88 results on '"Sara James"'
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2. Exploring the Relationship Between Self-Efficacy, Work Autonomy and Job Satisfaction
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Mohite, Nupur, primary and Sara James, Cynthia, additional
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- 2024
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3. Mental and Physical Health Promoting Behavior in Geriatric Widower and Non Widower: Comparative Study
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-, Hensi Ashik Gor, primary and -, Cynthia Sara James, additional
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- 2024
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4. A descriptive study to assess the knowledge of Mother’s regarding mobile phone use and mobile phone addiction among middle school children at Kollam
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Nithya Sara James, Princy S, Priya Samson, Reshma Sara Shaji, Shilpa S, and Sheeja S
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The research work undertook was "A descriptive study to assess the knowledge of mothers regarding mobile phone use and mobile phone addiction among middle school children at Kollam“. The objective of the study was to assess the knowledge of mothers of middle school children and to find out the association between knowledge regarding mobile phone use and mobile phone addiction among middle school children and selected demographic variables such as age of mother, number of child, age of child, gender of child, education of mother, occupation of mother, monthly income, type of family. A quantitative approach was used with Non- probability convenient sampling method. The Sample consists of 60 mothers of children between 5 to 18 years residing at Kollam. The data collected by using self- structured questionnaire. The tool was found to be reliable (0.8). The study result shows that there was significant association between gender of child, education of mother, monthly income of family, type of family among mothers of middle school children (calculated value >tabulated value) at 0.05 level of significance. There is no significant association between age of mother, number of children, age of children and occupation of mother. Based on the findings the investigators have drawn implication which were of vital concerns in the field of nursing practice, nursing administration and nursing education for future development.
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- 2022
5. Upheaval and reinvention in celebrity interviews: Emotional reflexivity and the therapeutic self in late modernity
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Anne-Maree Sawyer and Sara James
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Cultural Studies ,History ,Sociology and Political Science ,Political Science and International Relations - Abstract
The disruptions of life in late modernity render self-identity fragile. Consequently, individuals must reflexively manage their emotions and periodically reinvent themselves to maintain a coherent narrative of the self. The rise of psychology as a discursive regime across the 20th century, and its intersections with a plethora of wellness industries, has furnished a new language of selfhood and greater public attention to emotions and personal narratives of suffering. Celebrities, who engage in public identity work to ensure their continued relatability, increasingly provide models for navigating emotional trials. In this article we explore representations of selfhood and identity work in celebrity interviews. We focus on media veterans Nigella Lawson and Ruby Wax, both of whom are skilled in re-storying the self after personal crises. We argue that interpretive capital as a peculiarly late modern resource confers emotional advantages and life chances on individuals as they navigate upheavals, uncertainties, and intimate dilemmas.
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- 2022
6. Finding your passion: work and the authentic self
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Sara James
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Self-help ,Work (electrical) ,Aesthetics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Identity (social science) ,Passion ,Psychology ,Reality television ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
IntroductionThe existential question today is not whether to be or not to be, but how one can become what one truly is. (Golomb 200)In contemporary Western culture the ideal of living authentically, of being “true to yourself,” is ubiquitous. Authenticity is “taken for granted” as an absolute value in a multitude of areas, from music, to travel to identity (Lindholm 1). A core component of authentic selfhood is to find an occupation that is a “passion:” work that is “really you.” This article draws on recent qualitative interviews with Australians from a range of occupations about work, identity and meaning (James). It will demonstrate that for these contemporary individuals, occupation is often closely linked to perceptions of authentic selfhood. I begin by overviewing the significance and presence of authenticity as a value in contemporary culture through discussions of reality television and self-help literature focussed on careers. This is followed by a discussion of sociological theories of authenticity, drawing out the connections between the authentic self, modernity and work. The final section uses examples from the interviews to argue that the ideal of work being an extension of the authentic self is compelling because in providing direction and purpose, it helps the individual avoid anomie, disenchantment and other modern malaises (Taylor).The Authentic Self and Career Guidance in Contemporary Popular CultureThe prevalence of authenticity in contemporary Western popular culture can be seen in reality television programs like Master Chef (a cooking competition) and The Voice (a singing competition). Generally, contestants take part in the show in order to “follow their dreams” and pursue the career they feel they were “destined” for. When elimination is immanent, those at risk of departure are given one last chance to tell the judges what being in the competition means to them. This usually takes the form of a tearful monologue in which the contestant explains that the past few weeks have been the best of their life, that they finally feel “alive” and that they have found their “passion.” In these shows, finding work that is “really you”—that is an extension of your authentic-self—is portrayed as being a fundamental component of fulfillment and self-actualization.The same message is delivered in self-help media and texts. Since the 1970s, “finding your passion” and “finding yourself” have been popular subjects for the genre. The best known of these books is perhaps Richard Bolles’s What Color is Your Parachute?: a job-hunting manual aimed primarily at people looking for a career change. First published in 1970, a new edition has been released every year and there are over 10 million copies in print. In 1995 it was included in the Library of Congress’s Center for the Book’s 25 Books That Have Shaped Readers’ Lives, placing Bolles in the company of Cervantes and Tolstoy (Bolles).Bolles’s book and similar career guidance titles generally follow a pattern of providing exercises for the reader to help them discover the “real you,” which then becomes the basis for choosing the “right” occupation, or as Bolles puts it, “first deciding who you are before deciding the kind of work you want to pursue.” Another best-selling self-help writer is Phil McGraw or “Dr. Phil,” better known for his television program than his books. In his Self Matters—Creating Your Life from the Inside Out, McGraw begins bytelling the story of his own search for his authentic “passion.” Before moving into television, McGraw spent ten years working as a practicing psychiatrist. He recalls:So much of what I did—while totally okay if it had been what I had a passion for—was as unnatural for me as it would be for a dog. It didn’t come from the heart. It wasn’t something that sprang from who I really was ... I wasn’t doing what was meaningful for me. I wasn’t doing what I was good at and therefore was not pursuing my mission in life, my purpose for being here … You and everyone else has a mission, a purpose in life that cannot be denied if you are to live fully. If you have no purpose, you have no passion. If you have no passion, you have sold yourself out (7–12).McGraw connects living authentically with living meaningfully. Working in an occupation that is in accordance with the authentic self gives one’s life purpose. This is the same message Oprah Winfrey chose to deliver in the final episode of the The Oprah Winfrey Show, which was watched by more than 16 million viewers in the U.S. alone. Rather than following the usual pattern of the show and interview celebrity guests, Winfrey chose to talk directly to her viewers about what matters in life:Everybody has a calling, and your real job in life