1,518 research outputs found
âSymposiaâ in the Drama of trey anthony and Louise Delisle
Scholars recognize that African-Canadian literature is polyphonous, multicultural, and, in a word, diverse, thanks to its origins in the migration of black intellectuals and artists from the Caribbean, the United States, Africa, Europe, and South America, over three centuries, to colonial and (post-) modern Canada. One example of the profoundly divergent orientations among African-Canadian writers is provided by the plays of Louise Delisle and trey anthony. Delisle is an Africadian (African-Nova Scotian) playwright whose Canadian genealogy stretches back two hundred years. Significantly, her work in theatre has been regional, amateurish, and concerned with excavating the Africadian history of her environs. None of her work has enjoyed professional staging. In contrast, anthony is a first-generation immigrant, based in Toronto, whose play, âda Kink in my hair, has been an internationally successful major stage play and now a television sitcom, treating black womenâs experiences in a contemporary, urban setting. Delisle and anthony could hardly be more different. Yet, this paper argues, their settingsâkitchens and beauty parloursâreplicate a shared black experience that transcends very real cultural, historical, and geographical cleavages.
Résumé
Les spĂ©cialistes sâentendent pour dire que la littĂ©rature afro-canadienne est polyphonique, multiculturelle et, en un mot, diverse. Cela est dĂ» Ă ses origines, qui remontent Ă la migration dâartistes et dâintellectuels noirs venus des CaraĂŻbes, des Ătats-Unis, dâAfrique, dâEurope et dâAmĂ©rique du Sud pendant trois siĂšcles, pour sâinstaller dans un Canada colonial et (post)moderne. La profonde divergence des orientations adoptĂ©es par les Ă©crivains afro-canadiens est manifeste lorsque nous examinons lâĆuvre des dramaturges Louise Delisle et trey anthony. Delisle est une dramaturge africadienne (africaine et nĂ©o-Ă©cossaise) dont la famille est prĂ©sente au Canada depuis deux siĂšcles. Fait rĂ©vĂ©lateur, sa contribution thĂ©Ăątrale est rĂ©gionale et amateure, et elle cherche Ă mettre au jour lâhistoire africadienne de ses environs. LâĆuvre de Delisle nâa jamais fait lâobjet dâune production professionnelle. Par contraste, anthony est une immigrante de premiĂšre gĂ©nĂ©ration basĂ©e Ă Toronto; sa piĂšce âda Kink in my hair, qui met en scĂšne les expĂ©riences de femmes noires contemporaines en milieu urbain, a connu un trĂšs grand succĂšs Ă lâĂ©chelle internationale et fait maintenant lâobjet dâun sitcom tĂ©lĂ©visĂ©. On pourrait difficilement trouver deux artistes plus disparates. Et pourtant, fait valoir Clarke, les lieux que mettent en scĂšne ces deux dramaturgesâles cuisines et les salons de coiffureâreproduisent une expĂ©rience partagĂ©e par les gens de race noire et qui transcende des clivages culturels, historiques et gĂ©ographiques trĂšs concrets
Sounding John Thompsonâs White Noise
John Thompson and Malcolm X may have more in common than coincidences in their respective biographical histories. Although generally overlooked as a political poet, Thompson, superb writer of the Tantramar, employs images of black and white, dark and light in his writings to engage with specific conceptions of race and imperialism â developed more explicitly in the theoretical work of Toni Morrison and Frantz Fanon â that informed the tumultuous political climate of his and Xâs era. As a former student of psychology, the English-born, U.S.-educated Thompson would have been aware of the fundamental significance of blackness and whiteness in Western society, and many of his poems develop an idea of whiteness as a facade that works to obscure a primal or fundamental blackness. This exploration of the darker recesses of Thompsonâs poetry draws him more clearly into the company of his primary influences, themselves all highly political writers: English-language poets Ezra Pound, William Butler Yeats, and Dylan Thomas; French poets Charles Baudelaire, Arthur Rimbaud, and RenĂ© Char; and QuĂ©bĂ©cois poets Roland GiguĂ©re and Paul-Marie Lapointe
âNe nnipadua mmpeâ (the body hates it): Exploring the lived experience of food allergy in Sub-Saharan Africa
The final publication is available at Elsevier via https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.03.031 © 2018. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Allergic diseases have closely followed the rise of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) especially in western societies. As prevalence of NCD is increasing in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), researchers are hinting that the same future may hold for (food) allergic disease in this world region. Already, researchers are beginning to record prevalence, though with little attention to the social experience of individuals and parents with food allergic children. This paper presents the first qualitative analysis of the daily realities of adults and parents of children with allergies in SSA using Ghana as a case study. Drawing on political ecology of health, this study contextualizes the psychological (e.g. anxiety and fear), social (e.g. stigmatization, social exclusion), and economic (e.g. impact on work & household expenditures) wellbeing of affected persons within the broader sociocultural environment. By exploring the sociocultural environment, the results provide insights into the likely structures (e.g. the lack of familiarity, absence of local discursive repertoire on food allergy, infrastructure deficit) which interact to shape anxiety, and social exclusion of people with allergy. The case study provides evidence suggesting food allergies do have a global reach, and policy makers must heed the message to integrate food allergy into the broader chronic disease prevention agenda
Chlorpromazine for schizophrenia: a Cochrane systematic review of 50 years of randomised controlled trials
BACKGROUND:
Chlorpromazine (CPZ) remains one of the most common drugs used for people with schizophrenia worldwide, and a benchmark against which other treatments can be evaluated. Quantitative reviews are rare; this one evaluates the effects of chlorpromazine in the treatment of schizophrenia in comparison with placebo.
METHODS:
We sought all relevant randomised controlled trials (RCT) comparing chlorpromazine to placebo by electronic and reference searching, and by contacting trial authors and the pharmaceutical industry. Data were extracted from selected trials and, where possible, synthesised and random effects relative risk (RR), the number needed to treat (NNT) and their 95% confidence intervals (CI) calculated.
RESULTS:
Fifty RCTs from 1955â2000 were included with 5276 people randomised to CPZ or placebo. They constitute 2008 person-years spent in trials. Meta-analysis of these trials showed that chlorpromazine promotes a global improvement (n = 1121, 13 RCTs, RR 0.76 CI 0.7 to 0.9, NNT 7 CI 5 to 10), although a considerable placebo response is also seen. People allocated to chlorpromazine tended not to leave trials early in both the short (n = 945, 16 RCTs, RR 0.74 CI 0.5 to 1.1) and medium term (n = 1861, 25 RCTs, RR 0.79 CI 0.6 to 1.1). There were, however, many adverse effects. Chlorpromazine is sedating (n = 1242, 18 RCTs, RR 2.3 CI 1.7 to 3.1, NNH 6 CI 5 to 8), increases a person's chances of experiencing acute movement disorders, Parkinsonism and causes low blood pressure with dizziness and dry mouth.
CONCLUSION:
It is understandable why the World Health Organization (WHO) have endorsed and included chlorpromazine in their list of essential drugs for use in schizophrenia. Low- and middle-income countries may have more complete evidence upon which to base their practice compared with richer nations using recent innovations
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