Academic literature on the topic 'Seafaring life in literature'

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Journal articles on the topic "Seafaring life in literature"

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Askar Ali, M. "Islamic ‘Bakhirs’." Shanlax International Journal of Tamil Research 6, no. 4 (2022): 121–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.34293/tamil.v6i4.4834.

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The lives of Islamists around the world are fundamentally religious. More than that, it is subject to the rules taught by that “religious community.” In such a religious life, the duality of being centered and marginalized becomes inevitable. Thoppil Mohammad Meeran and Keeranur Jagirrajah are the creator of the myths about the marginalized community in the creative field. The lives of various marginalized people as a result of the central political attitude are portrayed as diverse in their fiction. They have written about the marginalized mantras of sex workers, homosexuals, mercenaries, brokers, thieves, drunkards, psychiatrists, beggars, etc., unfamiliar with most Islamic myths. His works also record non-seafaring fishing Islamists, Bakhirs (wanderers), Osaks (sailors), and Motinars (front-line servants in mosques). In this context, this article examines in detail how Keeranur Zakir Raja translated into literature the record of Bakhirs living a nomadic life in the Islamic community.
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KHALILIEH, HASSAN S., and AREEN BOULOS. "A GLIMPSE ON THE USES OF SEAWEEDS IN ISLAMIC SCIENCE AND DAILY LIFE DURING THE CLASSICAL PERIOD." Arabic Sciences and Philosophy 16, no. 1 (2006): 91–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0957423906000257.

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Islamic polities of the classical period recognized the importance of seaweeds in their daily life. Their men of science, craftsmen, and navigators used them for medicinal purposes, manufacturing, and navigation. The agar components were used in treating pathological conditions such jaundice, spleen, kidney and skin ailments, and malignancies. As food, we stress that our conclusions derive from Qur'ān-based commentaries and Muslim religious law that encouraged seafaring and exploiting the resources of the sea. Concerning navigation, sailors could identify coastal trunk routes, shallows, and various marine phenomena; shipwrights used agar compounds as a protective coating against the Greek Fire. Like their Greco-Roman counterparts, Muslim physicians, chemists, botanists, and professional sailors of this period were acquainted with numerous species of seaweeds and could appreciate the actual scientific importance of each type as well as the aquatic environment where these species lived and developed. Their scholarly literature consists of several generic Arabic and Arabicized terms to denote seaweeds and the terms variations appeared to be physical rather than linguistic.
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M, Selva Rosary Pushpa. "An Ethnography Study in Korkai by Joe D Cruz." International Research Journal of Tamil 4, S-7 (2022): 285–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.34256/irjt22s745.

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The novel, or novelty form of literature, is very popular among people. Its purpose is to use language to convey life's facts, events, and problems. Through this novel, Joe D. Cruz’s "korkai" has a special place in the realm of writing. In this novel, one can learn about the economic issues faced by marine dwellers, the Bharatas' fishing technique, and other topics through this kind of unique innovation, including crafting, conch shelling, pearling, fish processing, etc. When the marine community is examined more closely, it becomes clear that there are numerous large and minor economic activities occurring that are hidden from the general public. The cultural life of the maritime peoples has also been rich in vegetable products. These characters demonstrate how frequent it is for maritime people to adopt new names that have been influenced by their religious beliefs. The educational status of Bharatavar people has changed over time. Joe D Cruz’s Korkai, which depicts the lifestyle of such an honourable seafaring person, got the Sahitya Akademi Award in 2009. This article examines the maritime people's cultural and economic life messages that emerge in this novel.
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Pham, Charlotte Minh Ha. "AN INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH TO THE STUDY OF BOATS OF CENTRAL VIETNAM." Journal of Indo-Pacific Archaeology 36 (November 22, 2016): 25. http://dx.doi.org/10.7152/jipa.v36i0.14913.

