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Family Day
Due to provincial holidays, CELA will be closed on Monday, February 17th. Our office will reopen and our Contact Centre services will resume on Tuesday, February 18. Enjoy your holiday!
Due to provincial holidays, CELA will be closed on Monday, February 17th. Our office will reopen and our Contact Centre services will resume on Tuesday, February 18. Enjoy your holiday!
Showing 1 - 7 of 7 items
By Eve Joseph. 2014
Part memoir, part meditation on death itself, this book is an exploration of death from an “insider’s” point of view.…
Using the threads of her brother’s early death and her twenty years of work at a hospice, the author utilizes history, religion, philosophy, literature, personal anecdote, mythology, poetry and pop culture to discern the unknowable mystery that awaits us all. 2014.By Eve Joseph. 2014
Part memoir, part meditation on death itself, this book is an exploration of death from an “insider’s” point of view.…
Using the threads of her brother’s early death and her twenty years of work at a hospice, the author utilizes history, religion, philosophy, literature, personal anecdote, mythology, poetry and pop culture to discern the unknowable mystery that awaits us all. 2014.By Eve Joseph. 2018
By Eve Joseph. 2010
Much of this poised and luminous book is rooted in an idea of epiphany an aesthetic of everyday incarnation…
not the sudden and profound manifestation of essence or meaning but the smaller steps taken toward it The moments in which as Joyce writes the soul of the commonest object seems to us radiant If epiphanies are for theologians perhaps the little steps towards them are for poets like Eve Joseph and for all of us who attempt to see beyond the names we give things to the names they give themselvesBy Joseph Chilton Pearce, Glynda-Lee Hoffmann. 2003
A groundbreaking study of the connection between spirituality, psychology, and neurophysiology that is coded into the book of Genesis.• Reveals…
why Eve was allowed to eat the apple of knowledge forbidden to Adam.• Uses mythological imagery to reveal the working processes of awareness in the human brain.• Combines ancient Qabalic techniques and modern scientific brain research to show how Genesis is an operating manual for creating wholeness in the psyche.Adam exists within all our psyches, as does Eve. While Adam represents the masculine component of consciousness--pure intellect--Eve represents the functions of the brain's frontal lobes, the feminine intuitive integrator of the four-level human brain. If we wish to be whole, we must develop and integrate the feminine with the masculine. Using her lifelong study of the Qabalah and the secret meanings of the Hebrew alphabet, Glynda-Lee Hoffmann shows how the Garden of Eden story is actually an instruction manual that explains transcendence as a biological imperative. Hoffmann reveals why it was permissible for Eve to eat the apple of knowledge that was forbidden to Adam. Eve's desire for integration, clarity, and transcendence--for wisdom--is a goal Adam is biologically incapable of pursuing without her. Though written as mythology, Genesis contains remarkable scientific and psychological correlations that can help an individual integrate the masculine and feminine sides of the psyche and thereby translate potential into actuality.By Joseph S. Pliskin, M.G. Myriam Hunink Milton C. Weinstein Eve Wittenberg Michael F. Drummond Joseph S. Pliskin John B. Wong, Paul P. Glasziou, M.G. Myriam Hunink, Milton C. Weinstein, Eve Wittenberg, Michael F. Drummond, John B. Wong. 2001
Decision making in health care means navigating through a complex and tangled web of diagnostic and therapeutic uncertainties, patient preferences…
and values, and costs. In addition, medical therapies may include side effects, surgery may lead to undesirable complications, and diagnostic technologies may produce inconclusive results. In many clinical and health policy decisions it is necessary to counterbalance benefits and risks, and to trade off competing objectives such as maximizing life expectancy vs optimizing quality of life vs minimizing the required resources. This textbook plots a clear course through these complex and conflicting variables. It clearly explains and illustrates tools for integrating quantitative evidence-based data and subjective outcome values in making clinical and health policy decisions. An accompanying CD-ROM features solutions to the exercises, PowerPoint® presentations of the illustrations, and sample models and tables.By Robert Fanuzzi, Ann Cvetkovich, Kevin K. Gaines, Kirsten Silva Gruesz, John Kuo Wei Tchen, Kyla Schuller, E. Patrick Johnson, Amaranth Borsuk, Cynthia G. Franklin, David F. Ruccio, Lauren Berlant, Eric Lott, Ashley Dawson, David Kazanjian, Angela D. Dillard, Kembrew McLeod, Christopher Newfield, Marlene L. Daut, George Yúdice, Lauren Klein, Miriam Posner, Andrew Ross, Tara McPherson, Jodi Melamed, Timothy Mitchell, Erica Kohl-Arenas, George J. Sanchez, Vermonja R. Alston, Henry Yu, Carla L. Peterson, Rebecca Hill, Stephanie Smallwood, Rebecca Wanzo, Jack Halberstam, Lisa Lowe, Leerom Medovoi, Matthew Frye Jacobson, J. Kēhaulani Kauanui, Daniel Martinez HoSang, Brian T. Edwards, Marc Bousquet, Juana María Rodríguez, Dean Spade, Nikhil Pal Singh, Sandra M. Gustafson, Lisa Nakamura, Alyshia Gálvez, Alys Eve Weinbaum, Julie Sze, June Wayee Chau, Robert McRuer, Kandice Chuh, Joseph Lowndes, Caleb Smith, Siobhan B. Somerville, Oneka LaBennett, Crystal Parikh, Scott Herring, Christina B. Hanhardt, Laura Briggs, Walter Johnson, Josh Kun, George Lipsitz, Tavia Nyong’o, Jentery Sayers, Junaid Rana, Valerie Rohy, Erin Manning, Lee Bebout, Sunaina Maira. 2020
Introduces key terms, research traditions, debates, and histories for American Studies and Cultural Studies in an updated editionSince its initial…
publication, scholars and students alike have turned to Keywords for American Cultural Studies as an invaluable resource for understanding key terms and debates in the fields of American studies and cultural studies. As scholarship has continued to evolve, this revised and expanded third edition offers indispensable meditations on new and developing concepts used in American studies, cultural studies, and beyond.Designed as a uniquely print-digital hybrid publication, this Keywords volume collects 114 essays, each focused on a single term such as “America,” “culture,” “diversity,” or “religion.” More than forty of the essays have been significantly revised for this new edition, and there are nineteen completely new keywords, including crucial additions such as “biopolitics,” “data,” “debt,” and “intersectionality.” Throughout the volume, interdisciplinary scholars explore these terms and others as nodal points in many of today’s most dynamic and vexed discussions of political and social life, both inside and outside of the academy. The Keywords website features forty-eight essays not in the print volume; it also provides pedagogical tools for instructors using print and online keywords in their courses.The publication brings together essays by interdisciplinary scholars working in literary studies and political economy, cultural anthropology and ethnic studies, African American history and performance studies, gender studies and political theory. Some entries are explicitly argumentative; others are more descriptive. All are clear, challenging, and critically engaged. As a whole, Keywords for American Cultural Studies provides an accessible A-to-Z survey of prevailing academic buzzwords and a flexible tool for carving out new areas of inquiry.