News and activities at Norma Marion Alloway Library, Trinity Western University

Category: Environmental studies (Page 3 of 8)

New Titles Tuesday is Back! (June 25)

In the past week 10 titles added to the library’s collection; below is a sample. Click on a link for more information.

A critical discourse analysis of South Asian women’s magazines : undercover beauty /Linda McLoughlin.
This thought provoking book exposes the disconnection between the magazines’ representations of South Asian women and the lived realities of the target audience. The author challenges the notion that discourses of freedom and choice employed by women’s magazines are emancipatory, demonstrating instead that the version of feminism on offer is a commodified form which accords with the commercial aims of the publications.

Learning targets : helping students aim for understanding in today’s lesson /Connie M. Moss, Susan M. Brookhart.
This practical book situates learning targets in a theory of action that students, teachers, principals, and central-office administrators can use to unify their efforts to raise student achievement and create a culture of evidence-based, results-oriented practice. The book provides strategies for designing learning targets that promote higher-order thinking and foster student goal setting, self-assessment, and self-regulation.

The real thing : the natural history of Ian McTaggart Cowan /Briony Penn.
This is the first official biography of McTaggart Cowan, known as the “father of Canadian ecology”. Head and founder of the first university-based wildlife department in Canada, Ian McTaggart Cowan revolutionized the way North Americans understood the natural world, and students flocked into his classrooms to hear his brilliant, entertaining lectures regarding the new science of ecology.

Taught by God : making sense of the difficult sayings of Jesus /Daniel Fanous.
This book draws good and plausible conclusions regarding understanding difficult passages of Jesus, and provides a highly useful tool for people who read Scripture in depth and find themselves troubled or perplexed by these passages.

Thou art that : transforming religious metaphor /Joseph Campbell ; edited with a foreword by Eugene Kennedy.
Woven from Joseph Campbell’s previously unpublished work, this volume explores Judeo-Christian symbols and metaphors – and their misinterpretations – with the famed mythologist’s characteristic conversational warmth and accessible scholarship.

What we were eReading in April

Since our last update, over 3,072 EBSCO host eBooks were used in April, either by Alloway Library users viewing online, downloading, printing or emailing portions of the work. Here is a selection of the most-used titles.

Natural Law and Natural Rights (Clarendon Law Series) / Finnis, John.
149 uses.

Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man / McLuhan, Marshall ; Gordon, W. Terrence
44 uses.

The Human Journey: A Concise Introduction to World History / Reilly, Kevin
36 uses.

Navigating Strategic Possibilities: Strategy Formulation and Execution Practices to Flourish / Herholdt, Johan; Ungerer, Gerard; Ungerer, Marius
36 uses.

Evolution and the Fall / Cavanaugh, William T.; Smith, James K. A.
24 uses.

Cold War: A Very Short Introduction / McMahon, Robert J.
17 uses.

Reclaiming the Bible for the Church / Jenson, Robert W.; Braaten, Carl E.
16 uses.

Worship and the Hebrew Bible: Essays in Honour of John T. Willis /Graham, Matt Patrick; Willis, John T.; McKenzie, Steven L.; Marrs, Rick R.
16 uses.

The Climate Casino: Risk, Uncertainty, and Economics for A Warming World /Nordhaus, William D.
15 uses.

New Titles Tuesday, April 2

In the past week 33 titles added to the library’s collection, below is just a sample. Click on a link for more information.

Contemporary Chinese fiction writers : biography, bibliography, and critical assessment /Laifong Leung.
In the years since the death of Mao Zedong, interest in Chinese writers and Chinese literature has risen significantly in the West. This book explores Chinese writers such as Gao Xingjian who became the first Chinese writer to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature, and many more.

Could it happen here? : Canada in the age of Trump and Brexit /Michael Adams.
This book draws on groundbreaking social research to show whether Canadian society is at risk of the populist forces afflicting other parts of the world. Americans elected Donald Trump. Britons opted to leave the European Union. Far-right, populist politicians channeling anger at out-of-touch “elites” are gaining ground across Europe. Adams examines our economy, institutions, and demographics to answer the question: could it happen here?

Everyday women’s and gender studies : introductory concepts /Ann Braithwaite, University of Prince Edward Island, Catherine M. Orr, Beloit College.
Gender Studies is a text-reader that offers instructors a new way to approach an introductory course on women’s and gender studies. This book highlights major concepts that organize the diverse work in this field: knowledges, identities, equalities, bodies, places, and representations.

Imagining the future of climate change : world-making through science fiction and activism /Shelley Streeby.
From the 1960s to the present, activists, artists, and science fiction writers have imagined the consequences of climate change and its impacts on our future. This book examines the public awareness of climate change and the popularity of works of climate fiction that connect science with activism.

