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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Patrick J Doherty

Clean Streets

Clean Streets

Patrick J. Carr

New York University Press
2005
sidottu
With the close proximity of gangs and the easy access to drugs, keeping urban neighborhoods safe from crime has long been a central concern for residents. In Clean Streets, Patrick Carr draws on five years of research in a white, working-class community on Chicago's South side to see how they tried to keep their streets safe. Carr details the singular event for this community and the resulting rise of community activism: the shootings of two local teenage girls outside of an elementary school by area gang members. As in many communities struck by similar violence, the shootings led to profound changes in the community's relationship to crime prevention. Notably, their civic activism has proved successful and, years after the shooting, community involvement remains strong. Carr mines this story of an awakened neighborhood for unique insights, contributing a new perspective to the national debate on community policing, civic activism, and the nature of social control. Clean Streets offers an important story of one community's struggle to confront crime and to keep their homes safe. Their actions can be seen as a model for how other communities can face up to similarly difficult problems.
Clean Streets

Clean Streets

Patrick J. Carr

New York University Press
2005
pokkari
With the close proximity of gangs and the easy access to drugs, keeping urban neighborhoods safe from crime has long been a central concern for residents. In Clean Streets, Patrick Carr draws on five years of research in a white, working-class community on Chicago's South side to see how they tried to keep their streets safe. Carr details the singular event for this community and the resulting rise of community activism: the shootings of two local teenage girls outside of an elementary school by area gang members. As in many communities struck by similar violence, the shootings led to profound changes in the community's relationship to crime prevention. Notably, their civic activism has proved successful and, years after the shooting, community involvement remains strong. Carr mines this story of an awakened neighborhood for unique insights, contributing a new perspective to the national debate on community policing, civic activism, and the nature of social control. Clean Streets offers an important story of one community's struggle to confront crime and to keep their homes safe. Their actions can be seen as a model for how other communities can face up to similarly difficult problems.
Blue Collar-Roman Collar-White Collar

Blue Collar-Roman Collar-White Collar

Patrick J. Sullivan

University Press of America
1987
sidottu
Examines the record of U.S. Catholic involvement in the major labor-management controversies from 1960 to 1980. Indicates that the Catholic church supported labor's right to organize and bargain collectively and opposed management's resistance to the exercise of these moral and legal rights.
Blue Collar-Roman Collar-White Collar

Blue Collar-Roman Collar-White Collar

Patrick J. Sullivan

University Press of America
1987
nidottu
Examines the record of U.S. Catholic involvement in the major labor-management controversies from 1960 to 1980. Indicates that the Catholic church supported labor's right to organize and bargain collectively and opposed management's resistance to the exercise of these moral and legal rights.
Cinematic Hamlet

Cinematic Hamlet

Patrick J. Cook

Ohio University Press
2011
sidottu
Hamlet has inspired four outstanding film adaptations that continue to delight a wide and varied audience and to offer provocative new interpretations of Shakespeare's most popular play. Cinematic Hamlet contains the first scene-by-scene analysis of the methods used by Laurence Olivier, Franco Zeffirelli, Kenneth Branagh, and Michael Almereyda to translate Hamlet into highly distinctive and remarkably effective films. Applying recent developments in neuroscience and psychology, Patrick J. Cook argues that film is a medium deploying an abundance of devices whose task it is to direct attention away from the film's viewing processes and toward the object represented. Through careful analysis of each film's devices, he explores the ways in which four brilliant directors rework the play into a radically different medium, engaging the viewer through powerful instinctive drives and creating audiovisual vehicles that support and complement Shakespeare's words and story. Cinematic Hamlet will prove to be indispensable for anyone wishing to understand how these films rework Shakespeare into the powerful medium of film.
Cinematic Hamlet

Cinematic Hamlet

Patrick J. Cook

Ohio University Press
2011
pokkari
Hamlet has inspired four outstanding film adaptations that continue to delight a wide and varied audience and to offer provocative new interpretations of Shakespeare's most popular play. Cinematic Hamlet contains the first scene-by-scene analysis of the methods used by Laurence Olivier, Franco Zeffirelli, Kenneth Branagh, and Michael Almereyda to translate Hamlet into highly distinctive and remarkably effective films. Applying recent developments in neuroscience and psychology, Patrick J. Cook argues that film is a medium deploying an abundance of devices whose task it is to direct attention away from the film's viewing processes and toward the object represented. Through careful analysis of each film's devices, he explores the ways in which four brilliant directors rework the play into a radically different medium, engaging the viewer through powerful instinctive drives and creating audiovisual vehicles that support and complement Shakespeare's words and story. Cinematic Hamlet will prove to be indispensable for anyone wishing to understand how these films rework Shakespeare into the powerful medium of film.
A Catholic Cold War

