Filtrer
Kath
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Folles frues fortes
Marjolaine Beauchamp, Martine Delvaux, Fanie Demeule, Marie-sissi Labrèche, Maude Lafleur, Catherine Mavrikakis, Kath
- Tête première
- 4 Octobre 2019
- 9782924207987
FOLLE
La folie se présente comme un syndrome fourre-tout qui enferme les femmes dans une illégitimité chronique. En qualifiant les femmes de folles à tort et à travers, on leur retire le droit d'être blessées, en colère ou injustement traitées. Mais la folie n'est pas qu'une tare, elle est aussi moteur de création, génératrice d'idées et d'innovations.
FRUE
La femme frue, c'est la féministe enragée, la féminazie, réduite à sa seule colère. Frustrées sont ces courageuses qui continuent à lutter contre le backlash et le masculinisme rampant. En refusant de se plier au statu quo, elles se trouvent à être répudiées et dévalorisées publiquement : on les traite de mal baisées, de misandres et de... folles.
FORTE
La douceur et de la fragilité sont des attributs liés à la « vraie » féminité. En contrepartie, la force, physique et mentale, serait l'apanage du masculin. Les Fortes, qui n'ont rien des poupées de porcelaine ou des nymphettes soumises, dérangent. La Forte est un modèle de puissance, de résilience et d'audace.
Alors, et si au lieu de discréditer la folie, la frustration et la force, on s'en réclamait fièrement? -
A Toolkit of Motivational Skills
Catherine Fuller, Phil Taylor, Kath Wilson
- Wiley-Blackwell
- 29 Mai 2019
- 9781118510230
A Toolkit of Motivational Skills, Third Edition, draws on the latest research to show how the Motivational Interviewing approach can be effectively utilized to draw out and sustain an individual's internal motivation for behavioral change.
Updated with a wide range of applications and practical examples of motivational techniques which have effectively helped others to change Updated with a wide range of applications and practical examples of motivational techniques which have effectively helped others to change Features a variety of supplemental resources including 16 online video examples of MI in action, with a workbook chapter that helps readers analyse each video in detail Includes new illustrations and diagrams designed to amplify the text and make it an engaging and enjoyable reading experience -
Visibility matters in contemporary societies; online, in the media and in the public eye. But who is seen and how? Are women still seen through a male gaze? This book explores the politics of looking and being looked at, and the relationship between actual and virtual worlds, for example in sport, art and cinema.
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Everyday Data Cultures
Jean Burgess, Rowan Wilken, Kath Albury, Anthony Mccosker
- Polity
- 8 Juin 2022
- 9781509553310
The AI revolution can seem powerful and unstoppable, extracting data from every aspect of our lives and subjecting us to unprecedented surveillance and control. But at ground level, even the most advanced `smart' technologies are not as all-powerful as either the tech companies or their critics would have us believe.
From gig worker activism to wellness tracking with sex toys and TikTokers' manipulation of the algorithm, this book shows how ordinary people are negotiating the datafication of society. The book establishes a new theoretical framework for understanding everyday experiences of data and automation, and offers guidance on the ethical responsibilities we share as we learn to live together with data-driven machines.
Everyday Data Cultures is essential reading for students and researchers in digital media and communication, as well as for anyone interested in the role of data and AI in society. -
Health Care Ethics examines the way ethical dilemmas are played out in everyday clinical practice and argues for an approach to ethical decision-making which focuses more on patient needs than competing professional interests.
While advances in medical science and technology have improved the ability to save and prolong lives, they have also given rise to fundamental questions about what constitutes life and personhood, especially in the context of what are termed 'persistent vegetative state' and 'brain death'. Drawing on the example of intensive care where such questions feature strongly in everyday practice, Kath M Melia examines how decisions are taken within the context of multiprofessional teamworking, including
· whether to admit a patient and commence treatment
· what the aim of treatment should be (i.e. palliation, care or cure)
· when to limit, withhold or withdraw treatment
· when to donate organs.
As an area in which different professional groups work closely together, the author argues that there are lessons to be learnt from intensive care which can be applied to ethical decision making in all areas of health care for the greater good of patients.
The book makes a significant contribution to the literature on ethics in health care and to the development of ethical decision making which prioritises the needs of patients. It is essential reading for ethicists, sociologists and health care professionals.