interviews with broadcast journalists and their sources during this campaign, it provides an account of how journalists construct the frames that define their coverage of contested political campaigns. It views the mediation process from the perspective of those who participate directly in it, namely journalists and political communicators. It puts for
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Langbein, Julia, Mary Cosgrove, and Anne Fuchs, eds. Framing Ageing. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350341449.

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Framing Ageing, available open access, addresses scholars from across the Humanities and Social Sciences who want to approach the urgent topic of old age in their work, mapping the intellectual state of the field and putting the most salient concepts in action. Bringing together established and emerging scholars of old age from the humanities and social sciences as well as gerontologists and medical practitioners, this open access book showcases new scholarship and provides new methods and terms for ongoing conversations about old age as an object of analysis in contemporary culture. Cultural
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Kay, Tamara, and R. L. Evans. Politicization and Framing. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190847432.003.0004.

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This chapter examines how labor and environmental activists initially came together to broaden a labor-environmental rights frame during the fight over fast-track reauthorization in Congress. It explores how environmental activists utilized framing strategies to legitimize environmental critiques of trade liberalization and then to construct an expanded labor-environmental rights frame with labor activists that strengthened both movements’ anti-NAFTA message. The chapter looks at how anti-NAFTA organizations built their grassroots coalition and promulgated the new labor-environmental rights fr
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Dodd, Bill. Solutions Journalism. The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, 2021. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781978727885.

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As audiences avoid negative news and public risk perceptions fracture across polarized media ecologies, journalists are being called upon to tell engaging and optimistic stories about the future. Consequently, solutions journalism has moved from the margins to the global mainstream, resulting in a plurality of new solutions-focused practices. Solutions Journalism: News at the Intersection of Hope, Leadership, and Expertise explores the professional dynamics and tensions concerning solutions journalism, clarifies these related practices and, in so doing, provides scholars and journalists with a
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Bruch, Carl. Considerations in Framing the Environmental Dimensions of Jus Post Bellum. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198784630.003.0002.

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This chapter seeks to place the environmental provisions of jus post bellum in the broader context of environmental peacebuilding. In considering the efforts to articulate a new body of jus post bellum, particularly as it relates to natural resources and the environment, it presents three key observations. First, there is a large and diverse body of experience related to environmental peacebuilding that can inform the development and framing of jus post bellum, including through state practice and customary international law. This experience argues for a broad view of the environment in jus po
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Brown, Katherine A. Your Country, Our War. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190879402.001.0001.

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This book reviews how news intersects with international politics and discusses the global power and reach of the U.S. news media, especially within the context of the post-9/11 era. It is based on years of interviews conducted between 2009 and 2017, in Kabul, Washington, and New York. The book draws together communications scholarship on hegemony and the U.S. news media’s relationship with American society and the government (i.e. indexing and cascading; agenda-building and agenda-setting; framing; and conflict reportage) along with how national bias and ethnocentrism are fixed phenomena in i
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Wilson, Keeley. We Were the Only Ones to See It. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198777199.003.0003.

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Nokia’s executives were alone in the industry in perceiving the full potential of mobile phones as a mass consumer product. This chapter describes and analyzes how this perceptive framing emerged over time and why other firms (the leading incumbents) did not develop a comparable framing. Conceptually, the key points are that innovative winning strategies result from clear, lucid, and determined strategic opportunism, not from grand plans or a sudden awakening to a new reality. They evolve and develop incrementally and often iteratively. Nor are the most important innovations necessarily techno
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Ecks, Stefan. Living Worth. Duke University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478022282.

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In Living Worth Stefan Ecks draws on ethnographic research on depression and antidepressant usage in India to develop a new theory of value. Framing depressive disorder as a problem of value, Ecks traces the myriad ways antidepressants come to have value, from their ability to help make one’s life worth living to the wealth they generate in the multibillion-dollar global pharmaceutical market. Through case studies that include analyses of the different valuation of generic and brand-name drugs, the origins of rising worldwide depression rates, and the marketing, prescription, and circulation o
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Moscowitz, Leigh. “The Marrying Kind”. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038129.003.0003.

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This chapter examines the extent of gay rights activists' success in framing the gay marriage debate and in producing their preferred images for the news media. It first describes the linguistic and visual devices that news entities relied upon to represent gay and lesbian couples as “deserving” of marriage. It then explores how markers of gender, class, race, lifestyle, and sexuality were deployed to construct the human face of gay marriage and goes on to discuss the ways in which gay marriage ceremonies were ritualized and symbolized in news narratives. It also shows how “poster couples” sel
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Lolli, Gabriele. The Meaning of Proofs. The MIT Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/13820.001.0001.

