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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Elizabeth Anne Reeves

Bad Souls

Bad Souls

Elizabeth Anne Davis

Duke University Press
2012
sidottu
Bad Souls is an ethnographic study of responsibility among psychiatric patients and their caregivers in Thrace, the northeastern borderland of Greece. Elizabeth Anne Davis examines responsibility in this rural region through the lens of national psychiatric reform, a process designed to shift treatment from custodial hospitals to outpatient settings. Challenged to help care for themselves, patients struggled to function in communities that often seemed as much sources of mental pathology as sites of refuge. Davis documents these patients' singular experience of community, and their ambivalent aspirations to health, as they grappled with new forms of autonomy and dependency introduced by psychiatric reform. Planned, funded, and overseen largely by the European Union, this "democratic experiment," one of many reforms adopted by Greece since its accession to the EU in the early 1980s, has led Greek citizens to question the state and its administration of human rights, social welfare, and education. Exploring the therapeutic dynamics of diagnosis, persuasion, healing, and failure in Greek psychiatry, Davis traces the terrains of truth, culture, and freedom that emerge from this questioning of the state at the borders of Europe.
Bad Souls

Bad Souls

Elizabeth Anne Davis

Duke University Press
2012
pokkari
Bad Souls is an ethnographic study of responsibility among psychiatric patients and their caregivers in Thrace, the northeastern borderland of Greece. Elizabeth Anne Davis examines responsibility in this rural region through the lens of national psychiatric reform, a process designed to shift treatment from custodial hospitals to outpatient settings. Challenged to help care for themselves, patients struggled to function in communities that often seemed as much sources of mental pathology as sites of refuge. Davis documents these patients' singular experience of community, and their ambivalent aspirations to health, as they grappled with new forms of autonomy and dependency introduced by psychiatric reform. Planned, funded, and overseen largely by the European Union, this "democratic experiment," one of many reforms adopted by Greece since its accession to the EU in the early 1980s, has led Greek citizens to question the state and its administration of human rights, social welfare, and education. Exploring the therapeutic dynamics of diagnosis, persuasion, healing, and failure in Greek psychiatry, Davis traces the terrains of truth, culture, and freedom that emerge from this questioning of the state at the borders of Europe.
Kaibeto Memories

Kaibeto Memories

Elizabeth Anne Jones Dewveall; Robert Verne Jones; William Riley Jones

VistaBooks LLC
2023
pokkari
Kaibeto MemoriesELIZABETH ANNE JONES DEWVEALLA trader's daughter remembers growing upon the Navajo Reservation at Kaibeto Trading Postin remote northern Arizona1936 - 1960TRADERS TO THE NAVAJORALPH AND JULIA JONES, parents of author Elizabeth Anne JonesDewveall, operated the Kaibeto Trading Post on the Navajo Reservation for28 years, from 1934 to 1962, in remote northern Arizona. Theirs was a timewhen roads in the area were more like paths in the sand, over rocky ridges--snow-covered in winter, and across washes that could and did becomeflash floods without warning. TheNative population was transitioningfrom horseback and wagon travelto pickups. The post's role was toprovide goods that were needed bythe local population to supplementthe meager resources this harshland could provide. Canned fruitsand meats were important articles, as were tobacco, knives, andammunition. The Natives tradedsheep hides, wool, woven blankets, and turquoise-laden silver jewelry forgoods from the post. Their jewelryoften was provided as collateral, "pawn", to pay for purchases. Ralphand Julia and daughter Elizabeth Anne were often the only people of their"white-person" race in the entire region.It was in this environment that this book's author Elizabeth Anne livedher childhood years. Her playmates were often from the local population.In her later childhood years her school times were spent in distant Leuppor Winslow, Arizona, but coming back to what she calls, affectionately it isbelieved, the "Rez" for holidays and summer vacations.Told as an adult in the year 2020 while living at Mesa, Arizona, ElizabethAnne points out her purpose in recording her story is more for it to beher parents' story, for there is scant recorded material about their lives atKaibeto Trading Post and how they operated this out-of-the-way and nowhistoricpost for many years as a life-hub for a receptive Native population.
Soul-Filling Reflections

Soul-Filling Reflections

Elizabeth Anne Freeman

Blurb
2021
pokkari
This book offers a reflective compilation of uplifting scriptures and tranquil photos. It seeks to be a source of comfort to anyone navigating life's disappointing trials. This is a pleasant, quick read meant to boost the spirit and allow the heart to rest. Using soothing images, the author gently weaves a serene narrative of hope radiating God's love for His children to help heal the wounded soul.
An Opened Gate

An Opened Gate

Elizabeth Anne Janzen

Friesenpress
2022
pokkari
Hope. Faith. Endurance. An Opened Gate invites readers to learn to trust in God, to never give up, and to keep reaching for what is beyond but can't yet be seen. Elizabeth Janzen writes about living close to the earth, working hard together as a family, and surviving the loss of loved ones. As a young child, Elizabeth moves with her family to a Mennonite community in Bolivia, where they live under strict rules and a narrow interpretation of scripture. While there, she is introduced to Christ through a presentation of the gospel, and she receives him as her Saviour. After two separate tragedies, Elizabeth is faced with more heartache when the community leaders decide to split up her remaining siblings. An open gate leads to escape where she is met with new challenges and a new life but is the family's only option.
An Opened Gate

An Opened Gate

Elizabeth Anne Janzen

Friesenpress
2022
sidottu
Hope. Faith. Endurance. An Opened Gate invites readers to learn to trust in God, to never give up, and to keep reaching for what is beyond but can't yet be seen. Elizabeth Janzen writes about living close to the earth, working hard together as a family, and surviving the loss of loved ones. As a young child, Elizabeth moves with her family to a Mennonite community in Bolivia, where they live under strict rules and a narrow interpretation of scripture. While there, she is introduced to Christ through a presentation of the gospel, and she receives him as her Saviour. After two separate tragedies, Elizabeth is faced with more heartache when the community leaders decide to split up her remaining siblings. An open gate leads to escape where she is met with new challenges and a new life but is the family's only option.
Village Anecdotes; or, The Journal of a Year, From Sophia to Edward. With Original Poems
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