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<p class="Body" align="left">Despite a growing academic literature on maritime trade, shipping and navigation in the South China Sea, there is little information about how local societies negotiated their maritime environment, or how it influenced their daily life. This is most particularly the case for Vietnam, often considered through its history as an agrarian state. Nonetheless, with a coastline of over 3400 km located along a major shipping route between Malacca and China, Vietnam has a long lasting historical connection with its maritime environment and an exceptional boat diversity. Yet again, little is known about local boatbuilding traditions, boat use, seafaring skills and navigation, related maritime activities, about the organisation and role of the many harbours that dotted the coast of central Vietnam.</p><p class="Body" align="left">As a step in the development of maritime archaeology in Vietnam, a combined approach in the research of archives and ethnography can contribute to build up knowledge about maritime aspects of life in Vietnam, and can also provide context and understanding for potential maritime archaeological finds. At the same time it can push the boundaries of maritime archaeologists to incite research that goes beyond nautical technology.</p>
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Bøye, Merete. "Hallen og havet som eskatologiske modsætninger - i den angelsaksiske poesi og hos Grundtvig." Grundtvig-Studier 49, no. 1 (1998): 120–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/grs.v49i1.16274.

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The Sea and the Hall as Eschatological OppositesBy Merete BøyeGrundtvig frequently uses the Anglo-Saxon (AS) hall (heall) as a symbol of Paradise or of the Church. The hall is described by Beowulf-expert Andreas Haarder as a life-centre, where the AS king and his men gather around the feast, the giving of gifts, and the song of the scald. The opposite of the hall is the un-settling surrounding ’outside’, which is nature. The hall exists wherever and whenever men gather together in fellowship, and is as such potentially eternal. But it is always exposed to outer threat. The force of nature which awed the Anglo-Saxons most of all was the sea, which - being a seafaring nation - they had learned to fear and respect. To the Anglo-Saxons, the sea was a hostile and almost invincible evil power that only a true hero - such as Beowulf - could hope to conquer. The sea was the force which separated us from Paradise, but also the force which you had to defy in order to reach Paradise.Henning Høirup has observed a similar relation between fellowship and outer threat in Grundtvig’s writings. In Fra døden til livet (From Death to Life), Høirup writes that life - to Grundtvig - is to fill your place in the fellowship for which God has created us. Death will try to force itself onto the fellowship and dissolve it. Høirup’s concepts of life and death correspond with the AS concepts of the hall and the sea.In the works of Grundtvig, AS sea-imagery often occurs, e.g. in De Levendes Land (The Land of the Living), where Paradise is described as »Landet bag Hav« (the land behind the sea), and in Grundtvig’s sermons based on Matthew 8, 23-27, where he likens the church to a ship carrying its passengers to Paradise. The helmsman of the ship is Christ or the Holy Ghost.In the article The First New European Literature (1993), S.A.J. Bradley also points to AS influence on Grundtvig’s last poem Gammel nok er jeg nu blevet (Old Enough I Now Have Grown), which holds the same kind of sea-imagery as Grundtvig used in the sermons mentioned. Especially the AS poem The Seafarer« is very similar to Gammel nok... Both The Seafarer and Gammel nok... tell of an old man, who is crossing a vast, hostile ocean on a ship. The destination is Paradise. At the end of both poems there is a passage of praise to the Lord. This article concludes that Gammel nok... may be inspired by the AS seafaring poems.
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Metzler Sawin, Mark. "The Lynching and Rebirth of Ned Buntline: Rogue Authorship during the American Literary Renaissance." Text Matters, no. 9 (December 30, 2019): 167–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/2083-2931.09.10.

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Though largely unknown today, “Ned Buntline” (Edward Zane Carroll Judson) was one of the most influential authors of 19th-century America. He published over 170 novels, edited multiple popular and political publications, and helped pioneer the seafaring adventure, city mystery and Western genres. It was his pirate tales that Tom Sawyer constantly reenacted, his “Bowery B’hoys” that came to define the distinctive slang and swagger of urban American characters, and his novels and plays that turned an unknown scout into Buffalo Bill, King of the Border Men. But before “Ned Buntline” became a mainstay of the popular press, he had been on his way to becoming one of the nation’s highbrow literary elites. He was praised by the leading critics, edited an important literary journal, and his stories appeared in the era’s most prestigious publications. This study examines how and why “Ned Buntline” moved from prestigious to popular authorship and argues that the transformation was precipitated by one very specific event: in 1846, Edward Z. C. Judson was lynched. A close examination of Judson’s life, writing, and the coverage of him in the newspapers of the day (including the remarkable story of how he survived a lynching) demonstrates that the same issues that led to his lynching also led to his rebirth as a new kind of American author.
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McManamon, John M. "Res nauticae: Mediterranean Seafaring and Written Culture in the Renaissance." Traditio 70 (2015): 307–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0362152900012411.