A Catholic Cold War

Patrick J. McNamara

Fordham University Press
2005
sidottu
This book is the first biography in 42 years of the priest and educator whom historians have called "the most important anticommunist in the country." Edmund A. Walsh, as dean of Georgetown College and founder in 1919 of its School of Foreign Service, is one of the most influential Catholic figures of the 20th century. Soon after the birth of the Bolshevik state, he directed the Papal Relief Mission in the Soviet Union, starting a lifelong immersion in Soviet and Communist affairs. He also established a Jesuit college in Baghdad, and served as a consultant to the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal. A pioneer in the new science of geopolitics, Walsh became one of Truman's most trusted advisers on Soviet strategy. He wrote four books, dozens of articles, and gave thousands of speeches on the moral and political threat of Soviet Communism in America. Although he died in 1956, Walsh left an indelible imprint on the ideology and practical politics of Cold War Washington, moving easily outside the traditional boundaries of American Catholic life and becoming, in the words of one historian, "practically an institution by himself." Few priests, indeed few Catholics, played so large a role in shaping American foreign policy in the 20th century.
Re-Imagining Evangelization

Re-Imagining Evangelization

Patrick J. Brennan

Crossroad Publishing Co ,U.S.
1995
nidottu
Evangelization literature, in the past, has been filled with dreams and ideals but few practical steps. This book takes pastoral leaders through the actual steps that a faith community must take to transform vision into conversion. Here is a proven process for refounding the church in community, enabling the empowered, and reaching out to people in their readiness. Set in motion, evangelization will become contagion, and the parish a spiritual magnet.
Emily Dickinson's Approving God

Emily Dickinson's Approving God

Patrick J. Keane

University of Missouri Press
2008
sidottu
As much a doubter as a believer, Emily Dickinson often expressed views about God in general - and God with respect to suffering in particular. In many of her poems, she contemplates the question posed by countless theologians and poets before her: how can one reconcile a benevolent deity with evil in the world?Examining Dickinson's perspectives on the role played by a supposedly omnipotent and all-loving God in a world marked by violence and pain, Patrick Keane initially focuses on her poem 'Apparently with no surprise,' in which frost, a 'blonde Assassin,' beheads a 'happy Flower,' a spectacle presided over by 'an Approving God.' This tiny lyric, Keane shows, epitomizes the poet's embattled relationship with the deity of her Calvinist tradition.Although the problem of suffering is usually couched in terms of natural disasters or human injustice, Dickinson found new ways of considering it. By choosing a flower as her innocent 'victim,' she bypassed standard 'answers' to the dilemma (suffering as justified punishment for wickedness, or as attributable to the assertion of free will) in order to focus on the problem in it purest symbolic form. Keane goes on to provide close readings of many of Dickinson's poems and letters engaging God, showing how she addressed the challenges posed - by her own experience and by an innate scepticism reinforced by a nascent Darwinism - to the argument from design and the concept of a benevolent deity.More than a dissection of a single poem, Keane's book is a sweeping personal reflection on literature and religion, faith and scepticism, theology and science. He traces the evolving history of the ""Problem of Suffering"" from the ""Hebrew Scriptures"" (Job and Ecclesiastes), through the writings of Paul, Augustine, and Aquinas, to the most recent theological and philosophical studies of the problem. Keane is interested in how readers today respond to Emily Dickinson's often combative poems about God; at the same time, she is located as a poet whose creative life coincided with the momentous changes and challenges to religious faith associated with Darwin and Nietzsche. Keane also considers Dickinson's poems and letters in the context of the great Roman tradition, as it runs from Milton through Wordsworth, demonstrating how the work of these poets (perhaps surprisingly in the case of the latter) helps illuminate Dickinson's poetry and thought.Because Dickinson the poet was also Emily the gardener, her love of flowers was an appropriate vehicle for her observations on mortality and her expressions of doubt. Emily Dickinson's ""Approving God"" is a graceful study that reveals not only the audacity of Dickinson's thought but also its relevance to modern readers. In light of ongoing confrontations between Darwinism and design, science and literal conceptions of divine Creator, it is an equally provocative read for students of literature and students of life.
Action Research

