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(Mis)communication in couples : positioning as a site of conflict : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Psychology at Massey University
Appendix B & C missing from original copyMis)communication between people in couple relationships often results in arguments. Psychological research on this phenomenon has often relied on essentialist accounts of gender, offering little room for social or personal change. This study has used feminist poststructuralist theory to investigate the discourses that constitute couple relationships and enable (mis)communications in the form of arguments. From my reading of this theory and my experience of couple relationships I formulated three research questions: What discourses may be identified in young adults' talk about their couple relationships? How do these discourses specify the various obligations and entitlements of Boyfriends and Girlfriends? How are young adults' positions within these discourses implicated in their accounts of arguments? The transcripts of semi-structured interviews with young adults talking about their couple relationships provided the texts for analysis. I conducted interviews with six men and six women aged between 22 and 30. Four themes emerged from participants' talk: division of labour, relationship work, spending time, and arguments. I used analytic resources from Parker's (1992) and Baxter's (2003) interpretations of poststructuralist discourse analysis to identify five discourses that constitute these thematics. I have named these discourses egalitarian, traditional, togetherness, reciprocity, and men-need-space. Analyses address the ways in which these discourses position boyfriends and girlfriends. The implications of contradictory positioning for enabling arguments are discussed
Hell of a Life
This paper reflects on the work completed for the Storytelling and the Life of Faith Colloquium. It reflects on the author\u27s time in college, time abroad, life, and the course itself. It includes not only introspections on the course readings but also the larger course themes including the use of memory, and universal truths — be there any. It’s about struggle, the internal and the external, it’s an overview of a lot of realizations the author had during her college career. It’s about learning to be ok with the fluctuation called life
Boston District Attorney Rachael Rollins shares Six Secrets for Success with RWU School of Law
Boston\u27s new District Attorney Rachael Rollins is changing the culture of criminal justice
Cantor set zeros of one-dimensional Brownian motion minus Cantor function
It was shown by Antunovi\'{c}, Burdzy, Peres, and Ruscher that a Cantor
function added to one-dimensional Brownian motion has zeros in the middle
-Cantor set, , with positive probability if and only
if . We give a refined picture by considering a generalized
version of middle 1/2-Cantor sets. By allowing the middle 1/2 intervals to vary
in size around the value 1/2 at each iteration step we will see that there is a
big class of generalized Cantor functions such that if these are added to
one-dimensional Brownian motion, there are no zeros lying in the corresponding
Cantor set almost surely.Comment: 19 pages, improved Theorem 3.
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