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Why mathematics is not merely formulaic: an argument that to write a mathematical proof is tantamount to inventing a story. In The Meaning of Proofs, mathematician Gabriele Lolli argues that to write a mathematical proof is tantamount to inventing a story. Lolli offers not instructions for how to write mathematical proofs, but a philosophical and poetic reflection on mathematical proofs as narrative. Mathematics, imprisoned within its symbols and images, Lolli writes, says nothing if its meaning is not narrated in a story. The minute mathematicians open their mouths to explain something—the me
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McMillan, John, and Jeanne Snelling. Equality. Edited by Roger Brownsword, Eloise Scotford, and Karen Yeung. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199680832.013.3.

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This chapter discusses the role that equality plays within liberal theory. We show how the concept of treating citizens as equals is integral to the legitimization of the state and its regulations, including those involving new technologies. We suggest that equality is a fundamental value when exploring the scope of relevant freedoms with respect to new technologies. However, understanding the role of equality for such issues requires sensitivity to important differences in the way in which it can be theorized. We explain how equality can be valued intrinsically, instrumentally, or constitutiv
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Sierra, Sylvia. Millennials Talking Media. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190931117.001.0001.

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This book examines how a group of US Millennial friends in their late twenties embed both old media (books, songs, films, TV shows) and new media (YouTube videos, video games, and internet memes) in their everyday talk for particular interactional purposes. Multiple case studies are presented featuring the recorded talk of Millennial friends to demonstrate how and why these speakers make media references in their conversations. These recorded conversations are supplemented with participant playback interviews, along with ethnographic field notes. The analysis demonstrates how the speakers phon
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Regier, Alexander. Johann Georg Hamann. Edited by Paul Hamilton. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199696383.013.9.

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This chapter follows a neglected tradition (Kierkegaard, Heidegger, Benjamin, Celan) which finds in Hamann a problem that, in its many different forms, becomes the problem of a Romanticism that goes beyond a Kantian framing of philosophy, namely the problem of poetical thinking that encompasses the world or, to put it in Schlegelian terms, conceiving of the world as poesy. Hamann is a figure who offers completely new and unusual ways of thinking about issues that are central to our understanding of the Enlightenment, Romanticism, and modernity. One example for this is the connection of thought
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Baker, Frank W. Political Campaigns and Political Advertising. ABC-CLIO, LLC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798400697869.

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Examining political campaigns and political advertising through the analytical lens of media literacy, this well-illustrated and timely handbook guides readers through the maze of blandishments and spin that is the hallmark of the modern political campaign. It dissects the persuasive strategies embedded in the political messages we encounter every day in the media and demonstrates the importance of critical thinking in evaluating media stories. Key concepts of media literacy are applied to political advertising in traditional media (newspapers, television, radio) and on the Internet, the new f
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Porta, Donatella della, Massimiliano Andretta, Tiago Fernandes, Eduardo Romanos, and Markos Vogiatzoglou. Movement Legacies. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190860936.003.0004.

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Chapter 4 analyzes movements’ legacies. Transitions to democracy create new cultural assumptions that shape the development of social movements: the ways in which activists identify social problems, organize, and protest over time. After conceptualizing the main models of social movement families, it examines their long-term evolution in each of the four countries, with a focus on the path dependency of the transition time but also on turning points in the movements’ post-transition histories. Building upon main concepts in social movement studies, it covers movements’ traditions as organizati
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Denton Jr., Robert E., ed. 1996 Presidential Campaign. Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798216955108.

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Political campaigns are highly complex and sophisticated communication events: communication of issues, images, social reality, and persons. They are essential exercises in the creation, re-creation, and transmission of significant symbols through human communication. As voters and others involved with the campaigns attempt to make sense of the political environment, political bits of communication inform voting choices, world views, and legislative desires. The essays in this book examine the key elements in that process throughout the 1996 presidential campaign. Each focuses on a specific ar
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Moscowitz, Leigh. Gay Marriage Goes Prime-Time. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038129.003.0004.

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This chapter examines the storytelling techniques that were used by journalists to produce the gay marriage issue for prime-time news audiences in 2003–2004, including labeling, framing, sourcing, imagery, and graphics. It discusses the discursive strategies employed by mainstream media to create conflict in the news; how sensationalist labels and descriptive language were used in news stories to validate historic homophobic discourses; and how privileging dominant political and religious sources worked to dichotomize the debate and silence moderate perspectives. It also explores how standard
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Mirola, William A. A “New Consciousness” for Constructing a Morality of Leisure. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038839.003.0006.