Action Research

Patrick J. M. Costello

Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
2003
nidottu
The central purpose of this book is to enable practitioners to undertake and to offer an account of an action research project. The volume is divided into seven sections, the first six of which are headed by commonly asked questions. Having examined the nature of action research, Costello focuses on developing an appropriate project, data collection and analysis, and producing a research report. The final selection offers suggestions for further reading.
The Challenge of Relativism

The Challenge of Relativism

Patrick J.J. Phillips

BLOOMSBURY PUBLISHING PLC
2007
sidottu
Relativism, the view that knowledge is relative to time, culture, group and/or individual, remains a pervasive and influential intellectual position in philosophy and throughout the humanities. Since ancient times, relativists have been viewed as villains of truth and knowledge. They have undermined optimistic explanations of how we know things and, instead, have grounded knowledge in the ever-changing world of human opinion. But is the relativists' notorious reputation justified? In this important new book Patrick Phillips investigates several varieties of relativism proposed over the centuries and identifies relativism as a central strand of thought that permeates much of post-colonial and postmodern thinking. He investigates the reasons that contribute to the 'evergreen' status of relativism and asks: why does relativism remain a constant occurrence in the writings of the humanities and what accounts for its popular appeal?
Compromise and Political Action

Compromise and Political Action

Patrick J. Dobel

Rowman Littlefield
1989
sidottu
No one likes to compromise, but we almost always do. Our politics and associations are built upon negotiation, respect for diversity, bargaining and elections. Compromise seems an awkward stepchild of morality and even dictionaries reflect its moral ambiguity. Most first definitions suggest that compromise involves "mutual concessions" or "negotiations". Many of our most vital liberties depend upon practices of tolerance and learning to "live with", "tolerate", "deal with" and even compromise with those with whom we mightily disagree. Today moral rhetoric and stridency threaten to engulf large segments of political life. Leaders of the left and especially the righ seek to extend pervasive moral visions of personal and social life through political power. This book examines the nature of political morality and the role of compromise in political life, especially the life of a liberal and democratic society. In it the author maps the nature of moral-political justification by free and responsible individuals through charting the nature of political compromise.
The Odyssey of Political Theory

The Odyssey of Political Theory

Patrick J. Deneen

Rowman Littlefield
2000
sidottu
This path-breaking and eloquent analysis of The Odyssey, and the way it has been interpreted by political philosophers throughout the centuries, has dramatic implications for the current state of political thought. This important book offers readers original insights into The Odyssey and it provides a new understanding of the classic works of Plato, Rousseau, Vico, Horkheimer, and Adorno. Through his analysis Patrick J. Deneen requires readers to rethink the issues that are truly at the heart of our contemporary "Culture Wars," and he encourages us to reassess our assumptions about the Western canon's virtues or viciousness. Deneen's penetrating exploration of Odysseus's and our own enduring battles between the dual temptations of homecoming and exploration, patriotism and cosmopolitanism, and relativism and universality provides an original perspective on contentious debates at the center of modern political theory and philosophy.
The Odyssey of Political Theory

The Odyssey of Political Theory

Patrick J. Deneen

Rowman Littlefield
2003
nidottu
This path-breaking and eloquent analysis of The Odyssey, and the way it has been interpreted by political philosophers throughout the centuries, has dramatic implications for the current state of political thought. This important book offers readers original insights into The Odyssey and it provides a new understanding of the classic works of Plato, Rousseau, Vico, Horkheimer, and Adorno. Through his analysis Patrick J. Deneen requires readers to rethink the issues that are truly at the heart of our contemporary 'Culture Wars,' and he encourages us to reassess our assumptions about the Western canon's virtues or viciousness. Deneen's penetrating exploration of Odysseus's and our own enduring battles between the dual temptations of homecoming and exploration, patriotism and cosmopolitanism, and relativism and universality provides an original perspective on contentious debates at the center of modern political theory and philosophy.
Elliptic Marching Methods and Domain Decomposition
One of the first things a student of partial differential equations learns is that it is impossible to solve elliptic equations by spatial marching. This new book describes how to do exactly that, providing a powerful tool for solving problems in fluid dynamics, heat transfer, electrostatics, and other fields characterized by discretized partial differential equations. Elliptic Marching Methods and Domain Decomposition demonstrates how to handle numerical instabilities (i.e., limitations on the size of the problem) that appear when one tries to solve these discretized equations with marching methods. The book also shows how marching methods can be superior to multigrid and pre-conditioned conjugate gradient (PCG) methods, particularly when used in the context of multiprocessor parallel computers. Techniques for using domain decomposition together with marching methods are detailed, clearly illustrating the benefits of these techniques for applications in engineering, applied mathematics, and the physical sciences.
The Poetry of Line