is to figure out what that is and get about the business of doing it. Every time we have seen a person on this stage who is a success in their life, they spoke of the job, and they spoke of the juice that they receive from doing what they knew they were meant to be doing [...] Because that is what a calling is. It lights you up and it lets you know that you are exactly where you're supposed to be, doing exactly what you're supposed to be doing. And that is what I want for all of you and hope that you will take from this show. To live from the heart of yourself.Like McGraw, Winfrey draws a link between living authentically—living “from the heart”—and finding a “calling.” The message here is that the person whose career is in accordance with their authentic self can live with certainty, direction and purpose. Authenticity may act as a buffer against the anomie and disenchantment that arguably plague individuals in late modernity (Elliott & du Gay).Disenchantment, Modernity and Authenticity For many sociologists, most famously Max Weber, finding something that gives life purpose is the great challenge for individuals in the modern West. In a disenchanted society, without religion or other “mysterious incalculable forces” to provide direction, individuals may struggle to work out what they should do with their lives (149). For Weber the answer is to find your calling. Each individual must discover the “demon who holds the fibers of his very life” and obey its demands (156).Following Weber, John Carroll has argued that in modern secular societies, individuals must draw on their inner resources to find answers to life’s “fundamental questions” (Ego 3–4). As Carroll stresses, it is not that the religious impulse has disappeared from contemporary society, but it is expressed in new ways. Individuals still yearn for a sense of purpose but they are “more likely to pursue their quests for meaning on their own, in experimental ways and with their main resource being their ontological qualities” (Carroll, Beauty 221).Other Australian academics, like Gary Bouma and David Tacey, argue that rather than a decline in religiosity in Australia, what we are seeing is a change in the way people pursue the spiritual. Tacey suggests that while many Australians may “slink away” from the idea of God as something external to our lives, they may find more resonance with a conception of God as a “core dimension” of the person (167). Contemporary Australians continue to yearn for guidance, but they are more likely to look within to find it.There is a clear link between this process of turning inward to pursue the spiritual, the prevalence of authenticity in contemporary Western culture, and modernity. With the breakdown of traditional structures, individuals become more “free to self-create” (Bauman, Identity 3). As Charles Lindholm describes it: “The inclination toward a spontaneous mode of expressive self-revelation correlates with the collapse of reliable and sacralised institutional frameworks that once offered meaning and succour” (65–66).For Charles Taylor, the origins of this “massive subjective turn of modern culture” (26) lie in the 18th-century romantic period with the idea that each individual has an intuitive moral sense. To determine what is right, the individual must be in touch with their “inner voice” and act in accordance with it. It is in this notion that Taylor identifies the background to the belief, which is so prominent today, that “There is a certain way of being human that is my way. I am called upon to live my life in this way, and not in imitation of anyone else’s” (28–29). Lindholm points to Rousseau as the “inventor” of this ideal, with his revelatory Confessions becoming “the harbinger of a new ideal in which exploring and revealing one’s essential nature was taken as an absolute good” (8). According to Rousseau, social norms suppress the individual’s true nature, and so it is only possible for one to be authentic if they break these chains and act in accordance with their inner depths. For employees in today’s service-oriented knowledge economy, there are significant risks involved in following Rousseau’s advice and expressing one’s “true feelings.” As many researchers have noted, in the new capitalism, workers are increasingly required to regulate their emotions and present themselves as calm, agreeable and above all positive (Hochschild; Sennett; Ehrenreich). To offer criticism or express frustration, to drop the “mask of cooperativeness” (Sennett 112), may mean risking one’s employment.Nevertheless, while it is arguably becoming more difficult to express authentic feeling at work, for contemporary workers, choice of occupation is still often closely linked to perceptions of authentic selfhood. In fact, in a time of increasingly fragmented careers and short-term, episodic work, it becomes more necessary to create a meaningful narrative to link numerous and varied jobs to a core sense of self. As Richard Sennett argues, today’s flexible employees—frequently moving from one workplace to the next—are at risk of “drift:” a sensation of aimless movement (30). To counter this, individuals must create a convincing story that provides a rationale for career changes and can thereby “form their characters into sustained narratives” (31).In the next section, drawing on recent empirical research, I argue that linking authentic selfhood to work provides individuals with a way to make sense of the trajectory of their work lives and to accept change. Today’s employees are able to interpret even the most unexpected career changes as a beneficial occurrence—something that was “meant to be”—by rationalising that such changes are part of a process of finding work that is an expression of the authentic self.The Authentic Self at Work: Being True to Your EssenceThe following discussion focuses on how authenticity as an ideal influences individuals’s work identity and career aspirations. It draws examples from recent qualitative interviews with Australian workers from a range of occupations (James 2012). A number of interviewees described a search for an occupation that was authentically “them,” a task that was well-suited to their capabilities and came “naturally:”I have a feeling that I was sort of a natural teacher. (Teacher, 60)Medical is what I like, that’s me. (Paramedic, 49)I found my thing, I stick to it. (Farrier, 27) These beliefs are quite clearly influenced by the idea of vocation, in that there is a particular task the individual is most suited to, but they do not invoke the sense of duty that a religious “calling” entails. Often, the interviewees had discovered the occupation that was “really them” by working in other jobs that were not their “true passion.” Realising that performing a particular role felt inauthentic helped them to define their authentic self and encouraged them to pursue more fulfilling work. This process often required experimentation, since “one knows what one is only after realising what one is not” (Golomb 201).For instance, Olivia, a 33-year old lawyer had begun her career in a corporate law firm. She had never felt comfortable in the corporate environment: “I always thought, ‘They know I don’t belong here’.” Her performance at work felt inauthentic: “I was never good at smiling and saying yes.” This experience led her to move into human rights, which she found more fulfilling. Similarly Hazel, a 50 year-old social worker, had started her career in what she described as “boring administration jobs.” Although she had “always wanted” to work in the “caring sector” her family’s expectations and her low self-confidence had stopped her from applying for university. When she finally quit the administration work and began to study it was liberating: “a weight had come out off my shoulders.” In her occupation as a social worker she felt that her work fitted with her authentic self: “the kind of person I am,” and for the first time in her life she looked forward to going to work. Both of these women, and many of the other interviewees, rationalised their decision to work in a particular field by appealing to narratives of authentic selfhood.Similarly, in explaining why they enjoyed their work, a number of interviewees looked back to their childhood for signs of what was “meant to be.” For instance, Tim, a 27 year-old farrier, justified his work with horses: “Mum came from a farming background, every school holidays I was up there…I followed my grandpa around like a little dog, annoyed and pestered him and asked him ‘Why’ and How?’ I’ve always been like that … So I think from an early age I was destined to do something like this.” Ken, a 50 year-old electrician, had a similar explanation for his choice of occupation: “Even as a little kid I was always mucking around with batteries and getting lights to work and things like that, so I think it was just a natural progression.”This tendency to associate childhood interests with authentic selfhood is perhaps due to the belief that childhood is a time of innocence and freedom, where the individual had not yet been moulded by society. As Duschinsky argues, childhood is often connected with an “originary natural essence.” We are close here to Rousseau’s “sentiment of being,” or its contemporary manifestation the “real you.” Of course, the idea that the child is free from external influence is problematised by ideas of socialisation. From birth the infant learns by copying “significant others” and self-conception is formed through interaction (Cooley; Mead). Therefore, from the very beginning, an individual’s interests, dispositions and tastes are influenced by family and culture.Shane, a 29 year-old real estate agent, had resisted working in property because it was the family business and he “didn’t want to be as boring as to follow in Dad’s footsteps.” He saw himself as “academic” and “creative” and for a number of years worked as a writer. Eventually though he decided that writing was not his calling: it was “not actually me … I categorise myself as someone who has the ability to write but not naturally.” When Shane began working in real-estate however, it felt almost automatic. Like the other members of his family he had the right skills and traits to thrive in the business and was immediately successful. Interestingly, Shane’s conception of his authenticity includes both a belief in an essential, pre-social “true” self and at the same time an understanding of the importance of the influence of family in the formation of the self.Regardless of whether the idea of a natural, inner-essence discernable in childhood pastimes can be disproven, it is clear that the understanding of authentic selfhood as an “immediate expression of our essence” continues to influence how individuals conceive of their work identities. However, at the same time, the interviewees’ accounts of authenticity also acknowledged the role of parents in influencing traits and dispositions. In these narratives of the self, authenticity encompasses opposing understandings of childhood as being both free from social influences and highly influenced by primary agents of socialisation. That individuals are willing to do the necessary mental and emotional work to maintain these contradictory beliefs suggests that there is a strong incentive to frame work identity as an expression of authentic selfhood.Authenticity Provides PurposeThe great benefit of being able to convincingly rationalise one’s work as a manifestation of the true self is that it gives the individual direction and purpose. Work then provides answers to Carroll’s fundamental questions: “who am I?” and “What should I do with my life?” A number of the interviewees recalled their attempts to secure a sense of purpose by linking their current occupation to their inner essence. As Greg, a 36-year-old fitness consultant described it:You just gotta think ‘What do you really wanna do, what makes you happy, what are you about?’ … I guess the strengthening and conditioning work, the fitness, has been the constant right the way through. It’s probably the core of what I’ve done over the years, seeing individuals and teams get fit. It’s what I do. That’s my role, if you put it in a nutshell. That’s what I’m about … I was sort of floating around a little bit … I need to go ‘This is what I am.’ By identifying his authentic self and linking it to his work, Greg was able to make sense of his past. He had once been a professional runner and after an injury was forced to redefine himself. He now rationalised that his ability to run had led him into the fitness field: You look at what is your life mission and basically what are you out here for … with athletics it’s allowed me to deal with any sport, made me flexible in my career … if I was, therefore born to run? Yeah, quite possibly, there had to be a reason. Like many of the interviewees, Greg had been forced to change his plans, but he was able to rationalise that this change was positive by forming a narrative that connected both his current and previous occupations to his perception of his authentic self. As Sennett describes it, he is able to from his character into a “sustained narrative” (31). Similarly, Trish, a 42 year-old retail coordinator, connected both her work as a chef and her job in a hardware store back to her sense of authentic self. Both occupations, she thought, were “down and dirty” and she linked this to her family “roots” and her identity as a “country girl.” In interpreting these two substantially different occupations as an expression of her true self, Trish is able to create a narrative in which unexpected career changes are as seen as something beneficial that was “meant to be.” These accounts of career trajectories suggest that linking authenticity to work identity is a strategy individuals employ to cope with the disorienting effects of fragmented work lives. Even jobs that are unfulfilling and feel inauthentic can be made meaningful by interpreting them as necessary steps leading towards the discovery of one’s “ true passion”. This is quite different to the ideal of a life-long calling in one occupation, which as Bauman has noted, has become a “privilege of the few” in late-modernity (Work 34). In an era of insecure and fragmented work, the narrative of an authentic self becomes particularly appealing as it allows the individual to create a meaningful work-narrative that can accommodate the numerous twists and turns of contemporary “liquid” existence (Bauman, Identity 5) and avoid “drift” (Sennett). Conclusion Drawing on qualitative research, this paper has analysed the connections between authenticity, work and modern selfhood. I have shown that in an era of flexible and fragmented working lives, work-identities are often closely tied to understandings of authentic selfhood. Interpreting particular kinds of work as being expressions of the authentic self provides individuals with a sense of purpose and in some cases assists them in coming to terms with unexpected career changes. A meaningful career narrative acts as a buffer against disorientation, disenchantment and anomie. It is therefore no wonder that authentic selfhood is such a prominent theme in reality television, self-help and other forms of popular culture, since it is taps into an existential need for a sense of purpose that becomes increasingly elusive in late-modernity. It is clear from the accounts presented in this paper that the pursuit of authenticity is not merely a narcissistic endeavor, and is employed by individuals to work through fundamental existential questions. Future work in this area should continue to make use of empirical research to add depth and complexity to theoretical accounts of authentic selfhood. References Bauman, Zygmunt. “Identity in the Globalizing World.” Identity in Question. Ed. Anthony Elliott and Paul du Gay. London: Sage, 2009. 1–12. Bauman, Zygmunt. Work, Consumerism and the New Poor. Buckingham: Open UP, 1998. Bolles, Richard. What Colour Is Your Parachute 2015. 23 Jan. 2015 ‹http://www.jobhuntersbible.com/books/view/what-color-is-your-parachute-2015›. Bolles, Richard. What Colour Is Your Parachute. Berkley: Ten Speed, 1970. Bouma, Gary. Australian Soul: Religion and Spirituality in the 21st Century. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2006. Carroll, John. “Beauty contra God: Has Aesthetics Replaced Religion in Modernity?” Journal of Sociology 48.2 (2012): 206–23. Carroll, John. Ego and Soul: The Modern West in Search of Meaning. Melbourne: Scribe, 2008. Cooley, Charles Horton. Human Nature and the Social Order. New York: Scribner’s, 1902. Duschinsky, Robbie. “Childhood Innocence: Essence, Education, and Performativity.” Textual Practice 27.5 (2013): 763–81. Elliott, Anthony, and Paul du Gay. “Editors’ Introduction.” Identity in Question. Eds. Anthony Elliott and Paul du Gay. London: Sage, 2009. xi–xxi. Ehrenreich, Barbara. Bright-Sided : How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Has Undermined America. New York: Henry Holt, 2009. Golomb, Jacob. In Search of Authenticity: From Kierkegaard to Camus. London: Routledge, 1995. Hochschild, Arlie Russell. The Managed Heart: Commercialization Human Feeling. Berkeley: U of California P, 1983. James, Sara. “Making a Living, Making a Life: Contemporary Narratives of Work, Vocation and Meaning.” PhD Thesis. La Trobe U, 2012. Lindholm, Charles. Culture and Authenticity. Malden: Blackwell, 2008. McGraw, Phil. Self Matters—Creating Your Life from the Inside Out. London: Simon and Schuster, 2001. Mead, George Herbert. Mind, Self and Society. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1934. Sennett, Richard. The Corrosion of Character: The Personal Consequences of Work in the New Capitalism, New York: WW Norton, 1998. Tacey, David. Edge of the Sacred: Jung, Psyche, Earth. Sydney: Daimon, 2008. Taylor, Charles. Ethics of Authenticity. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1991. Weber, Max. “Science as a Vocation.” From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology. Ed. Hans Heinrich Gerth and Charles Wright Mills. London: Routledge, 1991. 129–56. Winfrey, Oprah. The Oprah Winfrey Show Finale. 23 Jan. 2015 ‹http://www.oprah.com/oprahshow/The-Oprah-Winfrey-Show-Finale_1#ixzz3PbhBrdBs›.
