Results for 'Jennifer Black'

963 found
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  1.  47
    Tracking Brain Plasticity in Cochlear Implant Patients Using the Event-Related Optical Signal.Tse Chun-Yu, Novak Michael, Tan Chin-Hong, Black Jennifer, Gordon Brian, Maclin Ed, Zimmerman Benjamin, Gratton Gabriele & Fabiani Monica - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  2. Measuring the unimaginable: Imaginative resistance to fiction and related constructs.Jessica Black & Jennifer Barnes - 2017 - Personality and Individual Differences 111 (1):71-79.
    Imaginative resistance refers to a perceived inability or unwillingness to enter into fictional worlds that portray deviant moralities (Gendler, 2000): we can all easily imagine that dragons exist, but many people feel incapable of imagining fictional worlds in which morality works differently. Although this phenomenon has received much attention from philosophers, no one has attempted to operationalize the construct in a self-report scale. In Study 1, we developed the Imaginative Resistance Scale (IRS), investigated its relationship to theoretically related constructs, and (...)
     
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  3.  71
    Morality and the imagination: Real-world moral beliefs interfere with imagining fictional content.Jessica Black & Jennifer Barnes - 2020 - Philosophical Psychology 33 (7):1018-1044.
    The purpose of this paper was to test whether imaginative resistance – a term used in the philosophical literature to describe the reluctance to imagine counter-moral worlds – is experienced by peo...
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  4.  37
    Investigating the possibility of a syntactic impairment in the semantic variant of PPA using a constrained production task: Preliminary findings.Cupit Jennifer, Leonard Carol, Graham Naida, Seixas Lima Bruna, Tang-Wai David, Black Sandra & Rochon Elizabeth - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  5.  17
    Public Health Surveillance: Electronic Reporting as a Point of Reference.Jennifer Black, Rachel Hulkower, Walter Suarez, Shreya Patel & Brandon Elliott - 2019 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 47 (S2):19-22.
    Federal, state, and local laws shape the use of health information for public health purposes, such as the mandated collection of data through electronic disease reporting systems. Health professionals can leverage these data to better anticipate and plan for the needs of communities, which is seen in the use of electronic case reporting.
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  6.  13
    Black bodies and quantum cats: tales from the annals of physics.Jennifer Ouellette - 2005 - New York: Penguin Books.
    Physics, once known as “natural philosophy,” is the most basic science, explaining the world we live in, from the largest scale down to the very, very, very smallest, and our understanding of it has changed over many centuries. In Black Bodies and Quantum Cats , science writer Jennifer Ouellette traces key developments in the field, setting descriptions of the fundamentals of physics in their historical context as well as against a broad cultural backdrop. Newton’s laws are illustrated via (...)
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  7.  51
    Black Feminist Bioethics: Centering Community to Ask Better Questions.Jennifer Elyse James - 2022 - Hastings Center Report 52 (S1):21-23.
    Hastings Center Report, Volume 52, Issue S1, Page S21-S23, March‐April 2022.
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  8.  20
    Black Lactation Aesthetics: Remaking the Natural in Lakisha Cohill's Photographs.Jennifer C. Nash - 2021 - Feminist Studies 47 (1):94-111.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:94 Feminist Studies 47, no. 1. © 2021 by Feminist Studies, Inc. Jennifer C. Nash Black Lactation Aesthetics: Remaking the Natural in Lakisha Cohill’s Photographs In her 1992 essay “Selling Hot Pussy,” bell hooks recounts entering a “late night dessert place” with a group of colleagues who all began to laugh at a shelf of “gigantic chocolate breasts complete with nipples— huge edible tits.”1 For hooks, the (...)
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  9.  13
    Do White Women Gain Status for Engaging in Anti-black Racism at Work? An Experimental Examination of Status Conferral.Jennifer L. Berdahl & Barnini Bhattacharyya - 2024 - Journal of Business Ethics 193 (4):839-858.
    Businesses often attempt to demonstrate their commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) by showcasing women in their leadership ranks, most of whom are white. Yet research has shown that organizations confer status and power to women who engage in sexist behavior, which undermines DEI efforts. We sought to examine whether women who engage in racist behavior are also conferred relative status at work. Drawing on theory and research on organizational culture and intersectionality, we predicted that a white woman who (...)