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In characteristic fashion, the Iter Italicum of Paul Oskar Kristeller reveals the richness of Renaissance thought on seafaring. The literature on seafaring conserved in manuscripts cataloged in the Iter Italicum ranges from commentary on ancient seafaring to eulogies of contemporary heroes to works on mechanics and engineering with unusual proposals for naval weaponry. Those manuscripts likewise highlight the Renaissance conceptualization of seafaring as an art and a creative tension in Renaissance scholarship between looking back to the past and looking forward to the future.
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Corke-Webster, James. "Roman History." Greece and Rome 65, no. 2 (2018): 259–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0017383518000207.

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Identity studies live. This latest batch of publications explores what made not just the Romans but the Italians, Christians, and Etruscans who they were. We begin with both age and beauty, the fruits of a special exhibition at the Badischen Landesmuseum Karlsruhe in the first half of 2018 into the most famous of Roman predecessors, the Etruscans. Most of the exhibits on display come from Italian museums, but the interpretative essays that break up the catalogue – which are also richly illustrated – are by both Italian and German scholars. These are split between five overarching sections covering introductory affairs, the ages of the princes and of the city-states, the Etruscans’ relationship with Rome, and modern reception. The first contains essays treating Etruscan origins, history, identity, and settlement area. The second begins with the early Iron Age Villanova site, before turning to early Etruscan aristocratic culture, including banqueting, burials, language, writing, and seafaring. The third and longest section considers the heyday of Etruscan civilization and covers engineering and infrastructure, crafts and production, munitions, women's roles, daily life, dance, sport, funerary culture, wall painting, religious culture, and art. The fourth section treats both the confrontation between Etruscan and Roman culture and the persistence of the former after ‘conquest’ by the latter. The fifth section contains one essay on the modern inheritance of the Etruscan ‘myth’ and one on the history of scholarship on the Etruscans. Three aspects to this volume deserve particular praise. First, it includes not only a huge range of material artefacts but also individual essays on Etruscan production in gold, ceramic, ivory, terracotta, and bronze. Second, there is a recurring interest in the interconnections between the Etruscans and other cultures, not just Romans but Greeks, Iberians, Celts, Carthaginians, and other Italian peoples. Third, it includes the history of the reception of Etruscan culture. Amid the just-shy-of-200 objects included (almost every one with description and high-quality colour image), the reader can find everything from a mid-seventh-century pitcher made from an Egyptian ostrich egg painted with birds, flowers, and dancers (147), through the well-known third- or second-century bcTabula Cortonensis – a lengthy and only partially deciphered Etruscan inscription that documents either a legal transaction or a funerary ceremony (311) – to the 2017 kit of the Etruschi Livorno American Football team (364). Since we have no extant Etruscan literature, a volume such as this is all the more valuable in trying to get a sense of these people and their culture, and the exceptionally high production value provides quality exposure to material otherwise scattered throughout Italy.
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Subiyanto, Agus, Nurhayati, and Astri Adriani Allien. "Maintaining Harmonious Social Environment among Fishermen on the North Coast of Central Java through Seafaring Myths." E3S Web of Conferences 125 (2019): 09013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/201912509013.

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Traditional fishermen in the North Coast of Central Java commonly have a simple life economically, and their income is sometimes sufficient only for fulfilling their very basic needs, especially food. However, their social life and environment are worth appreciating. The tough life in the sea has taught them how to behave with others. They believe that the sea is inhabited by many supernatural creatures, and so they have to avoid doing improper behavior as reflected in seafaring myths. This paper aims to discuss the kinds of seafaring myths related to forbidden acts among fishermen in the North Coast of Central Java, and the factors causing their belief of the myths. In this case, an eco-linguistics perspective is used to uncover the phenomena of the seafaring myths. This study used the data taken from interviewing fishermen, randomly chosen as the informants, who live in fishing areas in Semarang, Kendal, and Demak. The result of the study shows that seafaring myths still exist, and they are preserved because of the empirical facts they often experience when violating the myths. From an eco-linguistic perspective, the existence of the myths cannot be separated from biological, sociological, and ideological aspects of the fishermen.
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van Ingen, Ferdinand. "PHILIPP VON ZESENS DARSTELLUNG VON AMSTERDAMS SEEFAHRT: LICHT UND SCHATTEN." Daphnis 42, no. 1 (2013): 215–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18796583-90001131.