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- 2023
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7. Socio-Economic Factors Affecting Water Use in Lower Thiba Sub-Catchment, Kirinyaga County, Kenya
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Sara James, Mutembei Henry M'Ïkiugu, and Geoffrey Kironchi
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Human related activities affect how water is used. However, there is limited information on the effect of socio-economic factors on water use. This study was to establish the socio-economic factors that affect water resource use in Lower Thiba Sub-Catchment using a descriptive survey design. Qualitative as well as quantitative data was collected from 361 households and 5 focus group discussions (n=366) across the Sub-catchment. The sub-catchment was sub-divided into three zones namely; upper zone, middle zone and lower zone, from where each zone, 120 respondents were randomly sampled and issued with a questionnaire. Data was analysed with the help of Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) at a statistical significance of 5% probability level. Data was then presented using descriptive statistics such as tables, graphs and test for significance was done using Chi-square. The results showed that men were more likely to do irrigation farming than women, with 81%, as compared to their female counterparts who had 68%. Most of the respondents (82%) earned between Kshs. 10,000 (87$) and 30,000 (261$) from different occupations; however, 4% of respondents, all of who were farmers earned over kshs 70,000(609$) a month, compared to other types of occupation, indicating it as the main economic activity in the area. The results showed that 57.9% of respondents who had tertiary education preferred formal employment over farming with only 9.9% of them choosing to be farmers. The results also showed 75% of the respondents who owned land were male, with only 25% of the female respondents owning land. Further, respondents in formal employment had a higher ownership (83.9%) of water harvesting facilities compared to those doing irrigation farming at 73%. The results indicate that the community socioeconomic factors within the LTS should be considered by policy makers, as they clearly affect water use within the sub-catchment.
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- 2022
8. A Study to assess the effectiveness of Structured teaching program on knowledge regarding behavioural problems of children among mothers in selected areas at Kollam
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Anet Joy, Nithya Sara James, Jismi Jigu, Leema Thomas, J Jyothilakshmi, and Sandhra Benni
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03 medical and health sciences ,Medical education ,050402 sociology ,0302 clinical medicine ,0504 sociology ,030225 pediatrics ,education ,05 social sciences ,Teaching program ,Psychology - Abstract
A study was assess to find the effectiveness of structured teaching program on knowledge regarding behavioural problems of children among mothers in selected areas at kollam .The objectives of the study were to assess the knowledge regarding behavioral problems of children among mothers, to evaluate the effectiveness of structured teaching program on knowledge regarding behavioural problems of children among mothers and to find out the association between knowledge regarding behavioural problems of children among mothers and selected demographic variables like age of mothers, living area, number of children, education of mothers, age of marriage, monthly income, occupation of mothers and types of family. A quantitative research approach was used with one group pretest posttest only design. Convenience sampling was used. Sample size was 50. The investigator assessed the knowledge of mothers using structured questionnaire regarding behavioral problems of children. After conducting the pretest, the researcher provided structured teaching programme for a period of 40 minutes on the same day. After one week Posttest was conducted using the same research tool. It is found that the calculated t value (17.35) is greater than table value. There is significant difference between pretest and posttest knowledge scores of mothers. There is no association between pretest knowledge and selected demographic variables. The finding of the study suggests that structured teaching programme is effective in increasing the knowledge of mothers regarding behavioral problems of children.
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- 2021
9. Delay in diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis: reasons and trends over a decade
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Avinash Jain, Sanjana Joseph, Jeenamol James, Tintus Sara James, Kanta Kumar, Karim Raza, Sheila Greenfield, and Padmanabha Shenoy
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Rheumatology ,Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Delay in diagnosis and treatment initiation often lead to poorer outcomes in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Most of the data on delay in diagnosis and management are from western population with no data from India. Additionally, with improved health care services, whether the delay has changed over years is not known. In this longitudinal observational study, we investigated delay to diagnosis and disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) initiation over past 9 years.Patients aged ≥ 18 years having RA fulfilling 2010 ACR/EULAR criteria were enrolled from January to June in years 2012, 2017 and 2021. Diagnoses received before presenting to clinic, socioeconomic status, educational level and other demographic variables were recorded.Each year, 323 patients (mean age 49.5-52.01 years) were enrolled. There was a significant reduction in delay in diagnosis from a median (IQR) of 36 (12-84, range 1-288) months in 2012 to 12 (4-36, range 1-180) months in 2017 and 10 (5-24, range 1-120) months) in 2021 (p 0.0001). A significant improvement in time to initiating DMARDs from 2012 [48 (24-96) months] to 2017 [12 (6-36) months] (p 0.0001) and from 2017 to 2021 [12 (5-24) months] (p = 0.03) was seen. Higher education, more patients opting for treatment from rheumatologists, and urbanisation contributed significantly to improvement in delay. There was no impact of age or gender on delay.Delay in diagnosis has improved significantly between 2012 and 2021. However, delay still remains long as most patients miss the 3-month therapeutic window. Future work focussing on reasons for delays in the patient pathway could help improve consultation pathways in India.
