And Literature (and + literature)

Distribution by Scientific Domains

Kinds of And Literature

  • art and literature


  • Selected Abstracts


    The Important Books: Children's Picture Books as Art and Literature

    THE JOURNAL OF AMERICAN CULTURE, Issue 2 2006
    Eve Blachman
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Liste der ethnomykologisch und biotechnologisch relevanten Pilze , Literatur , Kunst , Volksmedizin , Pharmazie , Techniken , Drogen

    FEDDES REPERTORIUM, Issue 5-6 2005
    Hanns Kreisel Prof. Dr.
    Verzeichnis von Pilzen, welche in der Ethnomykologie, Ethnomedizin, Toxikologie, Pharmazie, Kunst und Literatur eine Rolle spielen, mit aktueller Nomenklatur und wichtigen Synonymen. Im Anschluss wird ein Verzeichnis von Namen mykologischer Produkte und Inhaltsstoffe erläutert. (© 2005 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) An enumeration of fungi which play a role in ethnomycology, ethnomedicine, toxicology, pharmacy, art and literature, with actual nomenclature and important synonyms. As an appendix, names of mycological products and metabolites are explained. [source]


    Saying and Showing: Art, Literature and Religious Understanding

    MODERN THEOLOGY, Issue 1 2002
    Patrick J. Sherry
    I argue that works of art and literature can be primary expressions of religious ideas, i.e., ones not dependent on other modes of communication like preaching or theology. This does not mean, however, that such works are independent of criticism, for an artist or writer can show something that is untrue, immoral, crude, and so on. I maintain that art and literature may criticize theology, or vice versa; or, thirdly, the relationship between them may be reciprocal, and I illustrate these three possibilities via Ibsen's Brand, Goethe's Faust, and the film Dead Man Walking. [source]


    Telling stories: Lessons from the Bible, literature and film provide a reference for mediation work

    ALTERNATIVES TO THE HIGH COST OF LITIGATION, Issue 10 2005
    Judith P. Meyer
    Judith P. Meyer, of Philadelphia, shares stories from art and literature,specifically, a Bible passage, a Philip Roth short story, and a Chinese film,that show the use of mediation skills in everyday life, and serve as examples for maximizing negotiation effectiveness. [source]


    What is conceptual research in psychoanalysis?,

    THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOANALYSIS, Issue 5 2006
    Research Subcommittee for Conceptual Research of the International Psychoanalytical Association
    The development of psychoanalysis as a science and clinical practice has always relied heavily on various forms of conceptual research. Thus, conceptual research has clarifi ed, formulated and reformulated psychoanalytic concepts permitting to better shape the fi ndings emerging in the clinical setting. By enhancing clarity and explicitness in concept usage it has facilitated the integration of existing psychoanalytic thinking as well as the development of new ways of looking at clinical and extraclinical data. Moreover, it has offered conceptual bridges to neighbouring disciplines particularly interested in psychoanalysis, e.g. philosophy, sociology, aesthetics, history of art and literature, and more recently cognitive science/neuroscience. In the present phase of psychoanalytic pluralism, of worldwide scientifi c communication among psychoanalysts irrespective of language differences and furthermore of an intensifying dialogue with other disciplines, the relevance of conceptual research is steadily increasing. Yet, it still often seems insuffi ciently clear how conceptual research can be differentiated from clinical and empirical research in psychoanalysis. Therefore, the Subcommittee for Conceptual Research of the IPA presents some of its considerations on the similarities and the differences between various forms of clinical and extraclinical research, their specifi c aims, quality criteria and thus their specifi c chances as well as their specifi c limitations in this paper. Examples taken from six issues of the International Journal of Psychoanalysis in 2002-3 serve as illustrations for seven different subtypes of conceptual research. [source]