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What Hurts Going Down

What Hurts Going Down
Author: Nancy Lee
Publisher: McClelland & Stewart
Total Pages: 98
Release: 2020-03-24
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 0771049048

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A searing exploration of girlhood in the pre- and post- #MeToo eras from the acclaimed novelist. CBC Best Canadian Poetry of 2020 What keeps a kind girl alive in the wild? The men in town are crapshoots, sawbucks, coins striking heads and tails. Nancy Lee's searing collection of poems confronts how socially ingrained violence and sexual power dynamics distort and dislocate girlhood, womanhood, and relationships. Startling and visceral, the poems in What Hurts Going Down deconstruct a lifetime of survival, hover in the uneasy territory of pre- and post- #MeToo, and scrutinize the changing wagers of being female.


It Hurts Down There

It Hurts Down There
Author: Christine Labuski
Publisher: SUNY Press
Total Pages: 344
Release: 2015-08-31
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1438458851

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Tracks the medical emergence and treatment of vulvar pain conditions in order to understand why so many US women are misinformed about their sexual bodies. How does a woman describe a part of her body that much of society teaches her to never discuss? It Hurts Down There analyzes the largest known set of qualitative research data about vulvar pain conditions. It tells the story of one hundred women who struggled with this dilemma as they sought treatment for chronic and unexplained vulvar pain. Christine Labuski argues that the medical condition of vulvar pain cannot be adequately understood without exposing and interrogating cultural attitudes about female genitalia. The author’s dual positioning as cultural anthropologist and former nurse practitioner strengthens her argument that discourses about “healthy” vulvas naturalize and reproduce heteronormative associations between genitalia, sex, and gender. “This is an empirically engaged, ethnographically rich interpretation of genital pain in a cross section of women—but it is also so much more. Christine Labuski has a deep understanding of both the anatomical biomedical construction of female genitalia and manifestations of physical pain and suffering, which she combines with a marvelous cultural analysis of how entangled these biological ‘facts’ are with the contemporary culture of female loathing and self-loathing.” — Lisa Jean Moore, coauthor of The Body: Social and Cultural Dissections


The Upside of Down

The Upside of Down
Author: Joseph M. Stowell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2006
Genre: Consolation
ISBN: 9781572931879

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Life is filled with stomach-wrenching drops, dips, and sudden curves, but there is an upside to being down: God, who works in and through Christians' troubles and never abandons them to disaster. This book is about learning to trust in God's work and provision as the divine superstructure underneath every trial.


The Pain Handbook

The Pain Handbook
Author: Rajat Chauhan
Publisher: Penguin UK
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2016-11-10
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 938605793X

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Back pain affects 80 per cent of people, and remains the toughest ailment to treat. Dr Rajat Chauhan gets to the heart of the problem, and explains how pain works, why we develop back, neck and knee problems, and how to heal. This book is sure to resonate with any person who has ever suffered from pain.


Supreme Court

Supreme Court
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 718
Release: 1910
Genre:
ISBN:

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The Michigan Teacher

The Michigan Teacher
Author: William Harold Payne
Publisher:
Total Pages: 494
Release: 1874
Genre: Education
ISBN:

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Purposeful Pain

Purposeful Pain
Author: Susan Guise Sheridan
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 281
Release: 2020-01-03
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 3030321819

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Pain is an evolutionary and adaptive mechanism to prevent harm to an individual. Beyond this, how it is defined, expressed, and borne is dictated culturally. Thus, the study of pain requires a holistic approach crossing cultures, disciplines, and time. This volume explores how and why pain-inducing behaviors are selected, including their potential to demonstrate individuality, navigate social hierarchies, and express commitment to an ideal. It also explores how power dynamics affect individual choice, at times requiring self-induced suffering. Taking bioanthropological and bioarchaeological approaches, this volume focuses on those who purposefully seek pain to show that, while often viewed as “exotic,” the pervasiveness of pain-inducing practices is more normative than expected. Theory and practice are employed to re-conceptualize pain as a strategic path towards achieving broader individual and societal goals. Past and present motivations for self-inflicted pain, its socio-political repercussions, and the physical manifestations of repetitive or long-term pain inducing behaviors are examined. Chapters span geographic and temporal boundaries and a wide variety of activities to illustrate how purposeful pain is used by individuals for personal expression and manipulated by political powers to maintain the status quo. This volume reveals how bioarchaeology illuminates paleopathology, how social theory enhances bioarchaeology, and how ethnography benefits from a longer temporal perspective.