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- 2022
10. CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL SPACES FOR EFFECTIVE LEARNING AND AESTHETIC RESPONSES THROUGH REFLEXIVE READING IN VISUAL REALITIES
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Sanjiv Dugal, Erin Torgersen, Jillian Stack, Skylar Santa Barbara, Timothy Murphy, Andrew Catanzaro, Dominic Volpe, Henry Schmidt, Scott Olivo, Matt Greene, Danny Garcia, Nathan Stpierre, Jake Machado, Colin Staples, Anthony Carollo, Jean Cazeau, Erin Chratian, Stephanie Scymcyk, Shannon Watelet, Bridget Murphy, Haley Logue, Anthony Lavecchia, Taro Norbury, Ciara Auclair, Connor Benbenek, Alexa Brink, Justin Hallas, Heather Pangburn, Talia Sanfilippo, Zachary Spinella, Michael Bergantine, Sara James, Michael Baran, Michael Capuano, Evelin Dapprich, Rafal Murawski, Katy Susi, Emily Youngs, Corey Longworth, Chris Morelli, Ryan Winn, Arturo Ortega, Lucas Alvernaz, Rahoul Singh, Mike Troiano, Shiv Singh, and Portia Boucher
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- 2022
11. Incidence of Symptomatic Femoroacetabular Impingement: A 4-Year Study at a National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I Institution
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Safran, Marc R., primary, Foard, Sara James, additional, Robell, Kevin, additional, and Pullen, W. Michael, additional
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- 2022
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12. Existential advertising in late modernity: Meaningful work in higher education advertisements
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Fabian Cannizzo and Sara James
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Late modernity ,Higher education ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Media studies ,050301 education ,General Medicine ,Existentialism ,Politics ,Work (electrical) ,0502 economics and business ,050211 marketing ,Sociology ,business ,0503 education - Abstract
The ongoing massification of higher education has entailed a changing relationship between higher education providers and students. While scholars have been quick to identify the political implications of the quasi-market model for the student-customer, there has been significantly less focus on the role that advertising plays in facilitating a student-consumer culture. This article uses an analysis of advertisements directed towards potential domestic university students in Australia to explore how the idea of a university ‘experience’ and meaningful work are discursively constructed within late modernity. Many advertisements draw on existential themes of living a meaningful, authentic or exceptional life and finding a fulfilling career, mythologising the role of the university within an idealised social order. This study highlights the need to understand the economic value of higher education as embedded in cultural economy, as well as the value of this framework for researching student experiences and marketing.
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- 2020
13. Meaningful work in late modernity: An introduction
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Fabian Cannizzo and Sara James
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Late modernity ,Work (electrical) ,Aesthetics ,General Medicine ,Sociology - Published
- 2020
14. University students, career uncertainty, and the culture of authenticity
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Sarah Midford, Sara James, and Mark Mallman
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,Higher education ,Full-time ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Post-industrial society ,050301 education ,General Social Sciences ,Identity (social science) ,Context (language use) ,Future career ,Public relations ,Emotion management ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Sociology ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,business ,0503 education ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Young people entering tertiary education in postindustrial societies choose their courses in the context of widespread uncertainty about future career prospects. At the same time, choice of degree ...
- Published
- 2020
15. How to navigate a pandemic: Competing discourses in The Australian Women's Weekly magazine
- Author
-
Sara James and Anne-Maree Sawyer
- Subjects
General Medicine - Abstract
As the Covid-19 pandemic caused schools, workplaces, and childcare centres to close, pressures in the home increased. Much of the additional unpaid work required under these conditions was done by women. Most women's magazines at this time urged women to stay positive and develop wellbeing routines to help them flourish. This approach reinforces normative neoliberal subjectivity with its roots in therapeutic culture and the happiness industry. While the focus on self-care may seem empowering, it puts more pressure on women in times of upheaval. Based on a thematic analysis of pandemic-related content in Australia's most popular women's magazine, The Australian Women's Weekly, we identified three key themes: ‘finding the silver lining’, ‘making lifestyle choices’, and ‘recognising hardships and social divides’. While self-responsibilising discourses were prominent, some articles acknowledged the broader structural issues impacting women, revealing a tension between competing discourses.
- Published
- 2023
16. Incidence of Symptomatic Femoroacetabular Impingement: A 4-Year Study at a National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I Institution
- Author
-
Marc R. Safran, Sara James Foard, Kevin Robell, and W. Michael Pullen
- Subjects
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine - Abstract
Background: Femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) is an increasingly recognized cause of hip pain in young athletes. Although there are multiple studies that describe the radiographic prevalence of FAI in athletes, its true incidence within this population is unknown. Purpose: To report on the overall and sport-specific incidence of symptomatic FAI in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I athletes. Return-to-sport times were reported for patients treated operatively. Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3. Methods: A retrospective review was conducted to identify all reported hip injuries within a large, multisport NCAA Division I institution. Hip injuries were stratified into FAI, general pain/dysfunction, musculotendinous, ligament, bursitis, bone stress, contusion, and other. FAI was diagnosed based on history, physical examinations, imaging, and symptomatic relief after a diagnostic injection. Descriptive statistics were used to calculate the overall and sport-specific incidence, and chi-square analysis was performed to identify contingency data. Results: In a 3-year period, a total of 5319 musculoskeletal injuries occurred in 1072 athletes. There were 491 (9.2%) hip injuries that occurred in 288 athletes, of which 40 injuries were FAI. The overall incidence of symptomatic FAI was 3.0% of the total population, 3.7% of all injured athletes, and 13.9% of athletic hip injuries. There were no statistically significant differences in FAI rates among male and female athletes overall or among male and female athletes within similar sports. Of the 19 athletes who were treated nonoperatively, 2 failed to return to play: 1 secondary to multiple musculoskeletal injuries and 1 related to cardiac issues. There were 21 hips in 20 patients that were treated operatively, with 1 athlete failing to return to sport. Return to play occurred at a mean of 202 days (range, 81-360 days) after hip arthroscopic surgery. Conclusion: In this large, multisport NCAA Division I cohort, the overall incidence of symptomatic FAI was 3.0% and represented 13.9% of hip injuries. The successful management of FAI with return to play was achieved by both nonoperative and operative treatment methods. The relatively low incidence of symptomatic FAI, despite reports of a high prevalence of FAI morphology in athletes, serves to emphasize the importance of clinical evaluations in treating patients with FAI.
- Published
- 2021
17. The Electronic In-patient Progress Note: Less is More.
- Author
-
Lacey Colligan, Cameron Coleman, Lauren Dobry, Sara James, Kevin McVey, and Stephen M. Borowitz
- Published
- 2013
18. How We Got to Where We're Going
- Author
-
Annapurna H. Poduri, Alfred L. George Jr, Erin L. Heinzen, Daniel Lowenstein, and Sara James
- Abstract
This Element serves as a welcome to the Cambridge Elements Genetics in Epilepsy series. The series editors look forward to sharing with you the story of epilepsy genetics through a series of Elements. They will bring together many voices, by text as well as video, to illustrate the history of epilepsy genetics, the many on-going efforts in the field, and how they hope to address the still unanswered questions that command the attention of all of us and our colleagues across the globe.