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Philipp von Zesen’s treatise in praise of seafaring and of the city of Amsterdam — the headquarters of the renowned East Indian trading company VOC — covers the whole complex of trade and seafaring, as well as the ethical problems that arise from them, in a Dutch context. Since Zesen dedicated his Beschreibung der Stadt Amsterdam to the city’s government, in gratitude for the citizenship that it had awarded him, he had to be cautious in his criticism. He therefore had to incorporate it with the required circumspection into the historical genre of Städtelob (‘praise of the city’) as it was understood at that time.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Seafaring life in literature"

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Stedall, Ellie. "Herman Melville, Joseph Conrad and transatlantic sea literature, 1797-1924." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2013. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.648378.

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Fury, Cheryl A. "Tides in the affairs of men : the social history of Elizabethan seamen, 1580-1603 /." *McMaster only, 1998.

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Macbeth, Jim. "Ocean cruising: A study of affirmative deviance." Thesis, Macbeth, Jim (1985) Ocean cruising: A study of affirmative deviance. PhD thesis, Murdoch University, 1985. https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/172/.

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Modern day ocean voyaging in private sailing vessels dates back to the turn of the century. Despite this, the present thesis is the first academic study of ocean cruising to be completed of the thousands of people who make ocean voyages only a few hundred are committed to the lifestyle of cruising, that is, see cruising as a whole way of life that they will pursue indefinitely. The thesis first presents an ethnography of the lifestyle of cruising with particular attention to (1) what activities constitute the lifestyle, (2) why people cruise, and (3) what values, attitudes, and characteristics attach to the participants. Second, the thesis relates this ethnography to several theories in sociology and psychology. In sociology, subculture and deviance theories are used to place cruising in the context of the wider scholastic study of society. Pearson (1979) and others are drawn upon in placing cruising in the context of subcultures while the work of Walter Buckley (1967) is used to modify deviance theory to account for the apparently positive nature of the deviance inherent in the cruising lifestyle. In psychology, theories of autotelic rewards, enjoyment, and human satisfaction are used to understand the experience of and motivation to cruise. In addition, theories of personal growth developed by Hampden-Turner (1970) and others are applied to cruisers and their way of life. The thesis concludes that cruisers, as cultural 'heroes', can be seen as affirmative deviants. That is to say, given an humanistic and western individualistic value system their deviance can be seen as contributing to their individual health and growth, and to positive social evolution.
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Macbeth, Jim. "Ocean cruising a study of affirmative deviance /." Access via Murdoch University Digital Theses Project, 1985. http://wwwlib.murdoch.edu.au/adt/browse/view/adt-MU20050628.120609.

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Prendergast, Patrick M. "Forced service official and popular responses to the impressment of seamen into the Royal Navy, 1660-1815 /." View electronic thesis (PDF), 2009. http://dl.uncw.edu/etd/2009-1/prendergastp/patrickprendergast.pdf.

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Karjalainen, Mira. "In the shadow of freedom : life on board the oil tanker /." Helsinki : Finnish Society of Sciences and Letters, 2007. http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy0716/2007438365.html.

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Lowe, Shannon Edythe. "Madness, life and literature." Thesis, Lancaster University, 2008. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.527153.

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Ryan, Caitlyn G. "Rubik’s Cube Life." Youngstown State University / OhioLINK, 2012. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ysu1343057479.

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Hansen, Harold Victor. "Men of war the seamen of HMS Mars and the Revolutionary era /." unrestricted, 2008. http://etd.gsu.edu/theses/available/etd-04212008-161219/.

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Thesis (M.A.)--Georgia State University, 2008.<br>Title from file title page. Dr. Christine Skwiot, committee chair; Denise Z. Davidson, committee member. Electronic text (186 p. : col. ill.) : digital, PDF file. Description based on contents viewed August 5, 2008. Includes bibliographical references (p. 180-186).
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Giraldo, Herrera César Enrique. "Sweet dreams rocking Viking boats : biocultural animic perspectivism through Nordic seamanship." Thesis, University of Aberdeen, 2013. http://digitool.abdn.ac.uk:80/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=195798.