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This chapter details several key eight-hour campaign successes and losses in the 1890s and their impact on the religious framing among workers and clergy. As the 1880s gave way to the 1890s, arbitration was heard much more frequently as a solution to impasses between employers and organized labor. Prominent businessmen such as Cyrus McCormick and Marshall Field rejected the notion of bargaining with their employees on what they considered to be their right to conduct their business affairs free from interference. Nevertheless, finding ways to minimize class hostilities and prevent the producti
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Yeo, K. K. Biblical Interpretation in the Majority World. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198702252.003.0005.

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This chapter challenges the ‘received’ view that traces the expansion of the dominant theologies of the European and North American colonial powers and their missionaries into the Majority World. When they arrived, these Westerners found ancient Christian traditions and pre-existing spiritualities, linguistic and cultural forms, which questioned their Eurocentric presumptions, and energized new approaches to interpreting the sacred texts of Christianity. The emergence of ‘creative tensions’ in global encounters are a mechanism for expressing (D)issent against attempts to close down or normaliz
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Pratten, David. Policing Boundaries. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190676636.003.0012.

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Starting from research on vigilantism and informal justice in Nigeria, this chapter looks at policing practices in the light of their links to wider practices and repertoires of legitimacy, visibility, knowledge, and punishment used in controlling crime and social deviance and resolving disputes in Africa. These practices include both long-established cultural framings of rectitude and popular legitimacy and practices which appropriate ‘state-ness’, as demonstrated by vigilante groups with whom police forces share a public space.
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Bächtiger, Andre, John S. Dryzek, Jane Mansbridge, and Mark Warren, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Deliberative Democracy. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198747369.001.0001.

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Deliberative democracy has been the main game in contemporary political theory for two decades and has grown enormously in size and importance in political science and many other disciplines, and in political practice. The Oxford Handbook of Deliberative Democracy takes stock of deliberative democracy as a research field, as well as exploring and creating links with multiple disciplines and policy practice around the globe. It provides a concise history of deliberative ideals in political thought while also discussing their philosophical origins. It locates deliberation in a political system w
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Berto, Francesco. Topics of Thought. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192857491.001.0001.

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Abstract This book concerns mental states such as thinking that Obama is tall, imagining that there will be a climate change catastrophe, knowing that one is not a brain in a vat, or believing that Martina Navratilova is the greatest tennis player ever. Such states are usually understood as having intentionality, that is, as being about things or situations to which the mind is directed. The contents of such states are often taken to be propositions. The book presents a new framework for the logic of thought, so understood—an answer to the question: Given that one thinks (believes, knows, etc.
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Pitt, Richard N. Church Planters. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197509418.001.0001.

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Starting a new organization is a risky business. Most startups fail; half of them do not reach the five-year mark. Protestant churches are not immune to these trends. Most new churches are not established with denominational support—many are actually nondenominational—and, therefore, have many of the vulnerabilities other infant organizations must overcome. Research has revealed that millions of Americans are leaving churches, half of all churches do not add any new members, and thousands of churches shutter their doors each year. These numbers suggest that American religion is not a growth in
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Pendakis, Andrew. Living a Marxist Life. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350420908.

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The last ten years have seen a dramatic upsurge of interest in socialist theory and politics.As a recentWashington Postop-ed put it, “We are living in a new social democratic moment”. People are increasingly drawn to Marxist theory but find it difficult to imagine how it can be integrated practically into an everyday life pervaded by capitalist norms and social practices. Often intuitively, they agree with Marx’s critique of capitalism, but don’t know how to bridge the gap between their sense of dissatisfaction with the present and a revolutionary solution which can feel indefinitely postponed
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Crespi, Paola, and Sunil Manghani, eds. Rhythm and Critique. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474447546.001.0001.

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Investigates rhythm from the perspective of critical theory, philosophy and art Includes newly translated materials from Rudolf Laban and Henri Meschonnic Looks at rhythm in relation to theoretical debates, politics and ethics, and rhythmanalysis Locates the significance of rhythm for the analysis of the everyday and its flow Rhythm and Critique presents 12 new essays from a range of specialists to define, contextualise and challenge the concepts of rhythm and rhythmanalysis. It includes newly translated materials from Rudolf Laban and Henri Meschonnic. The book begins with a genealogy of rhyt
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Maweu, Jacinta Mwende. Media, Ethnicity, and Electoral Conflicts in Kenya. The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc., 2022. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781666995923.