- Published
- 2021
19. Embedded Micro Radar for Pedestrian Detection in Clutter
- Author
-
Rick Gentile, Michael Jian, Chaofeng Wang, Sara James, Zhe Zhang, Zhenzhong Lu, and Honglei Chen
- Subjects
Computer science ,business.industry ,Deep learning ,Pedestrian detection ,Real-time computing ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,02 engineering and technology ,Application software ,computer.software_genre ,Convolutional neural network ,Field (computer science) ,law.invention ,Hybrid neural network ,law ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Clutter ,Artificial intelligence ,Radar ,business ,computer ,021101 geological & geomatics engineering - Abstract
Embedded micro radars that include integrated hardware, application software, and a real-time operating system as part of an enclosed system provide convenient platforms for outdoor and indoor environment monitoring. This paper discusses methods to suppress clutter and to extract features of weak radar targets, such as pedestrians. With the help of MATLAB® simulation tools, algorithms to detect pedestrians in a high clutter environment can be investigated. A hybrid neural network is developed on micro-Doppler signatures generated synthetically. It outperforms the traditional convolutional neural network in terms of accuracy and the amount of training data required. We then use an embedded micro radar for field trials to test the performance of the hybrid neural network on real data sets.
- Published
- 2020
20. The insider's guide to Decorating with White: three interior designers--each with a distinctive take on this versatile hue--demystify the process
- Author
-
Mnookin, Sara James
- Subjects
Interior design -- Methods ,Food/cooking/nutrition ,Home and garden - Abstract
Rachel Ashwell LOS ANGELES The Shabby Chic founder practically invented the whole whitewashed flea-market thing. Darryl Carter WASHINGTON, D.C. A minimalist with a traditional bent, Carter relies on white to [...]
- Published
- 2011
21. John Carroll’s metaphysical sociology
- Author
-
Sara James
- Subjects
Modernity ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Metaphysics ,Critical survey ,Sociology ,Existentialism ,media_common ,Epistemology ,Focus (linguistics) ,Key (music) - Abstract
For John Carroll, the major problem of modernity is that it is 'metaphysically precarious'. Carroll has proposed that a metaphysical sociology should focus on how societies grapple with the fundamental existential questions that confront all human. He has been a frequent writer of essays for popular literary journals. This collection of essays provides a critical survey of Carroll's metaphysical sociology, while also expanding the project into new areas. This chapter familiarises the reader with Carroll's approach, while outlining his major themes. Carroll's published works and lectures present a distinctive vision of the history of the West and its cultural implications. This introduction presents an overview of the key concepts discussed in the preceding chapters of this book. Carroll has written two pieces for this book: an introductory essay and a response to the other contributors.
- Published
- 2018
22. The Existential Jesus
- Author
-
Sara James
- Subjects
Psychoanalysis ,Philosophy ,Existentialism - Published
- 2018
23. Modern metaphysical romance
- Author
-
Sara James
- Subjects
Gratification ,Aesthetics ,Internet dating ,Metaphysics ,Mobile technology ,Sociology ,Meaning (existential) ,Romance ,Archetype ,Key (music) - Abstract
This chapter connects Carroll’s arguments about the ongoing significance of the soul-mate archetype to contemporary concerns about the impact of Internet dating and mobile technology on relationships. It considers whether Carroll is correct in arguing that romantic love continues to be one of the key areas of life in which the search for meaning takes place, or if, as other sociologists argue, romantic relationships are increasingly fragmented, insecure and primarily a means to temporary gratification as opposed to ongoing fulfilment. An analysis of the 2013 film Her draws out the tensions and ambivalences present in our attempts to connect with the other in an individualized society.
- Published
- 2018
24. Metaphysical Sociology
- Author
-
Sara James
- Subjects
Work (electrical) ,Metaphysics ,Sociology ,Epistemology - Published
- 2018
25. Key concepts in humanities and social sciences
- Author
-
Sarah Midford, Garrie Hutchinson, and Sara James
- Subjects
Key (cryptography) ,Engineering ethics ,Sociology - Published
- 2018
26. Metaphysical Sociology : On the Work of John Carroll
- Author
-
Sara James and Sara James
- Subjects
- Social sciences--Philosophy, Metaphysics, Culture
- Abstract
This volume critically engages with the work of the acclaimed Australian sociologist John Carroll. It makes the argument for a metaphysical sociology, which Carroll has proposed should focus on the questions of fundamental existence that confront all humans: ‘Where do I come from?', ‘What should I do with my life?'and ‘What happens to me when I die?'. These questions of meaning, in the secular modern West, have become difficult to answer. As contemporary individuals increasingly draw on their inner resources, or'ontological qualities', to pursue quests for meaning, the key challenge for a metaphysical sociology concerns the cultural resources available to people and the manner in which they are cultivated. Through wide-ranging discussions which include, film, romantic love, terrorism and video games, Metaphysical Sociology takes up this challenge. The contributors include emerging and established sociologists, a philosopher, a renowned actor and a musician. As such, this collection will appeal to scholars of social theory and sociology, and to the general reader with interests in morality, art, culture and the fundamental questions of human existence.
- Published
- 2018
27. Making a Living, Making a Life : Work, Meaning and Self-Identity
- Author
-
Sara James and Sara James
- Subjects
- Identity (Psychology), Work--Social aspects, Labor--Social aspects, Occupations--Sociological aspects
- Abstract
In a world in which individuals will undergo multiple career changes, is it possible any longer to conceive of a job as a meaningful vocation? Against the background of fragmentation and rationalisation of work, this book explores the significance and meaning of work in contemporary life, raising the question of whether people continue to feel motivated to dedicate their lives to their work, or must now look to other areas of life for meaning. Based on rich, in-depth interviews conducted with workers of different ages and across a broad range of occupations in the major city of Melbourne, Making a Living, Making a Life reveals that work continues to be a source of pride, passion and purpose, the author shedding light on the ways in which cultural narratives, collective meanings and structural factors influence people's feelings about work. An engaging and empirically grounded examination of the meaning and centrality of work to people's lives in today's'liquid'modern world, this book will appeal to sociologists with interests in cultural sociology, social theory, ethics, the sociology of work and questions of identity.
