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- 1From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 24, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedEvery medical act has repercussions for the existence of the individual patient and of those closest to him or her. Such repercussions are all the more significant in psychiatry. Many of the choices facing the...
- 2From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 22, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIn this paper, I will be exploring the phenomenon of 'barebacking' or UAI, the practice of unprotected anal intercourse. I will be hoping to clarify how this currently expanding phenomenon, and the reality of the...
- 3From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 28, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe paper introduces the reference points of therapeutic work in the Birstonas School of existential therapy. The results of the qualitative research using thematic analysis are three main themes: dimension of...
- 4From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 25, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedPhenomenology I take to be the study of experience. I am concerned with living experience, specifically with acting as a guide to those whose experience has become problematic to them. This practice I term existential...
- 5From:Sartre Studies International: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Existentialism and Contemporary Culture (Vol. 16, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedNot believing in God is, on the one hand, a very simple matter. As most Danes and Swedes know, it is increasingly possible to grow up in a wholly secular environment, where questions about sin, grace, and an afterlife...
- 6From:Australian Journal of Education (Vol. 48, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis article considers changing the purposes of education held by pre-service teachers. It argues that purposes of education are inextricably linked to life meanings and purposes. Employing an existential perspective,...
- 7From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 24, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis paper offers a comparative account of the relationship between freedom and morality in the thought of William James and Simone de Beauvoir. By combining elements of the thought of each, a compelling--albeit tragic...
- 8From:Post Script (Vol. 23, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn Christopher Nolan's Memento (2001), a man named Leonard seeks to discover the identity of a man who raped and killed his wife and then to enact vengeance on him. Complicating this search is the fact that the trauma...
- 9From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 28, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis paper discusses how Taoism and Buddhism are significant, if unrecognized, sources of what we think of as Existential thought. The radical philosophies of Buber and Heidegger are discussed as essential examples that...
- 10From:Sartre Studies International: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Existentialism and Contemporary Culture (Vol. 17, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT: Taking as its starting point recent claims that JeanPaul Sartre's Critique de la Raison Dialectique was written as an attempt to overcome the historical relativism of Raymond Aron's Introduction a la...
- 11From:French Forum (Vol. 31, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedPaule Constant's first novel, Ouregano (1980), is set in the early 1950s, at the height of existentialism's colonization of French consciousness and just a few years before the demise of the French colonial empire. In...
- 12From:TLS. Times Literary Supplement (Issue 5954)Presidential campaigns in France are moments of intense individual soul-searching and collective effervescence, and as such provide compelling insights into French ways of thinking. All the more so that a French...
- 13From:Forum for World Literature Studies (Vol. 14, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe current study attempts to show how Vladimir and Estragon, who are two of Samuel Beckett's main characters in his play, Waiting for Godot (1952) are meant to represent humanity during the time after World War II. That...
- 14From:Career Development Quarterly (Vol. 60, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAs workers face a changing and ever-complex employment landscape, traditional career theories and approaches may not be sufficient in meeting career challenges. Calls for integrated career theories have emerged as more...
- 15From:Nordic Journal of English Studies (Vol. 10, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed1. Introductory (1) 1.1 Existential sentences Like many other languages, English has a presentative construction that mainly serves to create end-focus. A subject that contains new information (normally expressed...
- 16From:Extrapolation (Vol. 38, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedWorks of fiction are conventionally expected to have a plot and a conclusion. However, Frederick Pohl's science fiction 'Stopping at Slowyear' seems to have eschewed the latter literary characteristic. The novel is about...
- 17From:Oceania (Vol. 67, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedBy focusing on children involved in the ritual practices in Ambonwari village, East Sepik Province, Papua New Guinea, this essay compares two types of ritual: that of healing and that of male initiation. Like other life...
- 18From:Humanist in Canada (Issue 1423) Peer-ReviewedHumanism and Humanists must address the personal aspects of life and not be shy of their expression. The exposed and reduced lifestyles of inmates in death camps serve both as objective reality and metaphor for deeper...
- 19From:Existential Analysis (Vol. 25, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedExistential Analysis is celebrating 25 years of publication. Our silver anniversary edition opens with a brief commemoration by Emmy van Deurzen, followed by Becoming an Existential Therapist, the transcript of her...
- 20From:The Hedgehog Review (Vol. 19, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedWhen, in 1774, at the age of twenty-four, Goethe published the epistolary novel The Sorrows of Young Werther, the frenzied affection with which the youth of that age greeted it was at first a surprise and eventually a...