Article - Vibrant – Virtual Brazilian Anthropology
... the collaboration of Edison Carneiro. This rather sad episode appears to reveal more of personal animosity and hurt feelings than matters of theoretical importance. Yet the dispute with Arthur Ramos does also reveal moral, political and theoretical differences as well. It is possible that Ramos, fri ...
... the collaboration of Edison Carneiro. This rather sad episode appears to reveal more of personal animosity and hurt feelings than matters of theoretical importance. Yet the dispute with Arthur Ramos does also reveal moral, political and theoretical differences as well. It is possible that Ramos, fri ...
Love, money and construction of masculinity among young people
... Love, relationships, and money among school pupils If the boy is of a poor family and doesn’t dress well, he should not expect to have a girlfriend. Such a thought does not enter his mind much because he has little chance of attracting girls even if he does want to get one (Keder, 18-year-old male). ...
... Love, relationships, and money among school pupils If the boy is of a poor family and doesn’t dress well, he should not expect to have a girlfriend. Such a thought does not enter his mind much because he has little chance of attracting girls even if he does want to get one (Keder, 18-year-old male). ...
swan-love
... nor even mastery seems to be an explicit issue; what is at stake is preserving the continuity of an existing dominant culture. The argumentative trajectory of these early sonnets is via the hetero sexual, the manly, toward the homosocial, or men. Actual women are so far from the. center of conscious ...
... nor even mastery seems to be an explicit issue; what is at stake is preserving the continuity of an existing dominant culture. The argumentative trajectory of these early sonnets is via the hetero sexual, the manly, toward the homosocial, or men. Actual women are so far from the. center of conscious ...
Unit 3 Revision – critical opinions Rapture and
... the most true to life character in the novel, found the other characters “stagy” or “farcical.” He objected to what he saw as Hardy’s excessive concern with descriptions of Tess’s appealing physical attributes and deemed the story improbable” ...
... the most true to life character in the novel, found the other characters “stagy” or “farcical.” He objected to what he saw as Hardy’s excessive concern with descriptions of Tess’s appealing physical attributes and deemed the story improbable” ...
swan
... the beloved is irrelevant to the meaning of the Sonnets—at least of sonnets 1-126 (the ones usually thought to he addressed /30/to a man). "In view of the chaste character of the neoPlatonic love [Shakespeare] speaks of . . . I must maintain that, whatever the truth, my case would not be altered by ...
... the beloved is irrelevant to the meaning of the Sonnets—at least of sonnets 1-126 (the ones usually thought to he addressed /30/to a man). "In view of the chaste character of the neoPlatonic love [Shakespeare] speaks of . . . I must maintain that, whatever the truth, my case would not be altered by ...
Selected for the Dead Erotic Themes on Grave Vases from Attic
... religious obligations, ideology, gender and class roles. It might be objected that the availability of vases and the importance of shapes play a more determining role, than the preferences of those responsible for the burial. This might be true for distant areas, but not for Athens and Attica, becau ...
... religious obligations, ideology, gender and class roles. It might be objected that the availability of vases and the importance of shapes play a more determining role, than the preferences of those responsible for the burial. This might be true for distant areas, but not for Athens and Attica, becau ...
an apologetic against homosexuality
... 1. In the ancient Greek world, an older man, an erastes would take an eromanos, an adolescent boy as a student. 2. The relationship was condoned by his parents and involved the older male teaching hunting, warfare, and adult male customs to the boy. 3. An integral part of this relationship was sexua ...
... 1. In the ancient Greek world, an older man, an erastes would take an eromanos, an adolescent boy as a student. 2. The relationship was condoned by his parents and involved the older male teaching hunting, warfare, and adult male customs to the boy. 3. An integral part of this relationship was sexua ...
Study Questions for Peters Chapter 1 Phaedrus
... 49. What does in mean that Plato’s notion of communication is both ideal and severe? p. 45 50. So, what is the key to the unity of dialogue? p. 45 51. Medicine treats the body—rhetoric the soul, but how can you know the soul of everyone? p. 45 52. How can you know realities? And, what are they? p. 4 ...
... 49. What does in mean that Plato’s notion of communication is both ideal and severe? p. 45 50. So, what is the key to the unity of dialogue? p. 45 51. Medicine treats the body—rhetoric the soul, but how can you know the soul of everyone? p. 45 52. How can you know realities? And, what are they? p. 4 ...
Love and Utopia - Facultatea de Stiinte Socio
... commitment. John, the main character, tributary to the love morality of the past is tortured by his attraction to Lenina and by her inability to respond to his love. The conflict between John’s desire for genuine love and Lenina’s desire for sex, illustrates the profound difference between the stric ...