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Media, Ethnicity, and Electoral Conflicts in Kenya critically examines the interplay between the media, ethnicity, and electoral conflicts in Kenya. Jacinta Mwende Maweu analyzes the place of ethnicity in Kenyan politics and the key drivers of electoral conflicts, as well as how ethnicity influences media framing of these conflicts in the Kenyan context. Maweu argues that, although there are many factors that can affect an electoral process and result in conflict and violence, the role that the mainstream media and new media play is central. As Maweu illustrates through various arguments, poli
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Wachbroit, Robert, and David Wasserman. Reproductive Technology. Edited by Hugh LaFollette. Oxford University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199284238.003.0007.

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Reproductive technologies enable a couple to have, or avoid having, a particular kind of child. Couples can learn much about some of the medical problems their offspring might have even before their child is born; and, in some cases, even before conception. These developments have had a profound effect in framing reproductive decisions. This article focuses the discussion on these issues, which arise directly from the convergence of reproductive and genetic technologies. But it also explores some important, and related, implications that convergence has for the other three groups of issues: th
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Travis Jr., Raphael. The Healing Power of Hip Hop. ABC-CLIO, LLC, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798400662171.

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Using the latest research, real-world examples, and a new theory of healthy development, this book explains Hip Hop culture's ongoing role in helping Black youths to live long, healthy, and productive lives. In The Healing Power of Hip Hop, Raphael Travis Jr. offers a passionate look into existing tensions aligned with Hip Hop and demonstrates the beneficial quality it can have empowering its audience. His unique perspective takes Hip Hop out of the negative light and shows readers how Hip Hop has benefited the Black community. Organized to first examine the social and historical framing of Hi
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Sidel, John T. Republicanism, Communism, Islam. Cornell University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501755613.001.0001.

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This book provides an alternate vantage point for understanding the variegated forms and trajectories of revolution across the Philippines, Indonesia, and Việtnam, a perspective that is de-nationalized, internationalized, and transnationalized. The book positions this new vantage point against the conventional framing of revolutions in modern Southeast Asian history in terms of a nationalist template, on the one hand, and distinctive local cultures and forms of consciousness, on the other. The book's comparative analysis shows how — in very different, decisive, and often surprising ways — the
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Baquero Cruz, Julio. The Preliminary Rulings Procedure: Cornerstone or Broken Atlas? Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198830610.003.0004.

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This chapter examines how Union law and the Court of Justice would not be what they are without the preliminary rulings procedure. This procedure occupies a central position among all the other ways to bring cases to the Court, and also has a key position among all the procedures connecting institutions and framing the use of power in the Union. Its development and current state also bear witness to the promise and difficulties of integration, starting from the initial hopes, fuelled by historical consciousness, and leading to the current disaffection and blindness, and the attendant risks for
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Margolis, Eric, Richard Samuels, and Stephen P. Stich, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Cognitive Science. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195309799.001.0001.

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Recent research across the disciplines of cognitive science has exerted a profound influence on how many philosophers approach problems about the nature of mind. These philosophers, while attentive to traditional philosophical concerns, are increasingly drawing both theory and evidence from empirical disciplines — both the framing of the questions and how to resolve them. However, this familiarity with the results of cognitive science has led to the raising of an entirely new set of questions about the mind and how we study it, questions which not so long ago philosophers did not even pose, le
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Tomlinson, Jim. Globalization. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198786092.003.0005.

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This chapter looks first at the trends towards international economic connectedness in the British economy, especially those evident in the post-war years. It analyses the ‘how and why’ of these trends, and especially the reasons for their acceleration from the 1970s and 1980s. The second section looks at the emergence of the term ‘globalization’ to describe these trends, and the freighting of this term with great political and ideological significance. In particular, it analyses the relationship between the deployment of this term and the emergence and development of New Labour. The third sec
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Schiff, Brian. Reasoned Interpretations. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199332182.003.0010.

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“Reasoned Interpretations,” Chapter 9 of A New Narrative for Psychology, examines the bases for making sound research arguments in psychology. It argues that there is a general form for making arguments that is found not only in psychology but everywhere. Psychological science becomes the deliberate activity of “going after” knowledge and framing knowledge claims in the form of a reasonable argument. The chapter argues for a critical examination of research arguments in order to arrive at general, but flexible, means for evaluating research claims. Research arguments in psychology, narrative a
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O'Hara, Alexander. Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190858001.003.0001.

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This chapter introduces this book’s main issues and questions. How were hagiographic texts used in the discourse of creating or recreating monastic identities? Was there a change in the social function of monasteries, and how did this come about? What was innovative about Jonas’s Vita Columbani, and how did he seek to establish new concepts of sanctity based on the community rather than on the individual holy man? It broaches these questions while framing the principal characters and subjects of the book—the life and works of Jonas of Bobbio, Columbanus, and the Columbanian monastic network—wi
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Shortell, Stephen, and Rachael Addicott. A New Lens on Organizational Innovations in Health Care. Edited by Ewan Ferlie, Kathleen Montgomery, and Anne Reff Pedersen. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198705109.013.4.