Making space for Indigenous feminism
/edited by Joyce Green.
This book provides a powerful and original intellectual and political contribution demonstrating that feminism has much to offer Aboriginal women in their struggles against oppression. The majority of scholarly and activist opinion by and about Aboriginal women claims that feminism is irrelevant for them. Yet, there is also an articulate, theoretically informed and activist constituency that identifies as feminist.

Playing with feelings : video games and affect /Aubrey Anable.
Interested in the gaming culture, then this book is for you. Anable applies affect theory to game studies, arguing that video games let us “rehearse” feelings, states, and emotions that give new tones and textures to our everyday lives and interactions with digital devices. Rather than thinking about video games as an escape from reality, Anable demonstrates how video games–their narratives, aesthetics, and histories–have been intimately tied to our emotional landscape since the emergence of digital computers.

The religion and film reader /edited by Jolyon Mitchell and S. Brent Plate..
Film is now widely studied and researched in theology and religious studies departments. This anthology offers the most complete survey of information pertaining to film and religion, and is ideal for students and researchers. The book explores such themes as the dawn of cinema: adherents and detractors the birth of film theory: realism, formalism, and religious vision directors and critics.

Stepping into emotionally focused couple therapy : key ingredients of change /Lorrie L. Brubacher.
This volume makes Emotionally Focused Couple Therapy (EFT) widely accessible to therapists of different orientations and to therapists in training. It provides clinicians with practical tools, an experiential tour through case examples, and simple guidance to step into EFT.

Widening the circle : the power of inclusive classrooms /Mara Sapon-Shevin.
In opposition to traditional models of special education, where teachers decide when a child is deemed “ready to compete” in “mainstream” classes, Sapon-Shevin articulates a vision of full inclusion as a practical and moral goal. Inclusion, she argues, begins not with the assumption that students have to earn their way into the classroom with their behavior or skills but with the right of every child to be in the mainstream of education, perhaps with modifications, adaptations, and support.

New Titles Tuesday, March 26

In the past week 40 titles added to the library’s collection, below is just a sample. Click on a link for more information.

Claiming Anishinaabe: decolonizing the human spirit /Lynn Gehl
Exploring Anishinaabeg philosophy and Anishinaabeg conceptions of truth, Gehl shows how she came to locate her spirit and decolonize her identity, thereby becoming, in her words, “fully human.” Gehl also provides a harsh critique of Canada and takes on important anti-colonial battles, including the land claims process and sex discrimination in the Indian Act.

The evolution of Tolkien’s mythology: a study of The history of Middle-earth /Elizabeth A. Whittingham
This work provides a study of Tolkien’s life and influences through an analysis of the History of Middle Earth, through elements common to Tolkien’s popular works, including the cosmogony, theogony, cosmology, metaphysics, and eschatology of Middle Earth.

Invasive species and global climate change /Lewis H. Ziska and Jeffrey S. Dukes
A great value to researchers, policymakers and industry in responding to changing management needs, this book examines what will happen to global invasive species, including plants, animals and pathogens with current and expected man-made climate change.

North Korea and Myanmar : divergent paths /Andray Abrahamian
North Korea and Myanmar (Burma) are known as Asia’s most mysterious and tragic stories.  This book speaks to how both countries were repressed and self-isolating and under sanctions by the international community.

Shock troops: Canadians fighting the Great War, 1917-1918 /Tim Cook
Taking up where ‘At the sharp end’ left off, ‘Shock troops’ follows Canadian soldiers through the final two years of World War One. Using previously unpublished letters, diaries, memoirs, and official documents. Cook captures the experience of battle through the eyes of the combatants and chronicles the major battles fought by the Canadian Corps–Vimy, Hill 70, Passchendaele and the Hundred Days.

Towards a code of ethics for artificial intelligence /Paula Boddington
This book provides a useful resource for those aiming to address the ethical challenges of AI research. Boddington investigates how to produce realistic and workable ethical codes or regulations in AI to address the immediate and realistic longer-term issues facing us. She spells out the key ethical debates  and addresses how codes of ethics or other regulations might feasibly be developed, looking for pitfalls and opportunities, drawing on lessons learned in other fields, and explaining key points of professional ethics.

Well-being and cultures: perspectives from positive psychology /Hans Henrik Knoop, Antonella Delle Fave, editors.
This anthology focuses on empirical studies comparing cultures in relation to central positive psychological topics. The book starts out with an introductory chapter that brings together the main ideas and findings within an integrative perspective, based on a broad theoretical framework encompassing interdisciplinary and methodological issues. It gives special emphasis to some open issues in the theory and assessment of culture-related dimensions, and to the potential of positive psychology in addressing them.

The women’s suffrage movement /edited with an introduction by Sally Roesch Wagner ; foreword by Gloria Steinem
Comprised of historical texts spanning two centuries with commentary on each period by the editor, this book covers the major issues and figures involved in the women’s suffrage movement with a special focus on diversity, incorporating race, class, and gender. The writings of such figures as Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony are featured alongside accounts of Native American women and African American suffragists such as Sarah Mapps Douglas and Harriet Purvis.

 

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