download / read online ebook Advances in experimental social psychology .pdf.epub.mobi

Advances in experimental social psychology by Mark P. Zanna


Each volume in Advances in Experimental Social Psychology contains an index, and each chapter includes references.

Author: Mark P. Zanna
Publisher: Elsevier Science
ISBN: 9780080567372
Format: .pdf.ibooks.epub.mobi.djvu.fb2
Release: March 1990
363 pages

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download / read online ebook Nurturing Natures .pdf.epub.mobi

Nurturing Natures by Graham Music

Attachment and Children’s Emotional, Sociocultural and Brain Development


This new edition of the bestselling text, Nurturing Natures, provides an indispensable synthesis of the latest scientific knowledge about children’s emotional development. Integrating a wealth of both up-to-date and classical research from areas such as attachment theory, neuroscience developmental psychology and cross-cultural studies, it weaves these into an accessible enjoyable text which always keeps in mind children recognisable to academics, practitioners and parents.  It unpacks the most significant influences on the developing child, including the family and social context. It looks at key developmental stages from life in the womb to the pre-school years and right up until adolescence, covering important topics such as genes and environment, trauma, neglect or resilience. It also examines how children develop language, play and memory and, new to this edition, moral and prosocial capacities. Issues of nature and nurture are addressed and the effects of different kinds of early experiences are unpicked, creating a coherent and balanced view of the developing child in context.   Nurturing Natures is written by an experienced child therapist who has used a wide array of research from different disciplines to create a highly readable and scientifically trustworthy text. This book should be essential reading for childcare students, for teachers, social workers, health visitors, early years practitioners and those training or working in child counselling, psychiatry and mental health. Full of fascinating findings, it provides answers to many of the questions people really want to ask about the human journey from conception into adulthood. . less

Author: Graham Music
Publisher: Taylor and Francis
ISBN: 9781317326540
Format: .pdf.ibooks.epub.mobi.djvu.fb2
Release: October 2016
381 pages

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download / read online ebook Behind the Mask of Chivalry .pdf.epub.mobi

Behind the Mask of Chivalry by Nancy K. MacLean

The Making of the Second Ku Klux Klan


On Thanksgiving night, 1915, a small band of hooded men gathered atop Stone Mountain, an imposing granite butte just outside Atlanta. With a flag fluttering in the wind beside them, a Bible open to the twelfth chapter of Romans, and a flaming cross to light the night sky above, William Joseph Simmons and his disciples proclaimed themselves the new Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, named for the infamous secret order in which many of their fathers had served after the Civil War. Unsure of their footing in the New South and longing for the provincial, patriarchal world of the past, the men of the second Klan saw themselves as an army in training for a war between the races. They boasted that they had bonded into “an invisible phalanx…to stand as impregnable as a tower against every encroachment upon the white man’s liberty…in the white man’s country, under the white man’s flag.”Behind the Mask of Chivalry brings the “invisible phalanx” into broad daylight, culling from history the names, the life stories, and the driving passions of the anonymous Klansmen beneath the white hoods and robes. Using an unusual and rich cache of internal Klan records from Athens, Georgia, to anchor her observations, author Nancy MacLean combines a fine-grained portrait of a local Klan world with a penetrating analysis of the second Klan’s ideas and politics nationwide. No other right-wing movement has ever achieved as much power as the Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s, and this book shows how and why it did. MacLean reveals that the movement mobilized its millions of American followers largely through campaigns waged over issues that today would be called “family values”: Prohibition violation, premarital sex, lewd movies, anxieties about women’s changing roles, and worries over waning parental authority. Neither elites nor “poor white trash,” most of the Klan rank and file were married, middle-aged, and middle class. Local meetings, or klonklaves, featured readings of the minutes, plans for recruitment campaigns and Klan barbecues, and distribution of educational materials–Christ and Other Klansmen was one popular tome. Nonetheless, as mundane as proceedings often were at the local level, crusades over “morals” always operated in the service of the Klan’s larger agenda of virulent racial hatred and middle-class revanchism. The men who deplored sex among young people and sought to restore the power of husbands and fathers were also sworn to reclaim the “white man’s country,” striving to take the vote from blacks and bar immigrants. Comparing the Klan to the European fascist movements that grew out of the crucible of the first World War, MacLean maintains that the remarkable scope and frenzy of the movement reflected less on members’ power within their communities than on the challenges to that power posed by African Americans, Jews, Catholics, immigrants, and white women and youth who did not obey the Klan’s canon of appropriate conduct. In vigilante terror, the Klan’s night riders acted out their movement’s brutal determination to maintain inherited hierarchies of race, class, and gender.Compellingly readable and impeccably researched, The Mask of Chivalry is an unforgettable investigation of a crucial era in American history, and the social conditions, cultural currents, and ordinary men that built this archetypal American reactionary movement. less

Author: Nancy K. MacLean
Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 9780199879403
Format: .pdf.ibooks.epub.mobi.djvu.fb2
Release: July 1995
336 pages

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