- Published
- 2017
28. Conclusion
- Author
-
Sara James
- Published
- 2017
29. Making a Living, Making a Life
- Author
-
Sara James
- Published
- 2017
30. The fate of the work ethic
- Author
-
Sara James
- Subjects
Work ethic ,Environmental ethics ,Sociology - Published
- 2017
31. Seeking sensation and meaningful work
- Author
-
Sara James
- Subjects
Work (electrical) ,Sensation ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Published
- 2017
32. Introduction
- Author
-
Sara James
- Published
- 2017
33. Work and self-identity
- Author
-
Sara James
- Subjects
Work (electrical) ,Identity (social science) ,Gender studies ,Sociology - Published
- 2017
34. Book Review: The problem with work: Feminism, marxism, antiwork politics and postwork imaginaries
- Author
-
Sara James
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Politics ,Sociology and Political Science ,Work (electrical) ,Political Science and International Relations ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,Feminism - Published
- 2014
35. Are baby boomer women redefining retirement?
- Author
-
Anne-Maree Sawyer and Sara James
- Subjects
050402 sociology ,0504 sociology ,Baby boomers ,0502 economics and business ,05 social sciences ,General Social Sciences ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,050203 business & management - Published
- 2018
36. Yoga & Pilates
- Author
-
Sara James and Sara James
- Subjects
- Hatha yoga--Juvenile literature, Yoga--Juvenile literature, Pilates method--Juvenile literature, Physical fitness--Juvenile literature, Exercise--Juvenile literature
- Abstract
Around the world, millions of people love to work out using yoga or Pilates. These exercises help people to get in shape, lose weight, and keep a positive attitude. While yoga has been around for hundreds of years, and Pilates was only created a few decades ago, many people are combining yoga and Pilates today to push their bodies further. Learn more about how yoga and Pilates can improve your body, your mind, and your life. Discover how to live a fit and healthy life through yoga and Pilates!
- Published
- 2014
37. Flexibility & Agility
- Author
-
Sara James and Sara James
- Subjects
- Physical fitness for children--Juvenile literatu
- Abstract
Even if you aren't a gymnast or dancer, flexibility and agility are a big part of fitness and both affect your life long physical wellbeing. Exercising to improve your flexibility and agility can be a great way to get in better shape and push your body just a bit further. Find out more about flexibility and agility, including which exercises can help you to become more flexible and agile, while staying safe. Find tips on making a schedule for working out and how to stick with the plan you make. Discover how exercising for flexibility and agility can help you stay healthy and fit!
- Published
- 2014
38. Step Aerobics & Aerobic Dance
- Author
-
Sara James and Sara James
- Subjects
- Step aerobics--Juvenile literature, Aerobic dancing--Juvenile literature
- Abstract
With exciting dance music and lots of energy, step aerobics and aerobic dance have become more and more popular for people who want to workout while having fun. Aerobic activities classes offer a huge number of different workouts to try. Finding one that works for you can be a great way to get active. Find out what you need to do to stay safe during step aerobic and dance classes. Learn more about the world of step aerobics and aerobic dance, including how moving your body to a beat can help you lose weight, stay in shape, and have a lot of fun!
- Published
- 2014
39. Safety
- Author
-
Sara James and Sara James
- Subjects
- Martial arts--Juvenile literature, Safety education--Juvenile literature
- Abstract
Martial arts students don't just learn how to fight. They also learn lots of other important things—like how to stay safe. Martial artists know how to kick, jump, and punch without hurting themselves. They know how to protect their bodies in martial arts class—and out. Discover how martial arts can help you stay safe too!
- Published
- 2014
40. Self-Discipline
- Author
-
Sara James and Sara James
- Subjects
- Martial arts--Juvenile literature, Self-control--Juvenile literature
- Abstract
Martial arts students don't just learn how to fight. They also learn lots of other important things they use every day—like self-discipline, for example. Self-discipline is what keeps us going, even when it's hard work. Martial artists learn this skill, and it helps them with everything from studying for a test... to practicing an instrument... to playing sports. Discover how martial arts can help you learn self-discipline too!
- Published
- 2014
41. Self-Esteem
- Author
-
Sara James and Sara James
- Subjects
- Martial arts--Juvenile literature, Self-esteem--Juvenile literature
- Abstract
Martial arts students don't just learn how to fight. They also learn lots of other important things they use every day—like self-esteem, for example. Martial arts students feel better about themselves because they are learning new things; they are hearing encouragement; and they are reaching their goals, so they feel like a success. Self-esteem helps them do better in school, at home, and with friends. Discover how martial arts can improve your self-esteem too!
- Published
- 2014
42. Photography
- Author
-
Sara James and Sara James
- Subjects
- Photography--Juvenile literature, Photography--Digital techniques--Juvenile lite, Photography--History--Juvenile literature
- Abstract
Now that we have cameras in smartphones, as well as plenty of ways to share photos with friends online, a lot of us are taking photos. But not everyone who takes a photo is an expert at using a camera lens to create works of art. If you're interested in a career in photography, first you'll need to know about the art, history, and business behind the beautiful shots. Learn more about the world of photography, from stock photographers to journalistic photographers who reveal truths we might not otherwise see. Discover how photographers make a living with their art—and how you too can build a career in photography!
- Published
- 2014
43. Writing: Stories, Poetry, Song, & Rap
- Author
-
Sara James and Sara James
- Subjects
- Authorship--Vocational guidance--Juvenile lite
- Abstract
From a touching poem to an epic novel to a meaningful song, the right words can change people's lives. Whether you're just starting your first short story or you're a young songwriter looking for the perfect chorus, you may find you have a talent with words. If you're interested in building that talent into a career, first you'll need to know the basics of the vast business opportunities in writing. Learn how different people are paid to write, from novelists to rappers, and find out what it takes to begin a career in writing. Discover how you can build your own writing career!