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This thesis explores animic and perspectivist notions in the context of Nordic Seamanship with a biocultural framework. It examines the history, cosmologies, terminology, practices, physiology and phenomenology of Nordic crafts and arts of boat building, rope-making, seafaring and fishing. Rope-making, its molecular basis and the social organization in a boat reveal the way in which physical and social bodies coalesce in the harmonies of the differing intentionalities of their constituents, forming symmetric hierarchical structures, which are at the basis of Nordic egalitarian and individualistic society. Through the enskillment in seafaring and fishing, we explore the perspectival transformations involved in nausea; the development of sea-legs (the attunement to the rhythms of the sea), fishiness (empathy with the fish) and the meiths (a system navigation, perception and theorization of the coastal environment), showing the role of normal microbial biota in the perception and interactions with the environment. Based on the experience at sea, it is suggested that the ontologies developed through the interactions of seamanship constituted a cosmology that influenced the development of the Medieval Perspectivist theories in Natural Philosophy, Norse poetry and hermeneutics, which were means of secularization of pagan knowledge in the Nordic conversion to Christianity. Elaborating on some aspects of medieval perspectivist theory through their comparison with Amerindian animic theories and the biology of the eye it is suggested that its morphology entails an entoptic (inner-vision) microscopy, affording a means of visual perception and interaction with microbial entities. Finally, with the aid of a Treponema pallidum, a transatlantic traveller with a copious Amerindian mythology, it is shown that animic notions about spirits, dwarves and gods are coherent with an ecological physiology that takes into account microbial sociality and their role, both in health and in disease, in our metabolism, perception and relations with the environment in particular ecological communities. In so doing, it demonstrates that animic perspectivist ontologies are compatible with a naturalism that takes into account intentionality as a generalized physical property constituent of beings and things, and therefore sociality as generalized characteristic of the interactions between beings/things in the environment.
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Books on the topic "Seafaring life in literature"

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Mark, Samuel. Homeric seafaring. Texas A&M University Press, 2004.

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How to draw Australian sealife. Steve Parish Publishing, 2006.

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Lasky, Kathryn. Born in the breezes: The seafaring life of Joshua Slocum. Orchard Books, 2001.

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Coote, Roger. The sailor through history. Thomson Learning, 1993.

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Aston, Paul. True Sea Stories. Siena Publishing, 1998.

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Humble, Richard. A 16th century galleon. P. Bedrick Books, 1995.

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Claybourne, Anna. Treasure hunter's handbook. Crabtree Pub. Company, 2011.

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Callery, Sean. Treasure hunt. A & C Black, 2011.

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Delēgiannēs, Giōrgos. Ho nautikos kai to provlēma tēs monaxias stēn poiēsē tou Nikou Kavvadia: Koina sēmeia Kavvadia kai gallikēs poiēsēs. Idmōn, 2002.

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1961-, Bergin Mark, ed. A 16th century galleon. P. Bedrick Books, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Seafaring life in literature"

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Baum-Talmor, Polina. "Careers at Sea: Exploring Seafarer Motivations and Aspirations." In The World of the Seafarer. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49825-2_5.

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AbstractNowadays, in the era of flexible and precarious employment, the concept of a ‘career for life’ in one organisation appears to be redundant, as most employees in the global labour market do not have permanent employment (ILO, World employment and social outlook: the changing nature of jobs. Geneva: International Labour Office, 2015). This chapter focuses on the shipping industry as an example of a global industry that employs over a million seafarers (BIMCO, Manpower 2005 update: the worldwide demand for and supply of seafarers. Warwick: Warwick Institute for Employment Research, 2015) as their main labour force in what could termed flexible employment. The chapter explores the idea of having a ‘career’ within the precarious shipping industry by focusing on the reasons for joining, staying, and leaving a seafaring occupation. The chapter is based on existing literature, and on recent data that was collected as part of a study on seafarers’ career development.
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Lippert, Leopold. "Maritime Mobility and the Work of Susanna Rowson: Transatlantic Perspectives." In Maritime Mobilities in Anglophone Literature and Culture. Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-91275-8_4.