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The long received wisdom in the organization design, change, and innovation literature is that “form follows function”. We question this dictum particularly for organizations facing radical, volatile changes such as those occurring in the health care sector. Drawing on examples from England, the United States and, to a lesser degree, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and Singapore we suggest that changes in form oftenprecedechanges in function. We further suggest that they need to do so in order for the functions to be successfully executed. This is as opposed to past attempts to making function
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Eller, Jonathan R. Critical Praise, Private Worries. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036293.003.0037.

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This chapter focuses on Ray Bradbury's anxiety about long fiction amid critical praise in 1951. By the time Bradbury's Miracle Year had run its course, he had successfully built a new story collection around the Illustrated Man framing device. And with the February 1951 release of his second Doubleday book, Bradbury was beginning to solidify his reputation as a major market book author. This chapter starts with a discussion of the critical acceptance for Bradbury's The Illustrated Man and The Martian Chronicles, focusing on their favorable reviews, their publication in major American and Briti
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Young, Kalima. Mediated Misogynoir. The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, 2022. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781666996197.

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To be considered innocent is to be viewed as vulnerable to harm and worthy of protection from harm. An innocent person’s pain is recognized, acknowledged, and addressed. Mediated Misogynoir: Erasing Black Women’s and Girls’ Innocence in the Public Imagination interrogates contemporary media culture to illuminate the ways the intersections of anti-blackness and misogyny, i.e., misogynoir, converge to obscure public perceptions of Black women and girls as people with any claim to innocence. When pained images of Black female bodies appear on media devices, the socio-political responses are telli
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Wilson, Donald. Practical Kantian Ethics. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2025. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350501300.

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Reversing the usual order of interpretation, Donald Wilson reinterprets Kant’s moral theory through his later practical works offering a new “inner freedom” account informing obscure aspects of Kant’s formal moral philosophy and the practical focus of ideals of proper respect.This account transcends the narrow rational asceticism often associated with Kant’s view, embedding morality in our humanity, recognizing the vital role of emotion in moral life, and prioritizing framing moral commitments and questions of character over obedience to formal rules. In doing so, it makes community and collec
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Sanders, James W. Irish vs. Yankees. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190681579.001.0001.

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As a social historian, James W. Sanders takes a new look at a critical period in the development of Boston schools. Focusing on the burgeoning Irish Catholic population and framing the discussion around Catholic hierarchy, Sanders considers the interplay of social forces in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries that led to Irish Catholics’ emerging with political control of the city and its public schools. The latter reduced the need for parochial schools; by at least the 1920s, the public and parochial schools had taken giant steps toward one another in theory and practice under the le
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Weir, Doug. Reframing the Remnants of War. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198784630.003.0019.

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Since 2011, states and civil society have sought to draw attention to the health and environmental risks from the toxic remnants of war; a process that has led to the International Law Commission proposing a draft principle that obliges states to help minimize their risks to the environment following conflicts. In addition to raising awareness of the impact and legacy of conflict pollution, the process has helped to reverse the historical decoupling of explosive remnants of war from other physical and toxic war remnants. Itself a product of the humanitarian advocacy framing promoted by the civ
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Inclán, María. The Zapatista Movement and Mexico's Democratic Transition. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190869465.001.0001.

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What happens to insurgent social movements that emerge during a democratic transition but fail to achieve their goals? How influential are they? Are they able to survive their initial mobilizing boom? Using the development of the Zapatista movement during Mexico’s democratic transition in the 1990s, this book seeks to answer these questions. The Zapatista movement is probably the best example of an influential and salient insurgent social movement emerging during a democratic transition that successfully mobilized sympathy and support for the indigenous agenda inside and outside of the country
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Harris, Jonathan Gil. Becoming-Indian. Edited by Henry S. Turner. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199641352.013.23.

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This chapter examines how travellers to the New World and to India made sense of their encounters by framing them specifically in reference to the performance techniques and even the architecture of the theatre, in ways both positive and negative. It first considers John Smith’s description of what he calls a ‘Virginia Maske’ in hisGenerall History of Virginia(1624), a reminder of how the specific textures of early modern theatricality rather than a generalized, abstract notion of performance shaped travellers’ understandings of ‘all the world’s a stage’. It then looks at the case of Thomas Co
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