amaXhosa Circumcision

amaXhosa Circumcision
Author: Lauraine M. H. Vivian
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 217
Release: 2021-04-27
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 0429560508

This book investigates amaXhosa circumcision and the psychological processes involved. Lauraine Vivian employs concepts such as resilience, orthodoxy, broken men, and reciprocity to examine the experiences of men who have developed mental health issues in relation to their initiation into manhood. The chapters cover sensitive topics such as physical injury, pain, harm, and women’s agency. Drawing on the stories of over seventy amaXhosa men, the book provides rare insight into circumcision and psychotic experience.

Cultural Perspectives on Shame

Cultural Perspectives on Shame
Author: Cecilea Mun
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 245
Release: 2023-06-09
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1000890848

Each essay in this volume provides a cultural perspective on shame. More specifically, each chapter focuses on the question of how culture can differentially affect experiences of shame for members of that culture. As a collection, this volume provides a cross-cultural perspective on shame, highlighting the various similarities and differences of experiences of shame across cultures. In Part 1, each contributor focuses primarily on how shame is theorized in a non-English-speaking culture, and address how the science of shame ought to be pursued, how it ought to identify its object of study, what methods are appropriate for a rigorous science of shame, and how a method of study can determine or influence a theory of shame. In Part 2, each contributor is primarily concerned with a cultural practice of shame, and addresses how shame is related to a normative understanding of our self as a person and an individual member of a community, how culture and politics affect the value and import of shame, and what the relationship between culture and politics is in the construction of shamed identities. Cultural Perspectives on Shame will be of interest to scholars and advanced students working in cross-cultural philosophy, philosophy of emotion, moral psychology, and the social sciences.

Blood Ground

Blood Ground
Author: Elizabeth Elbourne
Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 532
Release: 2002-12-03
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0773569456

Blood Ground traces the transition from religion to race as the basis for policing the boundaries of the "white" community. Elbourne suggests broader shifts in the relationship of missions to colonialism B as the British movement became less internationalist, more respectable, and more emblematic of the British imperial project B and shows that it is symptomatic that many Christian Khoekhoe ultimately rebelled against the colony. Missionaries across the white settler empire brokered bargains B rights in exchange for cultural change, for example B that brought Aboriginal peoples within the aegis of empire but, ultimately, were only partially and ambiguously fulfilled.

Zimbabwe's Cultural Heritage

Zimbabwe's Cultural Heritage
Author: Pathisa Nyathi
Publisher: African Books Collective
Total Pages: 147
Release: 2005
Genre: History
ISBN: 0797428976

Zimbabwe's Cultural Heritage won first prize in the Zimbabwe Book Publishers Association Awards in 2006 for Non-fiction: Humanities and Social Sciences. It is a collection of pieces of the culture of the Ndebele, Shona, Tonga, Kalanga, Nambiya, Xhosa and Venda. The book gives the reader an insight into the world view of different peoples, through descriptions of their history and life events such as pregnancy, marriage and death. "...the most enduring book ever on Zimbabwean history. This book will help people change their attitude towards each other in Zimbabwe." - Zimbabwe Book Publishers Association Awards citation

Current Catalog

Current Catalog
Author: National Library of Medicine (U.S.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 704
Release: 1993
Genre: Medicine
ISBN:

First multi-year cumulation covers six years: 1965-70.

Responsibility in Small Things

Responsibility in Small Things
Author: Monde Ndandani
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 382
Release: 2020-08-24
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 172835448X

Aspiring to be upright and honourable: This book is about metaphorical bricks (small things) that make walls of all types of buildings within which people work and live. The figurative walls in the pages of this book are the Noah social types of the holy Bible. Behaviour is the function of character. A well-behaved person, young and old, develops to be a paragon of virtue, a rare species amongst the peoples of this world. Universal and generic good behavior project starts with casual greeting one’s family members in the morning and after intervals of absence from one’s home. Greeting people anywhere should be spontaneous. Children learn being courteous from their homes, same as telling the truth all the time giving lies no space. Hence building average good and steadfast citizenry is the responsibility of each homestead and family. If being sturdy is the essential feature of leadership, then every citizen in any country in the world can have her/his turn to lead.

City of the Good

City of the Good
Author: Michael Mayerfield Bell
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2020-04-28
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0691202915

How we came to seek absolute good in religion and nature—and why that quest often leads us astray People have long looked to nature and the divine as paths to the good. In this panoramic meditation on the harmonious life, Michael Mayerfeld Bell traces how these two paths came to be seen as separate from human ways, and how many of today’s conflicts can be traced back thousands of years to this ancient divide. Taking readers on a spellbinding journey through history and across the globe, Bell begins with the pagan view, which sees nature and the divine as entangled with the human—and not necessarily good. But the emergence of urban societies gave rise to new moral concerns about the political character of human life. Wealth and inequality grew, and urban people sought to justify their passions. In the face of such concerns, nature and the divine came to be partitioned from the human, and therefore seen to be good—but they also became absolute and divisive. Bell charts the unfolding of this new moral imagination in the rise of Buddhism, Christianity, Daoism, Hinduism, Jainism, and many other traditions that emerged with bourgeois life. He follows developments in moral thought, from the religions of the ancient Sumerians, Greeks, and Hebrews to the science and environmentalism of today, along the way visiting with contemporary indigenous people in South Africa, Costa Rica, and the United States. City of the Good urges us to embrace the plurality of our traditions—from the pagan to the bourgeois—and to guard against absolutism and remain open to difference and its endless creativity.