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AbstractThe chapter explores how the work of Susanna Haswell Rowson (1762–1824) employs ships and sea travel as sites of the cultural articulation and negotiation of mobility in the early modern Atlantic world. Through her writings on seafaring, the chapter suggests, Rowson examines the tensions between imperial fantasies of seamless connectivity across the Atlantic world and the typically flawed material and infrastructural conditions that enabled/foreclosed that connectivity. Critically reading the play Slaves in Algiers (1794), the didactic treatise “Rise and Progress of Navigation” (1811), as well as the novels Reuben and Rachel (1798) and Rebecca (1814 edition), the chapter analyzes the ways in which Rowson functionalized maritime mobility in order to deliberate the materiality of transatlantic travel and the ways such travel impacted on the cultural imaginaries of correspondence, circulation, and exchange. Moreover, Rowson used ships and seafaring as narrative devices to relate early U.S. national identities (such as her own) to larger transatlantic contexts. Ultimately, the chapter shows that Rowson’s writing establishes the Atlantic world as a contested and contradictory cultural space that could not always reconcile imperial fantasies of connectivity with the imperfect material conditions of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century maritime mobility.
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Rask, K. A. "Bringing It All Together: Religion and the Seafaring Life." In Personal Experience and Materiality in Greek Religion. Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003328360-6.

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Kimmel, Lawrence. "Poetry, Life, Literature." In The Poetry of Life in Literature. Springer Netherlands, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-3431-8_3.

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Paroissien, David. "Literature and Life." In Selected Letters of Charles Dickens. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-17928-2_10.

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Ghosh, Ranjan K. "Literature and Life." In SpringerBriefs in Philosophy. Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-2460-4_4.

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Whittle, Matthew, and Jade Munslow Ong. "Life." In Global Literature and the Environment. Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429353352-5.

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Neyrat, Frédéric. "Materialism and life." In Literature and Materialisms. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315560502-5.

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Maciel, Maria Esther. "Shared Life." In Literature Beyond the Human. Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003243991-10.

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Kulcsár-Szabó, Zoltán, Tamás Lénárt, Attila Simon, and Roland Végső. "Introduction." In Life After Literature. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-33738-4_1.

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Conference papers on the topic "Seafaring life in literature"

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Easty, Richard, and Nikolay Nikolov. "Mashing up life science literature resources." In the 2009 joint international conference. ACM Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1555400.1555473.

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Mokienko, Valery. "«Czech-Russian phraseological dictionary»: life and destiny." In Slavic collection: language, literature, culture. LLC MAKS Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.29003/m.slavcol-2018/15-21.

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Tintelecan, Adriana, Anca Constantinescu Dobra, and Claudia Martis. "Literature Review - Electric Vehicles Life Cycle Assessment." In 2020 ELEKTRO. IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/elektro49696.2020.9130289.

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Hasnawati, Sri. "Life Cycle Theory of Dividend: A Review Literature." In Proceedings of the First International Conference of Economics, Business & Entrepreneurship, ICEBE 2020, 1st October 2020, Tangerang, Indonesia. EAI, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.1-10-2020.2304742.

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Khan, Sehrish. "Co-creation through digital fabrication technology: A systematic literature review." In IASDR 2023: Life-Changing Design. Design Research Society, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.21606/iasdr.2023.250.

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He, Siyu. "Death, What Gives Life Life in Ascent to Omai." In proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Literature, Art and Human Development (ICLAHD 2020). Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.201215.386.

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Kusuma Wardhani, Shinta Amalia, and ER Mahendrawathi. "Applying Social Software for BPM Life Cycle: Systematic Literature Review." In 2021 IEEE 7th Information Technology International Seminar (ITIS). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/itis53497.2021.9791661.

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Black, Dylan. "Life of Pi as Contemporary “Island Fiction” and “Master Narrative”." In Annual International Conference on Language, Literature and Linguistics. Global Science & Technology Forum (GSTF), 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2251-3566_l315.90.

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"Employees’ Satisfaction on Quality of Work Life in State Bank of India." In International Conference on Humanities, Literature and Management. International Centre of Economics, Humanities and Management, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.15242/icehm.ed0115031.

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Canfield Petrecca, Alessandra. "The social influences of digital technologies in the Design of S.PSS and DE: a literature review." In IASDR 2023: Life-Changing Design. Design Research Society, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.21606/iasdr.2023.415.

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Reports on the topic "Seafaring life in literature"

1

Rosenfeld, Paul, Amy L. Culbertson, and Paul Magnusson. Human Needs: A Literature Review and Cognitive Life Span Model. Defense Technical Information Center, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada250073.

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MOSKALENKO, OLGA, and ROMAN YASKEVICH. QUALITY OF LIFE ASSESSMENT IN PATIENTS WITH ARTERIAL HYPERTENSION (LITERATURE REVIEW). Science and Innovation Center Publishing House, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12731/2658-4034-2021-12-1-2-178-184.