... commitment. John, the main character, tributary to the love morality of the past is tortured by his attraction to Lenina and by her inability to respond to his love. The conflict between John’s desire for genuine love and Lenina’s desire for sex, illustrates the profound difference between the stric ...
Document
... development. (source) (e.g. infantilization of women in sexually reppresive society) ...
... development. (source) (e.g. infantilization of women in sexually reppresive society) ...
Doing It Together, The Gay Way: Queer Coupling in
... Both Hacker’s and Phillips’s collections narrate domestic coupledom as a process that unites ordinary people in ordinary spaces doing ordinary things: partners eat, sleep, shit, love, and fuck one another in the shared space of the home. These are processes ordinary to all kinds of Americans of what ...
... Both Hacker’s and Phillips’s collections narrate domestic coupledom as a process that unites ordinary people in ordinary spaces doing ordinary things: partners eat, sleep, shit, love, and fuck one another in the shared space of the home. These are processes ordinary to all kinds of Americans of what ...
aphrodisiacs - Campbell M Gold
... An aphrodisiac arouses or intensifies sexual desire. 'Aphrodisiacs' is a term which had been used for more than five thousand years - the term was derived from the myth of Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love. It is she who emerged from the sea on an oyster shell. See also: http://campbellmgold.com ...
... An aphrodisiac arouses or intensifies sexual desire. 'Aphrodisiacs' is a term which had been used for more than five thousand years - the term was derived from the myth of Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love. It is she who emerged from the sea on an oyster shell. See also: http://campbellmgold.com ...
Sternberg`s Triangular Theory of Love
... Maslow’s B-Love and D-Love Sternberg’s Triangular Theory of Love Lee’s Styles of Loving Rubin’s Scale Tennov’s Theory of Limerence • Intrusive thoughts about the object of passionate desire. • An acute longing for the feeling to be reciprocated. • Dependence of your mood on your perception of your l ...
... Maslow’s B-Love and D-Love Sternberg’s Triangular Theory of Love Lee’s Styles of Loving Rubin’s Scale Tennov’s Theory of Limerence • Intrusive thoughts about the object of passionate desire. • An acute longing for the feeling to be reciprocated. • Dependence of your mood on your perception of your l ...
GREEK "HOMOSEXUALI1Y": WinTHER THE DEBATE?
... "essentialism I constructionism" would call themselves "essentialists". The ideal "strict essentialist" (as portrayed by constructionists) often reflects unconsidered popular sentiment rather than substantial scholarly works of the last fifteen years or so. However, we should note Vance's comment th ...
... "essentialism I constructionism" would call themselves "essentialists". The ideal "strict essentialist" (as portrayed by constructionists) often reflects unconsidered popular sentiment rather than substantial scholarly works of the last fifteen years or so. However, we should note Vance's comment th ...
Chapter Seven
... Time to learn how to love, manage emotions Creates a foundation for adult relationships Role repertoire – varied ways to relate with others Intimacy repertoire – collection of behaviors used to create intimate relationships in life Usually begin with an unattainable crush; romantic love mo ...
... Time to learn how to love, manage emotions Creates a foundation for adult relationships Role repertoire – varied ways to relate with others Intimacy repertoire – collection of behaviors used to create intimate relationships in life Usually begin with an unattainable crush; romantic love mo ...
Does friendship require solidarity
... Friendship is not (nor does it require) reciprocal eros: friends need not have passionate desire for one another. The same goes for reciprocal agape: two people cannot be friends if they have never heard of each other, though two people can have agape towards each other even if they have never heard ...
... Friendship is not (nor does it require) reciprocal eros: friends need not have passionate desire for one another. The same goes for reciprocal agape: two people cannot be friends if they have never heard of each other, though two people can have agape towards each other even if they have never heard ...
Culture and passionate love
... A state of intense longing for union with another. It is a complex emotion that is marked by its extreme highs and lows, as well as its tendency to cause the afflicted person to think obsessively about the person for whom they desire. Requited love (in which the object of desire feels the same way i ...
... A state of intense longing for union with another. It is a complex emotion that is marked by its extreme highs and lows, as well as its tendency to cause the afflicted person to think obsessively about the person for whom they desire. Requited love (in which the object of desire feels the same way i ...
SEX: Eroticism in Ceramics
... male masturbation (but never, as yet, female masturbation); intercourse between heterosexual couples, in various positions; birthing scenes; intercourse between animals, copulating frogs, mice, dogs, lamas, monkeys even at times corn and other sexualized food crops engaged in genital, sexual acts; ...
