Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- African American Studies (1)
- Children's and Young Adult Literature (1)
- Clinical Psychology (1)
- Continental Philosophy (1)
- Counseling Psychology (1)
-
- Creative Writing (1)
- Education (1)
- Educational Assessment, Evaluation, and Research (1)
- Educational Methods (1)
- Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (1)
- Fiction (1)
- Literature in English, North America (1)
- Literature in English, North America, Ethnic and Cultural Minority (1)
- Other Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (1)
- Philosophy (1)
- Poetry (1)
- Psychology (1)
- Race, Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies (1)
- Secondary Education and Teaching (1)
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (1)
- Teacher Education and Professional Development (1)
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Restorative Practices In English Language Arts: My Journey Towards Linguistic Justice, Ariana Skeese
Restorative Practices In English Language Arts: My Journey Towards Linguistic Justice, Ariana Skeese
Master of Arts in English Plan II Graduate Projects
In this final portfolio, I examine anti-racist pedagogy in English Language Arts Education.
The Bengali Oil-Eaters: A Speculative Approach To New Materialism And The Nonhuman In Contemporary Petrofiction, Jenna Wayland
The Bengali Oil-Eaters: A Speculative Approach To New Materialism And The Nonhuman In Contemporary Petrofiction, Jenna Wayland
Honors Projects
Despite oil’s heavy saturation within the context of contemporary global life, novelistic registrations of oil frontiers and extractive drilling in contemporary world literature remain proportionally barren with regards to oil’s political and geographical importance across the world-system. Petro-cultural production, transnational in scale and imposing in material basis, relegates oil to a paradoxical literary deferment. The general invisibility of petrofiction within the petro-sphere suggests that the materialist basis of petroleum and its fraught geopolitical history has culturally transformed oil into a repressed, peripheral, and hidden material that subsequently renders the oil-encounter unseen in contemporary literature. This creative synthesis of the oil-encounter …
Trauma Is A Wound: Demonstrating The Use Of Character Analysis To Practice Clinical Analysis, Madisyn Beare
Trauma Is A Wound: Demonstrating The Use Of Character Analysis To Practice Clinical Analysis, Madisyn Beare
Honors Projects
Evidence-based treatments of trauma require clinicians to base their treatments on the client’s specific and individual needs, experiences, cognitions, and place in recovery. Essentially, each new client is a new and unique case, and the practice of understanding how trauma may affect an individual only comes from clinical exposure.Literature provides the public with somewhat of an aid in these circumstances: fictional characters are not real people, and therefore can undergo limitless character analyses. Analyzing a fictional character allows clinicians the ability to practice their exploration of various behavioral indicators of mental health concerns while honoring the ethical code of non-maleficence, …