- Published
- 2014
44. Why Change Management Matters in Portal Solution Implementation
- Author
-
Sara James, Nicholas Nylund, Rachel Sondag, and Tatiana Baquero
- Subjects
Knowledge management ,business.industry ,Strategy and Management ,Change management ,business - Published
- 2008
45. Differences in Fall Risk Factors Between Adults With Diabetes and Those Without Who Are Homebound
- Author
-
Migliarese, Sara James, primary
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Authentic Lives, Authentic Times: A Cultural and Media Analysis
- Author
-
Nicholas Hookway and Sara James
- Subjects
Sociology of culture ,Originality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Modernity ,Multitude ,Media studies ,Identity (social science) ,Sociology ,Morality ,Reality television ,Existentialism ,media_common ,Visual arts - Abstract
Normal 0 false false false EN-US JA X-NONE /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:"Table Normal"; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-priority:99; mso-style-parent:""; mso-padding-alt:0cm 5.4pt 0cm 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0cm; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:Cambria; mso-ascii-font-family:Cambria; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-hansi-font-family:Cambria; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-ansi-language:EN-US;} Authenticity is the value of our times. From reality television and self-help literature to expectations to find the “real you” in work, love and relationships, authenticity pervades contemporary social and cultural life (Vannini and Williams). In contemporary Western culture the ideal of living authentically, of being “true to yourself,” is ubiquitous. Authenticity is “taken for granted” as an absolute value in a multitude of areas, from music, to travel to identity (Lindholm 1). We seek to perform authentically, to consume authentic products and to be authentic people. To describe something as inauthentic is the critic's cruellest barb, implying that the product or person under review is contrived, insincere, or at worst, soulless. The prevalence of authenticity is linked to what Charles Taylor (26) calls the “massive subjective turn of modern culture.” As religion and other traditional forms of authority weaken in modern secular societies, individuals need to draw on their inner resources to find answers to life’s big questions. It is in this context that ethical ideals of authenticity—wrapped in notions of self-discovery, self-fulfilment and personal improvement—come to play a central role in modern Western culture. While Taylor posits that authenticity can be a worthwhile moral ideal, it has tended to get a bad wrap in much cultural diagnosis. From Lasch to Bauman, authenticity is routinely linked to narcissism and declining care for others. For this issue of M/C Journal we wanted to develop a more nuanced conception of authenticity that moved outside abstracted theoretical accounts such as those provided by Taylor, Lasch and Bauman. We wanted to curate an issue that captured the concrete and situated ways in which authenticity is mobilised in everyday life and use this to interrogate the meaning and consequences of authenticity for contemporary living. In aiming to do this, the issue builds upon a one-day symposium— Cultures of Authenticity —we organised in our roles as co-conveners of The Australian Sociological Association (TASA) Cultural Sociology group. The symposium was held at Flinders University City campus in Adelaide on 28 November 2014 and supported by TASA thematic group funding. Building on the focus of the symposium, we invited papers for this issue of M/C Journal to analyse the role of authenticity in late-modern life and its real world meanings, applications and consequences. We asked for papers to investigate the significance of authenticity across diverse areas of media and culture. The result is an exciting collection of articles that address authenticity from a variety of angles that draw upon established and innovative empirical sources, including blogs, internet forums, reality TV, radio transcripts, interviews and focus-groups. Our feature article by Patrick Williams and Xiang Goh offers an emotionally powerful account of how discourses of authenticity are constructed on a breast cancer Internet forum. Using qualitative research methods, the article analyses two key dimensions of authenticity: 1) the existential, which focuses on cancer patients’ ability to face crisis and death; and 2) the interactional, which focuses on the collaborative making of the authentic cancer survivor. Nicholas Hookway and Akane Kanai also use online mediums to excavate contemporary applications of authenticity. Hookway uses blog data to show the prevalence of “being true to yourself” as a contemporary moral ideal, but suggests that the version of authenticity produced by the bloggers tends to miss the relational basis of self and morality. Kanai engages with the topic of authenticity as it applies to Tumblr blogs, arguing that they produce a concept of authenticity constituted in tension between individuality and belonging. The following three papers address the significance of authenticity in relation to work, religion and authenticity. Sara James shows that constructions of authentic selfhood in relation to work can offer existential answers to questions of meaning in disenchanted times. Steve Taylor looks at how authenticity as originality is claimed by alternative Christian communities and appropriated by mainstream groups in the UK while Ramon Menendez Domingo explores the different meanings that individuals from diverse ethnic backgrounds associate with being authentic. The next two papers address the production of authenticity in chat-based radio and reality TV. Kate Ames uses Kyle Sandilands to examine authentic performance in the chat-based radio genre, before Ava Parsemain moves our attention to how authenticity as truthfulness is deployed as a pedagogical strategy in the SBS show Who Do You Think You Are . Amy Bauder and David Inglis then close out the issue with analyses of country music and wine. Focusing on Bob Corbett and the Roo Grass Band, Bauder offers an ethnographic account of the role of authenticity in country music, arguing that family is used as a central vehicle to authenticate the genre. Inglis book-ends the issue by challenging readers to consider authenticity in wine production and consumption not simply as a social construction. Highlighting the importance of developing specific accounts of authenticity, Inglis argues that unlike the example of country music, authenticity in wine is never solely a cultural fabrication. Specifically, Inglis urges us to consider the importance of terroir to authenticity, not simply as the branding of place but also the physical and chemical components involved in wine making. Inglis’s paper was a fitting way to close the issue—it not only highlights the importance of authenticity as a modern value it also underscores the importance of historising the concept, demonstrating that demand for “authentic” wine is not just a modern value but one that has ancient roots. Putting together such a project involves the support and cooperation of a large numbers of people. Thanks to the authors for their wonderful contributions, the reviewers for their generous comments and The Australian Sociological Association, Flinders University and the Australian Cultural Sociology group for your support and advice. Thank you to Axel Bruns and the M/C Journal team for supporting not only this issue but also providing an exciting avenue to share new research and ideas. This is an on-going project but we feel this issue makes an important contribution to the operationalisation and application of authenticity to the study of self, culture and society. We hope you agree. References Bauman, Zygmunt. Liquid Modernity . Cambridge: Polity, 2000. Lasch, Christopher. The Culture of Narcissism: American Life in an Age of Diminishing Expectations . New York: W.W. Norton and Co, 1979. Lindholm, Charles. Culture and Authenticity . Malden: Blackwell, 2008. Taylor, Charles . Ethics of Authenticity . Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1991. Vannini, Phillip, and J. Patrick Williams, eds. Authenticity in Culture, Self, and Society . Ashgate, 2009.
- Published
- 2015
47. Bad Girls? Women's Writing on Women in Prison
- Author
-
Sara James
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Linguistics and Language ,Literature and Literary Theory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Prison ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,Criminology ,Music ,Language and Linguistics ,media_common - Published
- 2006
48. What If... All Your Friends Turned On You
- Author
-
Liz Ruckdeschel, Sara James, Liz Ruckdeschel, and Sara James
- Subjects
- Children's stories
- Abstract
The popular interactive series returns! Can you save Haley from loserdom?Sixteen-year-old Haley Miller is back at Hillsdale High school after the holiday break, and she's finally got her driver's license! But something fishy is going on. The few people she trusts are now acting less than trustworthy, and she's beginning to wonder: is she turning into an outcast? Haley was looking forward to her best spring break yet, but now it's not clear she'll get an invite from anybody. Maybe readers—with their excellent decision-making skills—can guide Haley back to her rightful place in the social strata. Anything's possible in this fun series where Choose Your Own Adventure meets Gossip Girl.
- Published
- 2013
49. What If... All the Boys Wanted You
- Author
-
Liz Ruckdeschel, Sara James, Liz Ruckdeschel, and Sara James
- Subjects
- Children's stories
- Abstract
Haley's back at Hillsdale High after a New England vacation with her family. She's got a new haircut and some great new clothes, but the same problems--and the same people--continue to follow her. Coco and Whitney want to groom her to become the next Coquette now that they've kicked Sasha to the curb, but is Haley ready to make the changes they demand? Meanwhile, Sasha seems to be in serious trouble, and Irene is still willing to take Haley to San Francisco with her. So many possibilities! So many choices! Haley's future is in your hands--choose wisely!
- Published
- 2013
50. Robert Mighall ,A Geography of Victorian Gothic: Mapping History's Nightmares(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), xxv + 312 pages, illustrated, hardback, £45 (ISBN 0 19 818472 7)
- Author
-
Sara James
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,Media studies ,Art history - Published
- 2001
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