Friendship and Community

Friendship and Community

Author: Brian Patrick McGuire

Publisher: Cornell University Press

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 650

ISBN-13: 9780801476723

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First published in 1988, this book has been widely debated, inspiring the current interest on medieval friendship. In a new introduction, McGuire surveys the critical reaction to the original edition and new research on friendship.


Socrates on Friendship and Community

Socrates on Friendship and Community

Author: Mary P. Nichols

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 239

ISBN-13: 0521899737

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In Socrates on Friendship and Community, Mary P. Nichols addresses Kierkegaard's and Nietzsche's criticism of Socrates and recovers the place of friendship and community in Socratic philosophizing. This approach stands in contrast to the modern philosophical tradition, in which Plato's Socrates has been viewed as an alienating influence on Western thought and life. Nichols' rich analysis of both dramatic details and philosophic themes in Plato's Symposium, Phaedras, and Lysis shows how love finds its fulfilment in the reciprocal relation of friends. Nichols also shows how friends experience another as their own and themselves as belonging to another. Their experience, she argues, both sheds light on the nature of philosophy and serves as a standard for a political life that does justice to human freedom and community.


Mothering, Community, and Friendship

Mothering, Community, and Friendship

Author: Essah Díaz

Publisher: Demeter Press

Published: 2022-04-04

Total Pages: 181

ISBN-13: 177258391X

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Mothers, Community, and Friendship is an anthology that explores the complexities of mothering/motherhood, communities, and friendship from across interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary perspectives. The chapters in this text not only examine how communities and friendship shape and influence the various spectrums of motherhood, but also analyze how communities and friendship are necessary for mothers. Through personal, reflective, critical essays, and ethnographies, this collection situates the ways mothers are connected to communities and how these relationships forms, such as in mothering groups and maternal friendships. By calling attention to these central and current topics, Mothers, Community, and Friendship represents how communities and friendship become means of empowerment for mothers.


Friends, Lovers, Co-Workers, and Community

Friends, Lovers, Co-Workers, and Community

Author: Kathleen M. Ryan

Publisher: Lexington Books

Published: 2016-05-26

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 1498512968

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Friends, Lovers, Co-Workers, and Community analyzes how television narratives form the first decade of the twenty-first century are powerful socializing agents which both define and limit the types of acceptable interpersonal relationships between co-workers, friends, romantic partners, family members, communities, and nations. This book is written by a diverse group of scholars who used a variety of methodological and theoretical approaches to interrogate the ways through which television molds our vision of ourselves as individuals, ourselves as in relationships with others, and ourselves as a part of the world. This book will appeal to scholars of communication studies, cultural studies, media studies, and popular culture studies.


Aging and Society

Aging and Society

Author: Matilda White Riley

Publisher: Russell Sage Foundation

Published: 1972-03-15

Total Pages: 671

ISBN-13: 1610446836

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Represents the first integrated effort to deal with age as a crucial variable in the social system. Of special interest to sociologists for whom the sociology of age seems destined to become a special field.


Everyday Ethics and Social Change

Everyday Ethics and Social Change

Author: Anna Lisa Peterson

Publisher: Columbia University Press

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 218

ISBN-13: 0231148739

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Americans increasingly cite moral values as a factor in how they vote, but when we define morality simply in terms of a voter's position on gay marriage and abortion, we lose sight of the ethical decisions that guide our everyday lives. In our encounters with friends, family members, nature, and nonhuman creatures, we practice a nonutilitarian morality that makes sacrifice a rational and reasonable choice. Recognizing these everyday ethics, Anna L. Peterson argues, helps us move past the seemingly irreconcilable conflicts of culture and refocus on issues that affect real social change. Peterson begins by divining a "second language" for personal and political values, a vocabulary derived from the loving and mutually beneficial relationships of daily life. Even if our interactions with others are fleeting and fragmentary, they provide a viable alternative to the contractual and atomistic attitudes of mainstream culture. Everyday ethics point toward a more just, humane, and sustainable society, and to acknowledge moments of grace in our daily encounters is to realize a different way of relating to people and nonhuman nature--an alternative ethic to cynicism and rank consumerism. In redefining the parameters of morality, Peterson enables us to make fundamental problems such as the distribution of wealth, the use of public land and natural resources, labor and employment policy, and the character of political institutions the preferred focus of debate and action.


Stress, Social Support, And Women

Stress, Social Support, And Women

Author: Stevan E. Hobfoll

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2014-03-18

Total Pages: 291

ISBN-13: 1317770609

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First published in 1986. This book is concerned with the stressors women undergo from adolescence to old age and the resources, especially interpersonal resources, women use to cope with these stressors. There follows a series of chapters that address the use of social support as a resource for coping with stressful life events that confront women in a variety of contexts during their life span.