Idolising Children

Idolising Children

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  • Author: Daniel Donahoo
  • Publisher: UNSW Press
  • ISBN: 9780868409320
  • Category : Family & Relationships
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 276

Obsessed with our own youth and wanting perfect, genius children who live in a world of designer clothes and toys, it's time for us to find new ways of parenting and a new kind of childhood. With humour, insight and emotion, Daniel Donahoo reflects on the place of children in our society by looking at everything from fertility rates, childcare, the role of the media and the day-to-day joys and challenges of being a parent. Donahoo argues that idolising is a form of worship that adversely affects our children's development in their early years, and creates citizens who no longer understand their roles and responsibilities. It makes parents feel unnecessarily guilty and anxious. Without blame or finger-pointing, Idolising Children examines how we arrived here and looks at what needs to change so that communities as a whole are responsible for raising children. Book jacket.


No Kids Allowed

No Kids Allowed

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  • Author: Michelle Ann Abate
  • Publisher: JHU Press
  • ISBN: 1421438879
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 152

Children's literature isn't just for children anymore. This original study explores the varied forms and roles of children's literature—when it's written for adults. What do Adam Mansbach's Go the F**k to Sleep and Barbara Park's MA! There's Nothing to Do Here! have in common? These large-format picture books are decidedly intended for parents rather than children. In No Kids Allowed, Michelle Ann Abate examines a constellation of books that form a paradoxical new genre: children's literature for adults. Distinguishing these books from YA and middle-grade fiction that appeals to adult readers, Abate argues that there is something unique about this phenomenon. Principally defined by its form and audience, children's literature, Abate demonstrates, engages with more than mere nostalgia when recast for grown-up readers. Abate examines how board books, coloring books, bedtime stories, and series detective fiction written and published specifically for adults question the boundaries of genre and challenge the assumption that adulthood and childhood are mutually exclusive.


The Stupid Country

The Stupid Country

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  • Author: Chris Bonnor
  • Publisher: UNSW Press
  • ISBN: 9780868408064
  • Category : Education
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 260

Warns of a future where the hardest schools for Australian parents to get their kids into will be public ones. With insight, passion and a sense of urgency, this book shows how government, anxious parents, the church and ideology are combining to undermine public schools.


Children and their Urban Environment

Children and their Urban Environment

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  • Author: Claire Freeman
  • Publisher: Routledge
  • ISBN: 1136539700
  • Category : Nature
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 290

In our fast-changing urban world, the impacts of social and environmental change on children are often overlooked. Children and their Urban Environment examines these impacts in detail, looking at the key activities, spaces and experiences children have and how these can be managed to ensure that children benefit from change. The authors highlight the importance of planners, architects and housing professionals in creating positive environments for children and involving them in the planning process. They argue that children‘s lives are becoming simultaneously both richer and more deprived, and that, despite apparently increasing wealth, disparities between children are increasing further. Each chapter includes international examples of good practice and policy innovations for redressing the balance in favour of child supportive environments. The book seeks to embrace childhood as a time of freedom, social engagement and environmental adventure and to encourage creation of environments that better meet the needs of children. The authors argue that in doing so, we will build more sustainable neighbourhoods, cities and societies for the future.


Critical Social Work

Critical Social Work

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  • Author: Bob Pease
  • Publisher: Routledge
  • ISBN: 1000256693
  • Category : Social Science
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 344

'Another important contribution to the growing literature on critical social work. It is on the cutting edge of thinking about social work and its goal of social change.' - Kate van Heugten, Social Work Review Critical Social Work starts from the premise that a central goal of social work practice is social change to redress social inequality. Taking a critical theoretical approach, the authors explore the links between personal and social change. They confront the challenges for critical social work in the context of pressures to separate the personal from the political and in responding to the impact of changes in the socio-political, statutory and global contexts of practice. Critical Social Work has been thoroughly revised to take into account recent social, economic and political developments. Coverage of theoretical frameworks has been substantially expanded and reflects current concerns such as evidence based practice and human rights. The causes of people's marginalisation and oppression are examined in relation to class, race, ethnicity, gender and other forms of social inequality.Case study chapters in the earlier edition on working with immigrants, Indigenous people, women, men, families, people with psychiatric disabilities and those experiencing loss and grief have been updated and revised. The second edition includes new case study chapters on disability, older people, children, rurality, and violence and abuse. Critical Social Work is an essential resource to inform progressive social work practice.


Consuming Innocence

Consuming Innocence

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  • Author: Karen Brooks
  • Publisher: Univ. of Queensland Press
  • ISBN: 9780702236457
  • Category : Family & Relationships
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 340

"This is an academic look at the contribution of popular culture to the loss if innocence in today's children."--Publisher.


Buddhism for Mothers of Schoolchildren

Buddhism for Mothers of Schoolchildren

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  • Author: Sarah Napthali
  • Publisher: Atlantic Books
  • ISBN: 1925575969
  • Category : Family & Relationships
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 191

With her children at school, a mother is on to a new stage of her life, playing a new role. The daily challenges she confronts have changed, yet for each one Buddhist teachings of mindfulness, compassion and calm are invaluable. This book explores those teachings through many scenarios, including coping with routine and repetition, answering children's tricky questions about how the world works, fitting in with other parents, managing our fears and expectations for our children and dealing with difficult behaviour in both children and adults.


Horror Films FAQ

Horror Films FAQ

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  • Author: John Kenneth Muir
  • Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
  • ISBN: 148036682X
  • Category : Performing Arts
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 386

HORROR FILMS FAQ:ALL THAT'S LEFT TO KNOW ABOUT SLASHERS VAMPIRES ZOMBIES ALIENS AND


The St. James's Magazine

The St. James's Magazine

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  • Author:
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN:
  • Category : English literature
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 548


The Song of Ascents

The Song of Ascents

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  • Author: Tom Hiney
  • Publisher: Ignatius Press
  • ISBN: 1642292222
  • Category : Biography & Autobiography
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 287

The Truth is bigger than we are, and if it comes for us, everything might break open. "It falls from heaven," writes Tom Hiney. "It can fall at four in the morning when you are cold with insomnia, and it can refuse to fall when advertised. It has a life of its own, and sometimes appears with a special intensity." God calls, whether we are ready or not. The Song of Ascents tells the stories of lives laid bare by love, stories that, over the years, gradually spurred acclaimed English biographer Tom Hiney up the ragged mountain of his own conversion to Roman Catholicism."These stories," he says, "are about people turning to God in horrible moments, with faltering human hearts like mine, and finding Him to be faithful." Written in lean, vigorous prose, the book is a visceral study of faith, in which the holiness of other men and women leads the writer to realize that, despite everything, anything is possible with God, even joy. A medieval king awaiting a Viking invasion (King Alfred), a Jesuit evangelist at the court of Akbar (Father Monserrate), a West African prince in 1890s Indiana (Samuel Morris), and a composer in Communist Poland (Henryk Górecki), as well as a trapped Arctic whaling vessel (the Diana), a lost explorer (David Livingstone), a disobedient general (Charles Gordon), and an aging war hero (the author's own father)—all these become unlikely companions in Hiney's messy, fumbling journey to Christ. The Song of Ascents is about coming to faith through stories, including the humanly incredible storytelling of the Church's unique, heavenly, and inevitable destiny.