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  10.  56
    White protestants and Black Christians: The absence and presence of whiteness in the face of the Black manifesto.Jennifer Harvey - 2011 - Journal of Religious Ethics 39 (1):125-150.
    This essay brings Critical Whiteness Studies into liberationist Christian ethics in order to analyze white Protestant responses to the 1969 Black Manifesto, which demanded reparations from white churches. The essay's primary argument is that the absence of a sense of white moral agency among white Protestants manifested itself in behaviors and rhetoric that ensured whiteness went unacknowledged, which caused Protestant responses to the Manifesto to fail. A related argument is that white behavior and rhetoric were particularly dramatic because of (...)
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  11.  59
    Authorship policies of scientific journals: Table 1.David B. Resnik, Ana M. Tyler, Jennifer R. Black & Grace Kissling - 2016 - Journal of Medical Ethics 42 (3):199-202.
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  12.  23
    Black Mothers and Vaccine Refusal: Gendered Racism, Healthcare, and the State.Jennifer A. Reich & Courtney Thornton - 2022 - Gender and Society 36 (4):525-551.
    Vaccine refusal has increasingly been the focus of public health concern. Rates of children who are up to date on vaccines have declined in recent years, and vaccine refusal has been implicated in disease outbreaks. Most research on children who are not fully immunized identifies white affluent mothers as most likely to opt out by choice and Black mothers as more likely to face structural barriers that limit access to vaccines for their children. In this paper, we analyze social (...)
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  13.  19
    Black sexualities.Jennifer C. Nash - 2018 - Feminist Theory 19 (1):3-5.
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  14.  15
    Colonial Geographies, Black Geographies, and Bioethics.Jennifer Mccurdy - 2022 - Hastings Center Report 52 (S1):66-68.
    Hastings Center Report, Volume 52, Issue S1, Page S66-S68, March‐April 2022.
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  15.  37
    The Political Life of Black Motherhood.Jennifer C. Nash - 2018 - Feminist Studies 44 (3):699.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 44, no. 3. © 2018 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 699 Jennifer C. Nash The Political Life of Black Motherhood In 1976, Adrienne Rich wrote, “We know more about the air we breathe, the seas we travel, than about the nature and meaning of motherhood.”1 In the four decades since the publication of Rich’s now-canonical Of Woman Born, Andrea O’Reilly has argued for the advent of (...)
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  16. Towards transitional justice? Black reparations and the end of mass incarceration.Jennifer Page & Desmond King - 2018 - Ethnic and Racial Studies 41 (4):739-758.
    There are many commonalities between the goals of transitional justice and domestic redress movements. We look at the movement for reparations for enslavement and Jim Crow in the United States as an example of a domestic reparations movement, and argue for the usefulness of the concept of transitional justice. We are particularly interested in showing that a future democratic transition – the end of mass incarceration – could animate a renewed push for reparations and a formal investigation into America’s legacy (...)
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  17.  25
    In the Face of a Haitian Child: Racial Intimacies, Paternalistic Interventions, and Discourses of “Deviant Black Motherhood” in Transnational Hispaniola.Jennifer L. Shoaff - 2017 - Feminist Studies 43 (2):438.
    Abstract:In the immediate aftermath of the Haitian earthquake on January 12, 2010, the representative victim-survivor in multiple media sites appeared to the world in the face of the Haitian child-cum-orphan. This poignant image of loss and suffering lent urgency to a range of altruistic responses—or rather, paternalistic interventions—by white families in the U.S. I argue that in both narrative and practice, dominant constructions of normative (white) motherhood were exaggerated and made hypervisible, which propelled the actual lived experience of Haitian mothers (...)
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  18. Of Black boxes, instruments, and experts: Testing the validity of forensic science.Jennifer L. Mnookin - 2008 - Episteme 5 (3):pp. 343-358.
    This paper argues that judges assessing the scientific validity and the legal admissibility of forensic science techniques ought to privilege testing over explanation. Their evaluation of reliability should be more concerned with whether the technique has been adequately validated by appropriate empirical testing than with whether the expert can offer an adequate description of the methods she uses, or satisfactorily explain her methodology or the theory from which her claims derive. This paper explores these issues within two specific contexts: latent (...)
