5 research outputs found

    The Student Movement Volume 107 Issue 8: Cuffing Season, Co-Curriculars, and CTC Telehealth: The Student Movement Highlights Important Issues on Campus

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    HUMANS CTC Prevention Coordinator/Staff Counselor Interview: Nycole Goldberg, Interviewed by: Lauren Kim Meet Ellie Dovich: Cast/Cardinal Lead Editor, Interviewed by: Nora Martin Women in Stem: A Peek into Physics, Interviewed by: Caryn Cruz ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Creatives on Campus: Art via Insta, Ceiry Flores Currently..., Solana Campbell Spotlight: The Parent Trap, Skyler Campbell NEWS AUSA Senate News Update, November 2022, Neesa Richards, AUSA Senate Public Relations Officer Governor Whitmer Takes A Stop In Benton Harbor, Nicholas C. Gunn Home Season Opener, Solana Campbell Hopes and Plans Behind the Seminary Center of Community Change, Interviewed by: Gloria Oh The Days Speak on Veterans Day, Andrew Francis IDEAS T Spills the Tea on Co-Curriculars, T Bruggemann To Bee or not to Bee: The Importance, Causes, and Impact of Bee Disappearance, Alexander Navarro Ye Being an Issue Once Again!, Jonathon Woolford-Hunt PULSE A Dive into Lamson Hall Maintenance, Scott Moncrieff Condemned: Horror Stories from Lamson Hall, Joseph Keough Marriage From Our Point of View, Gloria Oh Reflections on the Soccer Season, Brendan Syto LAST WORD Reflection on Writing Poetry, Alannah Tjhatrahttps://digitalcommons.andrews.edu/sm-107/1007/thumbnail.jp

    Why do Serial Killers Kill

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    This study seeks to identify and understand the possible motives of serial killers. The study suggests that serial killers kill because of the impact of exposure to physical abuse, drug abuse, and alcoholism from an early age. Brain injury and mental disorders also play a significant role. Serial killers come from all walks of life and are usually abused in childhood by their parents or someone close to them. They typically show signs early on that they have issues, but those signs often go unnoticed because their families are either ashamed, don’t have the knowledge or resources, or for some other reason don’t address the situation. They are usually only discovered when they commit a crime or murder, and at that point, it is too late. Serial killers do not think the same way society would consider the norm. To them, raping or killing a victim may provide the same thrill anyone else would get from hitting a home run or celebrating their wedding day

    Avion 2008-10-28

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    https://commons.erau.edu/avion/2094/thumbnail.jp

    Life in transit : travel narratives of the British governess

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    Life in Transit: Travel Narratives of the British Governess argues that on entering the profession of governessing, women embarked on a new, more mobile existence of travel and relocation on a local and global scale. At a time when gentlewomen rarely travelled far without a chaperone, governesses left home and travelled unaccompanied across counties, countries and even continents for the purpose of work. Some relocated to wealthy households in Britain, some toured with families on the Continent, and others voyaged out to the colonies to work for expatriates or members of the Eastern aristocracy. Previously, however, scholars have tended to consider the governess in light of her unusual social status between the middle and working class. Studies of this kind do much to highlight the complexity of the governess’s situation, but by developing new theoretical perspectives which focus on the governess’s mobility, this thesis demonstrates how the impact of travel is fundamental to this.Highlighting the interplay between the governess of fact and fiction, Life in Transit defines the ‘governess travel narrative’ as a literary strand present in the canonical novel, and a sub-genre of women’s travel writing. Beginning with a re-reading of the governess novel, it considers Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre (1847) and William Thackeray’s Vanity Fair (1848) to explore the governess’s journey in England. Moving its focus across the Channel, it then examines how the semi-autobiographical governesses of Anna Brownell Jameson’s Diary of and Ennuyée (1826) and Brontë’s Villette (1853) experience life on the Continent. Crossing the border of fact and fiction into the genre of travel writing, the thesis considers the work of the lesser-known Emmeline Lott and Ellen Chennells, and examines governess travel narratives produced at the height of the British Empire. Finally, it analyses the journeys of Sarah Heckford and Anna Leonowens, who travelling in the 1870s and 80s, reached as far as South Africa and Siam, extending the scope of women’s travel and pushing the boundaries of the governess profession.In this way, Life in Transit re-reads the governess’s plight as both a physical and psychological journey in which she attempts to understand her place in the world. Incorporating theories of travel, space, translation and ‘things’ into a framework through which to examine her experience, it builds on Marxist and feminist approaches to the governess’s position. Allowing for further analysis of the governess’s unusual status, this approach shows how, from within the liminal space of her displacement, the governess experiences her life through spatial above social relations, and provides a unique voice in nineteenth-century Britain’s conception of self and world
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