![]() The ethnographic origin story begins in 1914 with Bronislaw Malinowski and his detailed study of life in the Trobriand Islands: Consequent to the first World War, Malinowski was forced to stay in the Trobriand Islands much longer than planned. By moving from example to methodological reflection, to principle of research, we demonstrate how the oscillation of ethnographic research between theory and practice can productively contribute to the field of health service research. We trace how ethnography, through generative processes of oscillation, can take us beyond lamenting the gap and capture the relational dynamics of people working together in complex systemic arrangements. In this article, we present an argument for the inclusion of ethnographic methods in health services research and show that this approach enables researchers to address this divergence by working within it. ![]() This disparity is usually referred to as the theory–practice gap and contributes to concerns that scientific evidence fails to make substantial impacts on the processes of service delivery. ![]() ![]() The well-known divergence between what policy and protocol look like on paper, and what happens in the actual practice of daily life remains a central challenge in health services provision and research. ![]()
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![]() ![]() Allen collaborated with James Ingram to create "Brothers of the Knight" which played at the prestigious Kennedy Center in Washington, DC in the spring of 1998.Īs Resident Director of the hit television series "Fame", in which she also starred, Allen went on to direct episodes of "Family Ties", "Bronx Zoo", "A Different World" and the pilot for "The Fresh Prince of Bel Air", which she also produced. She holds the distinction of having choreographed the Academy Awards for five consecutive years. ![]() In 1988 she went behind the scenes to choreograph the new American Musical "Carrie with the Royal Shakespeare Company" and has continued to devote herself to that discipline. ![]() Allen received another Tony Award nomination in 1986 for her role as Bob Fosse's "Sweet Charity".Īllen's choreography career soared in 1980 with the international hit TV series "Fame". She next appeared in "Raisin", then in the 1979 production West Side Story", for which she won a prestigious Drama Desk Award, as well as, her first Tony Award nomination. Actor, director, dancer/choreographer and singer, Debbie Allen's career has touched nearly every facet of the entertainment industry.Īllen's Broadway career as a dancer, singer and actor began in the chorus of "Purlie". ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The story it tells is a gripping one of adventure and discovery, but it is also a guidebook that has the power to crystallize your perceptions of why you are where you are in life and to direct your steps with a new energy and optimism as you head into tomorrow. Drawing on ancient wisdom, it tells you how to make connections among the events happening in your life right now and lets you see what is going to happen to you in the years to come. Within its pages are 9 key insights into life itself - insights each human being is predicted to grasp sequentially one insight, then another, as we move toward a completely spiritual culture on Earth. In the rain forests of Peru, an ancient manuscript has been discovered. You have never read a book like this before-a book that comes along once in a lifetime to change lives forever. THE #1 BESTSELLING INTERNATIONAL PHENOMENON - NOW WITH A NEW PREFACE ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Other characters include a friendly giant named Garth and a convent of nuns. ![]() You'll find what isn't what it is." The protagonist journeys through medieval England and France, encountering various characters such as Henry, the power-hungry King of England Rufus, the Mad King of Hereford a motley group of Philosopher Knights and Michelle, a young tavern maid who joins the protagonist on his quest. Where that which falls stays where it is, There, he becomes involved in a quest for the Forbidden Castle, which can be found only by solving a riddle: "Somewhere south, where it is colder, Although unlike "The Cave of Time", the protagonist only travels to one time period rather than jumping through epochs.Īs in the other books in the series, the reader is portrayed as the protagonist of the story, referred to in the present tense and by the second-person pronoun "you." In this book, the protagonist re-enters the time portal from " The Cave of Time" and finds himself transported back to the Middle Ages. It is the 14th book in the Choose Your Own Adventure series and the first sequel to " The Cave of Time", the first book in the same series. Image_caption = Cover of the Bantam editionįollowed_by = House of Danger "The Forbidden Castle" is a 1982 gamebook by Edward Packard, with illustrations by "Paul Granger" (a pseudonym for Don Hedin). ![]() ![]() ![]() Finally, after drifting along the river in an unintentional parody of Three Men in a Boat, he locates his contact, Verity Kindle (she caused the problem in the first place). ![]() So a bewildered Ned finds himself in Oxford in 1889, wearing boating clothes, accompanied by a mountain of luggage, a regal cat in a box, and no idea what he's supposed to do next. A chronological complication that Ned is only dimly aware of, though, has arisen and must be fixed before history is changed. But Lady Schrapnell has another vital task for poor Ned: to locate a grotesque Victorian artifact known as the bishop's bird stump. After too many recent missions, operative Ned Henry is timelagged and in need of a complete rest. In 2057, the fearsome, slave-driving Lady Schrapnell has lent her authority and her money to developing time travel so that