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  19.  35
    Beyond Seeing Race: Centering Racism and Acknowledging Agency Within Bioethics.Jennifer E. James & Corina L. Iacopetti - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (2):56-58.
    As the twin pandemics of COVID-19 and state violence against Black Americans dominated our national landscape in the spring of 2020, many in medicine, nursing, and public health made renewed calls...
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  20.  42
    Teaching about Ferguson: An Introduction.Jennifer C. Nash - 2015 - Feminist Studies 41 (1):211.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:7 Forum: Teaching about Ferguson 8 Feminist Studies 41, no. 1. © 2015 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 211 Jennifer C. Nash Teaching about Ferguson: An Introduction This forum was organized around the idea of asking feminist scholars to reflect on the practice of teaching about racial violence as well as on the experiences of teaching in the midst of racial violence. What do feminist pedagogies centered on Ferguson (...)
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  21.  38
    A Second Chance at Health.Jennifer Elyse James - 2021 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 14 (2):70-80.
    Mass incarceration and the aging prison population in the United States is an ethical crisis, understudied in empirical bioethics research. In this article, I share one woman’s narrative to illustrate how older Black women describe accessing healthcare while incarcerated and identify sites for bioethical exploration. I argue that, due to the punitive nature of prison healthcare interactions, wherein women are seen as inmates first and patients second, healthcare providers are caught in a trap of competing ethical commitments to their (...)
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  22.  30
    Race, Racism, and Bioethics: Are We Stuck?Jennifer E. James - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (3):22-24.
    Camisha Russell has written a beautiful essay articulating why race and racism should be centered within bioethics. I agree with her assertion that Black Lives Matter (and the subsequent backlash t...
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  23.  13
    Legally Armed but Presumed Dangerous: An Intersectional Analysis of Gun Carry Licensing as a Racial/gender Degradation Ceremony.Jennifer Carlson - 2018 - Gender and Society 32 (2):204-227.
    This article analyzes gun carry licensing as a disciplinary mechanism that places African American men in a liminal zone where they are legally armed but presumed dangerous, even as African Americans now experience broadened access to concealed pistol licenses amid contemporary U.S. gun laws. Using observational data from now-defunct public gun boards in Metropolitan Detroit, this article systematically explores how CPLs are mobilized by administrators to reflect and reinforce racial/gender hierarchies. This article broadens scholarly understandings of how tropes of criminality (...)
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  24.  21
    Women of Color and the Reproductive Rights Movement.Jennifer Nelson - 2003 - NYU Press.
    Uncovers the truth behind the ideas, struggles, and eventually success of Black and Puerto Rican Nationalists regarding key feminist issues of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s While most people believe that the movement to secure voluntary reproductive control for women centered solely on abortion rights, for many women abortion was not the only, or even primary, focus. Jennifer Nelson tells the story of the feminist struggle for legal abortion and reproductive rights in the 1960s, 1970s, and early 1980s (...)
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  25.  42
    Becoming Able to See Anomalies.Jennifer Clegg, Elizabeth Murphy & Kathryn Almack - 2017 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 24 (4):381-384.
    In his still-authoritative history of science essay, Kuhn showed that scientific discoveries commence with awareness of anomaly that researchers initially struggle to notice. Kuhn drew on a psychological study to illustrate the problem. Bruner and Postman asked people to name playing cards on brief exposure. Most cards were normal, but some were anomalous, such as a red six of spades and a black four of hearts. On brief exposure all participants fitted the anomalous cards unhesitatingly into their existing cognitive (...)
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  26.  27
    Correction to: Black Bioethics in the Age of Black Lives Matter.Keisha Ray, Faith E. Fletcher, Daphne O. Martschenko & Jennifer E. James - 2023 - Journal of Medical Humanities 44 (2):287-289.