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A review of the literature on the current problem of medicine is presented. Arterial hypertension is one of the common chronic diseases for which the current goal of therapy is not recovery, but improvement of circulatory function with a satisfactory quality of life. The study of QOL and the factors influencing it can contribute to an increase in the individual effectiveness of treatment and complex rehabilitation of patients suffering from this pathology.
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Santero, Nicholas, Eric Masanet, and Arpad Horvath. Life Cycle Assessment of Pavements: A Critical Review of Existing Literature and Research. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/985846.

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MOSKALENKO, O. G., and R. A. YASKEVICH. FACTORS AFFECTING THE QUALITY OF LIFE IN PATIENTS WITH ARTERIAL HYPERTENSION (LITERATURE REVIEW). Science and Innovation Center Publishing House, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.12731/2658-4034-2022-13-1-2-136-143.

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A review of the literature on the actual problem of medicine - the factors influencing the decrease in the quality of life associated with health in patients with arterial hypertension presented. The study of QOL and the factors affecting it can contribute to an increase in the individual effectiveness of treatment and comprehensive rehabilitation of patients with hypertension.
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Teplitzky, Martha L. The Effects of Work on Family Life: A Review and Analysis of the Literature. Defense Technical Information Center, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada198936.

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Weller, Joshua, Gulbanu Kaptan, Rajinder Bhandal, and Darren Battachery. Kitchen Life 2. Food Standards Agency, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.46756/sci.fsa.wom249.

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The aim of the Kitchen Life 2 project is to identify the key behaviours relating to food safety that occur in domestic and business kitchens, as well as the factors that may reduce the likelihood to enact recommended food safety and hygiene behaviours. The outcomes will inform risk assessment and development of hypotheses for behavioural interventions. The goal of this literature review was to ensure that the research design and fieldwork techniques identify existing key behaviours, actors, triggers and barriers in domestic and business kitchens to develop successful behavioural interventions and risk assessment models. Additionally, we have included the impacts of Covid-19 pandemic and national lockdowns on food safety practices in domestic and business kitchens. This addition is important because FSA policy response to the pandemic should address the needs of both consumers and food businesses due to reduced ability to deliver inspection and enforcement activities, business diversification (for example, shifting to online delivery and takeaway), increasing food insecurity, and change in food consumption behaviours (for example, cooking from scratch) (FSA, 2020).
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Madan, Amman, and Ananya Pathak. Sociological Perspectives on Everyday Life and The Social Construction of School Failure: A Literature Review. Azim Premji University, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.61933/wps.18.2020.9.

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McGrath, Robert E., and Alejandro Adler. Skills for life: A review of life skills and their measurability, malleability, and meaningfulness. Inter-American Development Bank, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0004414.

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It is widely accepted that schools and other settings catering to youth can play an essential role in offering education in life skills and character. However, there exists a broad array of potential targets for such programs, suggesting the need for guidance on which targets are most likely to result in demonstrable and valuable results. This report attempts to integrate a broad literature addressing the universe of targets for skills development programs for youth. After identifying a set of 30 candidate skills to investigate further, research literature was reviewed to evaluate each skill on three dimensions. Measurability had to do with the extent to which adequate measurement tools were available for evaluating skill level, with emphasis on those tools specifically used for younger populations and available in multiple languages, particularly in Spanish. Malleability had to do with the extent to which there is evidence that interventions have the potential to modify skill level, with emphasis on those that have been extensively evaluated through randomized controlled trials. Finally, meaningfulness had to do with the extent to which evidence exists demonstrating that the higher levels of skill can result in consequential outcomes. Based on these criteria, 10 skills were selected for further review as having the most compelling evidence to date that they are life skills that matter: Mindfulness, Empathy and compassion, Self-efficacy/ Self-determination, Problem solving, Critical thinking, Goal orientation and goal completion, Resilience/Stress resistance, Self-awareness, Purposefulness, and Self-regulation/Self-control/Emotion regulation. The evidence for each is summarized. We finish with a review of key issues to consider in the design, implementation, and evaluation of life skills that matter.
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Horioka, Charles Yuji. Is the Selfish Life-Cycle Model More Applicable in Japan and, If So, Why? A Literature Survey. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w27869.

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Babin, Abigail. Clinical and Quality of Life Outcomes of Medical Nutrition Therapy Interventions in Pediatric Eosinophilic Esophagitis: Literature Review. Iowa State University, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.31274/cc-20240624-366.

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