she can rebuild Old Coventry Cathedral, destroyed by Nazi bombs in 1940. Comic yarn set in the same time-traveling universe as the splendid Doomsday Book (1992), with some of the minor characters in common. ![]() ![]() ![]() It presents the young Mrs March as a fiery character with strong verbal and physical expressions of anger. The novel accurately reflects Bronson Alcott's principles, notably his belief that boys and girls of all races had a right to education and his wish to follow a vegetarian diet. The recovering March, despite his guilt and grief over his survival when others have perished, returns home to his wife and Little Women, but he has been scarred by the events he has gone through. While in hospital, he has an unexpected meeting with Grace, an intelligent and literate black nurse whom he first met as a young woman staying in a large house where she was a slave. He suffers from a prolonged illness stemming from poor conditions on a cotton farm in Virginia. ![]() During this time, March writes letters to his family, but he withholds the true extent of the brutality and injustices he witnesses on and off the battlefields. March, an abolitionist and chaplain in the Union Army, is driven by his conscience to leave his home and family in Concord, Massachusetts, to participate in the war. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() This idea is embodied by the character, White Fang. The process of "natural selection" means that only the strongest, brightest, and most adaptable elements of a species will survive. Jack London write many books with Darwin's popular ideas in mind, particularly White Fang and The Call of the Wild. London is also particularly careful to adhere to established facts of a wolf's life cycle in White Fang's early years. White Fang's heredity is carefully defined, "one-fourth dog, three-fourths wolf," leading up to the struggle within him between his civilized impulses and his wild ones. He was not responsible." Jim Hall is also portrayed as a victim of his environment, not responsible for his actions. ![]() With the environmental theme in mind, this novel is written with biological and social determinism, and London insists that although Beauty Smith was "a monstrositythe blame of it lay elsewhere. The environmental theme is signaled at the onset of White Fang as London vividly describes the landscape, paradoxically combining a foreboding animism with a sinister desolation. ![]() Generally, naturalism refers to those who viewed life strictly from a scientific approach in this case that translates to the view that man and other creatures were victims of their heredity and environment. Throughout White Fang, Jack London uses the theme of naturalism. ![]() ![]() I read Adorno’s interpretation of Beethoven’s late works as a contrasting response to a situation that is pervaded by the experience of finitude. For Adorno, the recognition of the historical truth of the distinction between history and nature is the driving force of critique, the comportment of which Adorno regards as most clearly expressed in artworks, in particular, in music. It is at this point that Adorno’s work, and, in particular, his thinking on aesthetics can make an important intervention. ![]() ![]() While the differences between those two approaches could hardly appear greater, they converge at their margins: both operate on the assumption that the Anthropocene signifies a nature-culture continuum. The popularisation of the term Anthropocene has been accompanied by the emergence of two seemingly opposed discourses: one response could be characterised in terms of a Promethean faith in science, and the other as a turn towards new materialism. ![]() ![]() This article develops a critique of the notion of the Anthropocene through the lens of Adorno’s reading of Beethoven’s late style. ![]() ![]() ![]() Her return, as well as her continued involvement with various movements, awakens dormant emotions in Hap, leading him to wonder whether he should have devoted more time to the ideals he felt in the 1960s, and whether he had wasted his time in the interim on low-paying, go nowhere jobs. She is involved with a small group of radical leftists who wish to use the money to fund their movement Hap and Leonard just wish to have enough to retire somewhere pleasant. Hap's ex-wife Trudy returns, involving the pair in a scheme to retrieve hundreds of thousands of dollars stolen from a bank and then lost in a creek in the woods in an area which Hap knows quite well. Hap and Leonard are two Texan men who are down on their luck, both working low paying jobs well into their 40s. The novel was nominated for a Bram Stoker Award for Best (Mystery) Novel of 1990. ![]() It is the first in a series of books and stories written by Lansdale featuring the characters Hap Collins and Leonard Pine. ![]() Savage Season is a 1990 crime novel by American author Joe R. ![]() ![]() ![]() Both parents and the government, in consequence of this view, may be said to wink at profligacy, and even in the last resource to encourage its practice. ![]() My views on the question may be succinctly stated as follows: Without entering into details, it will be generally admitted that I am accurate in saying that many people condone in young men a course of conduct with regard to the other sex which is incompatible with strict morality, and that this dissoluteness is pardoned generally. I have received, and still continue to receive, numbers of letters from persons who are perfect strangers to me, asking me to state in plain and simple language my own views on the subject handled in the story entitled "The Kreutzer Sonata." With this request I shall now endeavor to comply. Source: Translated by the Isabel Florence Hapgood Lesson of the Kreutzer Sonata - The Kreutzer Sonata, by Leo Tolstoy ![]() |