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  27.  62
    Sigewiza's cure.Jennifer H. Radden - 2007 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 14 (4):pp. 373-376.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Sigewiza’s CureJennifer H. Radden (bio)Keywordsbiopsychosocial model, Hildegard of Bingen, associationist presuppositions, causation, power of suggestionSuzanne Phillips and Monique Boivin provide us with a sympathetic and compelling account of how the various elements of Hildegard’s sophisticated amalgam of ritual, magic, religion, dietary and other medical remedies, caring, and community, formed a seamless cure for Sigewiza’s affliction. Whether Hildgard’s approach reflects an early instance of the biopsychosocial “model” is a separate (...)
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  28.  33
    Reproductive Justice and Abolition: Important Lessons Black Feminists Have Been Teaching Us for Years.Jennifer E. James - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (2):55-58.
    In March of 2021, a woman named Ashley Caswell was arrested in Etowah County, Alabama after testing positive for methamphetamine (Levin 2023). Ms. Caswell was two months pregnant and was arrested f...
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  29.  18
    Margaret S. Graves, Arts of Allusion: Object, Ornament, and Architecture in Medieval Islam. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018. Pp. xi, 339; many color and black-and-white figures. $90. ISBN: 978-0-1906-9591-0. [REVIEW]Jennifer Pruitt - 2021 - Speculum 96 (1):224-225.
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  30.  65
    Responsibility Gaps and Black Box Healthcare AI: Shared Responsibilization as a Solution.Benjamin H. Lang, Sven Nyholm & Jennifer Blumenthal-Barby - 2023 - Digital Society 2 (3):52.
    As sophisticated artificial intelligence software becomes more ubiquitously and more intimately integrated within domains of traditionally human endeavor, many are raising questions over how responsibility (be it moral, legal, or causal) can be understood for an AI’s actions or influence on an outcome. So called “responsibility gaps” occur whenever there exists an apparent chasm in the ordinary attribution of moral blame or responsibility when an AI automates physical or cognitive labor otherwise performed by human beings and commits an error. Healthcare (...)
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  31.  19
    Peter Coss, Chris Dennis, Melissa Julian-Jones, and Angelo Silvestri, eds., Episcopal Power and Personality in Medieval Europe, 900–1480. (Medieval Church Studies 42.) Turnhout: Brepols, 2020. Pp. vi, 303; color plates and black-and-white figure. €85. ISBN: 978-2-5035-8500-0. Table of contents available online at http://www.brepols.net/Pages/ShowProduct.aspx?prod_id=IS-9782503585000-1. [REVIEW]Jennifer Paxton - 2022 - Speculum 97 (3):816-817.
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  32.  17
    The Postcolonial and the Post-Traumatic: Specters and Syndromes of White Feminist Canon.Jennifer Scuro - 2023 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 13 (1):25-40.
    Following Namita Goswami’s call for a “non-antagonistic understanding of difference” in Subjects That Matter: Philosophy, Feminism, and Postcolonial Theory (2019), I want to challenge the canon of white feminism that still lingers in the emerging discourses on trauma care and trauma recovery, specifically utilizing concepts from Critical Disability Theory and, to some degree, Critical Trauma Studies. As Joy DeGruy asks in Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome [PTSS]: “debilitating beliefs and assumptions are... part of the legacy of trauma.... How are such effects (...)
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  33.  36
    Diagnostic Wannabes.Jennifer Radden - 2023 - Philosophy Psychiatry and Psychology 30 (3):279-281.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Diagnostic WannabesJennifer Radden, PhD (bio)Saunders explores challenges for the clinician faced with self-styled sufferers from attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, bipolar disorder, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and fibromyalgia. The diagnostic system was not meant to be used as “a scaffold for identity,” she points out. Yet wannabe patients now step into the clinic wielding self-proclaimed diagnoses as social identities. Saunders explains the context where such phenomena arise, (...)
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  34.  31
    Black Bioethics in the Age of Black Lives Matter.Keisha Ray, Faith E. Fletcher, Daphne O. Martschenko & Jennifer E. James - 2023 - Journal of Medical Humanities 44 (2):251-267.
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  35.  9
    Me, myself, and why: searching for the science of self.Jennifer Ouellette - 2014 - New York: Penguin Books.