The Poetry of Line

Patrick J. McGrady

Palmer Museum of Art
2002
pokkari
Published by the Palmer Museum of Art Henry Pearson is often linked to the Op Art movement of the 1960s because his best-known paintings feature a labyrinth of undulating parallel lines. Yet his work, although included in the landmark exhibition of 1965, "The Responsive Eye," has an intuitive rhythm and poetic elegance that fall well outside the calculated, often hard-edged structures favored by most Op artists. World War II interrupted Pearson’s first career in theater design but led to a prolonged contact with Japanese culture and a passion for painting. Back in New York City, Pearson studied at the Art Students League and, as early as 1959, began to develop drawings he had made during the war from secret Japanese survey maps. Gradually, he transformed a topography of mountains and valleys into nonobjective forms that reflect a personal vision and herald a new era of linear abstraction in his work. The Poetry of Line accompanied an exhibition of Pearson’s drawings from 1959 to the mid-1970s, the years when the artist moved toward geometric abstraction. This work is crucial from the standpoint of draftsmanship because it achieves a status above that of a sketch or study and makes an artistic statement at once complete and intimate.
Will Barnet

Will Barnet

Patrick J. McGrady

Palmer Museum of Art
2004
pokkari
“My interest has been in developing further the plastic convictions that have been evolving in my abstract paintings; so that a portrait, while remaining a portrait, becomes in this sense an abstraction: the idea of a person in its most intense and essential aspect.” —Will Barnet, 1962 Will Barnet (1911–), much like Chuck Close and Alex Katz, has approached painting through sustained exploration of the relationship between abstract, geometric forms and the processes of perception. In this book, which accompanied an exhibition of the same name at the Palmer Museum of Art and the Alexandre Gallery, Patrick J. McGrady examines the paintings, drawings, and prints Barnet made in the 1960s, the decade when Barnet portrayed his family and renegotiated his commitment to pure abstraction. As McGrady traces work during this decisive period in Barnet’s career, he shows how drawing became increasingly important in the evolution of such major paintings as Mother and Child, The Blue Robe, and Eden. In addition, McGrady provides a richly documented discussion of critics’ responses to the profound changes in Barnet’s art and Barnet’s own commentary on his goals as an abstract artist. Will Barnet illustrates many of the forty-nine works in the 2003 exhibition and includes a checklist of the exhibition as well as reproductions of comparative works.
Manet and Friends

Manet and Friends

Patrick J. McGrady

Palmer Museum of Art
2008
pokkari
Manet and Friends accompanies an exhibition of the same name organized by the Palmer Museum of Art in memory of the Manet scholar and Penn State distinguished professor of art history George Mauner, who passed away in 2004. The catalogue focuses on the printmaking milieu of Paris during the 1860s and early 1870s, when Édouard Manet produced the majority of his graphic works. Seventeen of Manet’s etchings and lithographs are discussed, as are an equal number of prints by several of his colleagues and associates, including Félix Bracquemond, Alphonse Legros, and Marcellin Desboutin. Nancy Locke’s feature essay examines Manet’s prints in light of the French concept of les moeurs—customs, habits, or manners, but also ethics—about which mid-nineteenth-century writers and artists were deeply concerned. In discussing the confrontational manner in which Manet regularly posed his subjects, Locke speculates on how the viewer might have been expected to respond to such portrayals. The catalogue entries were written by Patrick McGrady.
As If It Never Happened: Stories of a Young Boy's Secrets, Fears, Love, and Loss
An emotionally driven story in the tradition of the best-selling memoirs, Running with Scissors and The Glass Castle, Patrick Knowlton's As If It Never Happened is the moving and heartbreaking coming-of-age story of a child's desperate struggle to make sense of an emotionally impoverished and chaotic existence. At a time when children are to be seen and not heard, we enter the mind of seven-year-old Patrick making his way among adults whose family secrets and instability leave him in a state of constant fear and uncertainty. From the wrong side of the tracks, literally, he is traumatized by constant bullying outside his home and unrelenting loss and isolation inside, where his absent father and sickly mother abandon him to the cruel whims of the adults who wander in and out of his life. Love is fleeting, security nowhere to be found. In As If It Never Happened, Patrick Knowlton exquisitely captures the voice of his young soul, whose fortitude and deep faith refuses to be defeated by dark forces beyond his control.