... male masturbation (but never, as yet, female masturbation); intercourse between heterosexual couples, in various positions; birthing scenes; intercourse between animals, copulating frogs, mice, dogs, lamas, monkeys even at times corn and other sexualized food crops engaged in genital, sexual acts; ...
Degradation a - Thedivineconspiracy.org
... nothing but animals. It is that revelation that came with the great increase in obscenity prosecutions, particularly in the late nineteenth through the first half of the twentieth centuries in the United States. It is as though society expressed itself in denial of Darwin’s claims by proscribing the ...
... nothing but animals. It is that revelation that came with the great increase in obscenity prosecutions, particularly in the late nineteenth through the first half of the twentieth centuries in the United States. It is as though society expressed itself in denial of Darwin’s claims by proscribing the ...
1 st place part 1 - College of the Canyons
... them. • “Within social service environments, they were often told implicitly or explicitly that they "do not belong'. The presence of trans women within these spaces seemed to challenge the underlying assumption of a 'normative' homeless woman” (Sakamoto et al 2009). • Much of the literature on tran ...
... them. • “Within social service environments, they were often told implicitly or explicitly that they "do not belong'. The presence of trans women within these spaces seemed to challenge the underlying assumption of a 'normative' homeless woman” (Sakamoto et al 2009). • Much of the literature on tran ...
`A Streetcar Named Desire` and `Sweet Bird of Youth`
... In what way does characterisation contribute to the presentation of theme in ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ and ‘Sweet Bird of Youth’? ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ and ‘Sweet Bird of Youth’ are widely heralded amongst literary critics and theatregoers alike as two of the twentieth century’s most socially ...
... In what way does characterisation contribute to the presentation of theme in ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ and ‘Sweet Bird of Youth’? ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ and ‘Sweet Bird of Youth’ are widely heralded amongst literary critics and theatregoers alike as two of the twentieth century’s most socially ...
Quest for Love through Self-Exploration: Edna Wu`s Women
... that continuation in the two parts of the book, the first part being a screenplay and the second, a play. As explained earlier, Wu’s screenplay in this book is about two lesbian lovers—a daughter and a daughter-in-law—who are caught in the act of love-making by their father/father-in-law. Out of fea ...
... that continuation in the two parts of the book, the first part being a screenplay and the second, a play. As explained earlier, Wu’s screenplay in this book is about two lesbian lovers—a daughter and a daughter-in-law—who are caught in the act of love-making by their father/father-in-law. Out of fea ...
the constructionist historiography of greek erotics1
... nineteenth century to the second generation of Annales) and the history in crumbs [L'histoire en miettes] (the third generation of Annales)6. The Cultural History seems to be the most successful intellectual enterprise in that process of crumbling history. Reis records the losses and gains that the ...
... nineteenth century to the second generation of Annales) and the history in crumbs [L'histoire en miettes] (the third generation of Annales)6. The Cultural History seems to be the most successful intellectual enterprise in that process of crumbling history. Reis records the losses and gains that the ...
Pederasty in ancient Greece
Pederasty in ancient Greece was a socially acknowledged erotic relationship between an adult male (the erastes) and a younger male (the eromenos) usually in his teens. It was characteristic of the Archaic and Classical periods. The influence of pederasty on Greek culture of these periods was so pervasive that it has been called ""the principal cultural model for free relationships between citizens.""Some scholars locate its origin in initiation ritual, particularly rites of passage on Crete, where it was associated with entrance into military life and the religion of Zeus. It has no formal existence in the Homeric epics, and seems to have developed in the late 7th century BC as an aspect of Greek homosocial culture, which was characterized also by athletic and artistic nudity, delayed marriage for aristocrats, symposia, and the social seclusion of women.Pederasty was both idealized and criticized in ancient literature and philosophy. The argument has recently been made that idealization was universal in the Archaic period; criticism began in Athens as part of the general Classical Athenian reassessment of Archaic culture.Scholars have debated the role or extent of pederasty, which is likely to have varied according to local custom and individual inclination. The English word ""pederasty"" in present-day usage might imply the abuse of minors in certain jurisdictions, but Athenian law, for instance, recognized consent but not age as a factor in regulating sexual behavior. As classical historian Robin Osborne has pointed out, historical discussion of paiderastia is complicated by 21st-century moral standards:It is the historian's job to draw attention to the personal, social, political and indeed moral issues behind the literary and artistic representations of the Greek world. The historian's job is to present pederasty and all, to make sure that … we come face to face with the way the glory that was Greece was part of a world in which many of our own core values find themselves challenged rather than reinforced.