    A fascinating survey of the forces that shape who we are and how we act-from the author of The Calculus Diaries Following her previous tours through the worlds of physics (Black Bodies and Quantum Cats) and calculus (The Calculus Diaries), acclaimed science writer Jennifer Ouellette now turns her attention to the mysteries of human identity and behavior with Me, Myself, and Why. She draws on genetics, neuroscience, and psychology-enlivened as always with her signature sense of humor and pop-culture (...)
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  36. Truth and Reparation for the U.S. Imprisonment and Policing Regime: A Transitional Justice Perspective.Jennifer M. Https://Orcidorg Page & Desmond King - 2022 - Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race 19 (2):209–231.
    In the literature on transitional justice, there is disagreement about whether countries like the United States can be characterized as transitional societies. Though it is widely recognized that transitional justice mechanisms such as truth commissions and reparations can be used by Global North nations to address racial injustice, some consider societies to be transitional only when they are undergoing a formal democratic regime change. We conceptualize the political situation of low-income Black communities under the U.S. imprisonment and policing regime (...)
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  37.  27
    Canada and Pure Land, a New Field and Buddha-Land: Womanists and Buddhists Reading Together.Jennifer Leath - 2012 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 32:57-65.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Canada and Pure Land, a New Field and Buddha-Land:Womanists and Buddhists Reading TogetherJennifer LeathReligion, in theory and in praxis, is often a journey through and to territories known and unknown. Sometimes the paths of particular traditions seem to avoid intersection at all costs. Thus, it is no small accomplishment that Womanists and scholars and practitioners of Buddhism, who typically reflect very different demographic groups, have been in dialogue about (...)
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  38.  20
    Thomas W. Gaehtgens, Notre-Dame: Geschichte einer Kathedrale. Munich: C. H. Beck, 2020. Paper. Pp. 127; color and black-and-white figures. €9.95. ISBN: 978-3-4067-5048-9. [REVIEW]Jennifer M. Feltman - 2022 - Speculum 97 (2):496-497.
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  39.  95
    A non‐normative account of assertion.Dylan Black - 2018 - Ratio 32:53-62.
    Many contemporary philosophers argue that assertion is governed by an epistemic norm. In particular, many defend the knowledge account of assertion, which says that one should assert only what one knows. Here, I defend a non‐normative alternative to the knowledge account that I call the repK account of assertion. According to the repK account, assertion represents knowledge, but it is not governed by a constitutive epistemic rule. I show that the repK account offers a more straightforward interpretation of the conversational (...)
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  40.  30
    Yolanda Plumley, The Art of Grafted Song: Citation and Allusion in the Age of Machaut. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2013. Pp. xxiv, 460; 15 black-and-white figures. $74. ISBN: 978-0-19-991508-8. [REVIEW]Jennifer A. Saltzstein - 2014 - Speculum 89 (3):815-816.
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  41. When Do People Not Protest Unfairness? The Case of Skin Color Discrimination.Jennifer Hochschild - 2006 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 73 (2):473-498.
    The evidence is clear and consistent that African Americans and Hispanics are treated differently depending on their skin color within their racial or ethnic group, and yet the surveys that show these results also show very few political or political-psychological patterns as a result of skin color. To investigate why this is so, this paper uses the fact that discriminatory treatment by skin color does not necessarily result in political action or perceptions around that discrimination to raise the larger question (...)
     
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  42.  20
    Preface.Jennifer Nash & Millie Thayer - 2017 - Feminist Studies 43 (2):255.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:preface In this issue, one cluster of articles presents scholarly and creative work focused on Latin American queer politics. Each article reveals queer challenges—theoretical, aesthetic, political, ideological, libidinal, corporeal—to prevailing logics of heteronormativity and neoliberalism, and to asymmetrical processes of knowledge production and circulation. Rafael de la Dehesa examines how political responses to AIDS in Brazil enabled surprising alliances between NGOs, activists, and the state, which produced radical social (...)
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  43.  25
    Sandra Ness Ihle, Malory's Grail Quest: Invention and Adaptation in Medieval Prose Romance. Madison and London: University of Wisconsin Press, 1983. Pp. xii, 199; 7 black-and-white illustrations. $22.50. [REVIEW]Jennifer R. Goodman - 1984 - Speculum 59 (3):721.
