16 research outputs found
From the military to college and beyond: Growing a culturally sensitive program to support veteran success
Extraterrestrial liberty and creative practice: a firsthand experience of an imagined future.
In extra-terrestrial settlements of the future, liberty will be aligned with one's ability to act with spontaneity and forethought from a position of psychological safety, away from censorship and surveillance. Though humans are often perceived to be the vulnerable link in space systems, this chapter discusses an aspect to sustainable new settlement that is rarely mentioned: how art making can address wellbeing and the nature of isolation through an emphasis on inner experiences and self-determinism. Through the lens of a first-hand experience within a space analogue, this text explores networks of relations generated from shared practices within a confined space in an extreme environment. As the links between art and liberty are evaluated, imaginative works are positioned as acts of free will, offering an intimate connection to an alternative reality, one that links freedom to failure. In a constrained, unfamiliar future world, art making can nourish and promote notions of freedom, build autonomy , strengthen communities and help shape new cultural identities. Finally, in such a place, for humans to really inhabit a role in a new world, this chapter suggests that creative practices in future extra-terrestrial settlement need to be clearly prioritised and mandated as transitional space, occupying a significant role as part of and apart from daily life
Correspondence: Referendum on Darkness in EI Dorado and Danger to Immunization Campaigns
Romantic Love and Family Organization
We propose that romantic love is a biosocial phenomenon that may well be a universal and that its cultural aspects are a product of social conditions. This position is unique because romantic love is promoted as a cultural rather than social universal. We argue that culture, social, and psychological phenomena are too frequently conflated and their core definitional features underdefined by researchers. Culture refers to learned practices that have collectively shared meanings to the members of a society. Under social conditions in which romantic love does not confer reproductive and health advantages to a mother and child, it will often be suppressed, undeveloped, and rejected as a cultural component. Through a cross-cultural study, we show that female status and family organization are important features that help in regulating the sociocultural importance of romantic love as a basis for marriage
