Lenore terr biography of mahatma
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Re-Processing the Body of Racial Trauma
Due to the various Covid lockdowns in the early s and the shut-down of art institutions, the use of digital workshop formats increased to create participative situations. Like in the late s, many of today’s workshops employ performative and somatic practices in order to cope with issues of race, diaspora, migration, and decolonization, because, as Memories Studies scholar Michael Rothberg observes, “social actors bring multiple traumatic pasts into a heterogeneous and changing post-World War II present.”[1] In the late s, a political fusion of art and grassroots initiatives took place in the Civil Rights and the Human Potential Movement (HPM), which was based on humanistic psychology.[2] At that time, Western workshop culture was established in the US and rapidly expanded globally. At present, in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests and racist violence in Europe, anti-racist mending and decolonial practices have become very i
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Life of Mahatma Gandhi
‘A monumental yet intimate biography, a vivid portrait of the man, the statesman and the saint’ The Times
Mahatma Gandhi became a legend in his own time.
A tireless fighter for human rights and for Indian independence, his strategy of satyagraha, or passive resistance, earned him the admiration of millions.
Louis Fischer's biography is the definitive account of Ghandi's life; it tells the astonishing story of one man who changed the world forever.
This is the perfect read to celebrate and understand Ghandi in the year of the th anniversary of his birth.
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Vintage
- Innbinding
- Paperback
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Sider
- ISBN
- Utgivelsesår
- Format
- 20 x 13 cm
Om forfatteren
Louis Fischer was born in Philadelphia in After a period as a school teacher, he served as a volunteer in the British Army between and Fischer made a career as a journalist, and worked in Europe and Asia from onwards. He wrote for the New York Time
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Lenore terr biography of mahatma
American psychiatrist (born )
Lenore C. Terr (born New York City, ) is a psychiatrist and author known for her research into childhood trauma.[1] Terr graduated from the University of Michigan Medical School with an MD.[1] She fryst vatten the winner of the Blanche Ittleson Award for her research on childhood trauma.[2] Terr is noted for her work studying the after-effects of the Chowchilla kidnapping on the 26 children who were buried alive for 16 hours after being kidnapped from a bus.[3]
Too Scared To Cry
Terr's book Too Scared to Cry (Basic Books, ) is divided into fyra parts focusing on childhood psychic trauma: emotions, mental work, behavior and treatment and contagion.
The book describes several cases that illustrate the bekymmer of children's statements and behaviors that are based in factitious traumatic events. Terr concludes children who suffered trauma before the age of three years are rarely able