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  44.  34
    Mireille Chazan and Nancy Freeman Regalado, eds., Lettres, musique et société en Lorraine médiévale: Autour du “Tournoi de Chauvency” (Ms. Oxford Bodleian Douce 308). (Publications Romanes et Françaises 255.) Geneva: Librairie Droz, 2012. Paper. Pp. 583 plus 17 color plates; black-and-white figures, musical examples, and tables. $96. ISBN: 9782600014656. [REVIEW]Jennifer Saltzstein - 2013 - Speculum 88 (4):1072-1074.
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  45.  22
    Coping With Changes to Sex and Intimacy After a Diagnosis of Metastatic Breast Cancer: Results From a Qualitative Investigation With Patients and Partners.Jennifer Barsky Reese, Lauren A. Zimmaro, Sarah McIlhenny, Kristen Sorice, Laura S. Porter, Alexandra K. Zaleta, Mary B. Daly, Beth Cribb & Jessica R. Gorman - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Objective:Prior research examining sexual and intimacy concerns among metastatic breast cancer patients and their intimate partners is limited. In this qualitative study, we explored MBC patients’ and partners’ experiences of sexual and intimacy-related changes and concerns, coping efforts, and information needs and intervention preferences, with a focus on identifying how the context of MBC shapes these experiences.Methods:We conducted 3 focus groups with partnered patients with MBC [N = 12; M age = 50.2; 92% White; 8% Black] and 6 interviews (...)
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  46.  10
    Looking.Jennifer James - 2015 - Feminist Studies 41 (1):213.
    Abstract:AbstractProfessor James opens her essay “Looking” with her aging mother's distressed response to the televised images of Ferguson on the evening District Attorney McCulloch announced that Darren Wilson would not be indicted for killing Michael Brown. A St. Louis native, she had left the city as a young woman to flee the twinned violence of sexism and racism and had never resided there again. James juxtaposes her mother's attempt to “not look back” at the circumstances she left behind against the (...)
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  47. Critical Indigenous Philosophy: Disciplinary Challenges Posed by African and Native American Epistemologies.Jennifer Lisa Vest - 2000 - Dissertation, University of California, Berkeley
    In this thesis, I examine recent proposals for the creation of African and Native American forms of Indigenous philosophy and show how the discussions and debates in these fields challenge the disciplinary boundaries of modern Academic Western philosophy. With regard to African philosophy, I critique the debates in the Anglophone literature, teasing out those aspects of the debates which pose substantial epistemological challenges to mainstream [Western] philosophy, focusing, in particular, on assumptions about the intersections between philosophy, culture, science, and universality (...)
     
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  48.  16
    Jean-Paul Ponceau, ed., L'estoire del saint Graal. 2 vols. (Les Classiques Français du Moyen Age, 120–21.) Paris: Honoré Champion, 1997. Paper. 1: pp. lix, 1–278; 3 black-and-white plates, tables, and figures. 2: pp. iv, 279–679; 2 black-and-white plates. 1: F 150. 2: F 150. [REVIEW]Jennifer Looper - 1998 - Speculum 73 (2):579-579.
  49. Bottles and Bricks: Rethinking the Prohibition against Violent Political Protest.Jennifer Kling & Megan Mitchell - 2019 - Radical Philosophy Review 22 (2):209-237.
    We argue that violent political protest is justified in a generally just society when violence is required to send a message about the nature of the injustice at issue, and when it is not ruled out by moral or pragmatic considerations. Focusing on protest as a mode of public address, we argue that its communicative function can sometimes justify or require the use of violence. The injustice at the heart of the Baltimore protests—police brutality against black Americans —is a (...)
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  50.  15
    The Teacher.Jennifer Anne Moses - 2018 - Feminist Studies 44 (2):491.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 44, no. 2. © 2018 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 491 Jennifer Anne Moses The Teacher It didn’t start percolating out until years—decades—later, and by that time even the youngest of what we’d soon be calling “the victims ” were in their early fifties, with husbands and children and grandchildren of their own, or not, with houses, careers, garages stuffed to the gills with lifetimes’ worth of (...)
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