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Articles 1 - 13 of 13
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
College Of Arts And Sciences: March 2020, College Of Arts And Sciences
College Of Arts And Sciences: March 2020, College Of Arts And Sciences
College of Arts and Sciences news
- Internships, faculty support help alumnus land job at ABC News
- WMU professor awarded for book that peels back the curtain on Fetzer's secret life
- What do you think?
- Giving Impact: Helping Students 'Take Off'
- Unearthing her passion for archaeology at WMU
- Geography alumnus analyzes tree canopy in Colorado
- Western Michigan University receives a $9.6M federal grant to advance renewable energy research
Green Burials: The Deinstitutionalization Of Death, A A. Bouverette 3906173
Green Burials: The Deinstitutionalization Of Death, A A. Bouverette 3906173
The Hilltop Review
Abstract
Methods for preparing and burying the dead vary widely across time and cultures, but an enduring theme persists in ritualistic deposition. Some forms of disposal include inhumation, cremation, entombment, sea submersion and methods of exposure (Spellman, 2014). For many cultures, an exposed corpse or one that had not been given ritualized funeral rites was viewed as improper or neglectful. Exposed or rotting bodies is also associated with disease and illness (Feagan. 2007).
The transition from natural burial to preservative practices is a recent invention created in response to mass death during a wartime period (Stowe, Schmidt & Green, 2001). …
Western News, June 21, 2018, Western Michigan University
Western News, June 21, 2018, Western Michigan University
Western News (1972-2018)
Story highlights: WMU part of student mental health effort; Valley Dining Center achieves LEED Gold status; Physical plant upgrades expected to cause few disruptions; On Campus with Monica Liggins-Abrams.
Free Zone Scientology: The Social Structure Of A Contemporary Reform Movement, Kyle D. Byron
Free Zone Scientology: The Social Structure Of A Contemporary Reform Movement, Kyle D. Byron
The Hilltop Review
In lieu of an abstract, a short excerpt is provided:
"
The Church of Scientology has a notorious history of controversy. The sources of this controversy stem from both the legal realm (most notably in the acquisition of the legal label of “religion” and, therefore, tax exempt status) and the social sphere, with critics from both the Christian and secular “anti-cult” movements publishing polemics against the Church. There also, however, exists a third source of criticism: self-identified Scientologists who have chosen to leave the official institution of Scientology. These understudied groups, practicing outside of the Church, are known as …
Kjv In The Usa: The Impact Of The King James Bible In The Usa, Brian C. Wilson
Kjv In The Usa: The Impact Of The King James Bible In The Usa, Brian C. Wilson
Comparative Religion Publications
No abstract provided.
Western News, Nov. 13, 2008, Western Michigan University
Western News, Nov. 13, 2008, Western Michigan University
Western News (1972-2018)
Story highlights: Three named 2008-09 Fulbright Scholars; $4 million literacy grant helping 350 area children; Service anniversaries for November; On Campus with John Disbro.
Religion And Semiosphere: From Religious To The Secular And Beyond, Rajka Rush
Religion And Semiosphere: From Religious To The Secular And Beyond, Rajka Rush
Dissertations
Religion is a system of structural ideas that involve the natural ability of the mind to engage itself into the process of unlimited semiosis which can be defined as an existential openness of one's consciousness to the universe as a system. This primary religious consciousness becomes limited by language, symbolic, and cultural constraints. The religious semiotic space is a sub-cultural system open to culturally and cross-culturally encoded idioms and concepts. These cultural potentials are interpreted and settled by the religious exegesis expressed in the behavioral patterns of the symbolic actions that reflect a specific worldview of the closed community controlled …
The Muggletonians: A People Apart, Juleen Audrey Eichinger
The Muggletonians: A People Apart, Juleen Audrey Eichinger
Dissertations
Muggletonians were followers of John Reeve and Lodowick Muggleton, seventeenth-century London tailors who believed that they were the last two witnesses of the Spirit described in Revelation 11:3. A dizzying array of religious and political groups flowered for a time in mid-seventeenth-century England, inspired by the establishment of the Church of England and the continental Reformation in prior centuries, and unleashed by the collapse of the English monarchy in 1640. Muggletonians were long considered to be heretics or lunatics, one example of the many religious eccentrics and fanatics who flourished in England during this period.
The opportunity now exists to …
Western News, May 2, 1996, Western Michigan University
Western News, May 2, 1996, Western Michigan University
Western News (1972-2018)
Story highlights: Chicago advertising executive; WMU alumnus to head marketing; PR and communications, Faculty member donates his entire net salary, Texas Tech administrator selected for admissions post, 2,700 medievalists due on campus for 31st congress, State's finest high school artists pool talents for 34th annual Michigan Youth Arts Festival, WMUK-FM ends spring fund drive in record time, Clock tower named for major donor's parents, WMU to continue East Campus improvements, Expert on Japanese religion to discuss Aum Shinrikyo, University will honor Barn Theatre founders.
A Psychoanalytic And Archetypal Examination Of Two Seminal Dreams And Visions Of Ellen G. White, Dennis E. Waite
A Psychoanalytic And Archetypal Examination Of Two Seminal Dreams And Visions Of Ellen G. White, Dennis E. Waite
Dissertations
This study is a psychological examination of the earliest dreams and visions of Ellen G. Harmon (more commonly known by her married name Ellen G. White), a 19th century prophetess and founding leader of the Seventh-day Adventist church. The following two questions were addressed: (1) What effects did Mrs. White’s dreams and visions have upon her resolution of childhood emotional or developmental conflicts? and (2) In what way do Mrs. White’s early religious experiences clarify the role of religious experience in individual psychological and emotional development?
Two dreams and two visions were selected for analysis by two methods of dream …
Teaching From A Feminist Perspective, Pamela J. Benson, Sharon Farmer
Teaching From A Feminist Perspective, Pamela J. Benson, Sharon Farmer
Medieval Feminist Forum: A Journal of Gender and Sexuality
No abstract provided.
Three Women Saints In The Thirteenth Century: Mentalities And Roles, Ulrike Strasser
Three Women Saints In The Thirteenth Century: Mentalities And Roles, Ulrike Strasser
Masters Theses
This case study analyzes the lives of three thirteenth-century female saints, Lutgard of Aywiferes, Margaret of Ypres, and Christina Mirabilis, and places them against the broader theoretical frame of quantitative studies on the subject sainthood. The focus of the study is the pursuit of holiness as well as the perception of holiness. Both, pursuit and perception, serve as the point of departure for a discussion of the mentalities and the social realities which the women’s sainthood reflects.
The findings from this study indicate that female saints display numerous commonalities which can be traced back to the saints’ gender and its …
Western News, January 10, 1980, Western Michigan University
Western News, January 10, 1980, Western Michigan University
Western News (1972-2018)
Story highlights: Open Office Hours Resume, APA Workshop Begins Wednesday, Scott To Assist Egyptians, Sexual Assault Seminar Topic, Grad College Awards Funds