Results 271 to 280 of about 104,274 (313)
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The shame of shaming

Phi Delta Kappan, 2017
Historically, public schools have often used shaming techniques to discipline students, even though researchers have found shaming to be not just an ineffective means of curtailing misbehavior, but, more important, psychologically harmful to children. The author reviewed policy documents from nine leading charter management organizations and found that
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Shame! Shame! Shame! Shame!

De Witte Raaf, 2021
De geschiedenis van de moderne kunst wordt geplaagd door gewetenswroeging. Kunst is een guilty pleasure – niet als een vorm van slechte smaak, maar omdat kunst steeds opnieuw in gebreke blijft: toegankelijkheid wordt verondersteld terwijl elitarisme overheerst, belangeloosheid wordt geveinsd waar commercie bepalend is, idealen worden gepredikt maar ...
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Such a shame—a consideration of shame and shaming mechanisms in families

Child Abuse Review, 1998
Shame is a powerful emotion associated with the exposure of any aspect of the self that we wish to keep hidden from others. In its healthy manifestation, shame guards the boundary of the self and promotes a realistic self-appraisal of our capacities and our limitations. However, too much shame results in a sense of the self as fundamentally flawed, and
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The shame of existing: An extreme form of shame

The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 2014
This paper presents 'the shame of existing' as a form of shame that is deeper and more extensive than those customarily encountered. 'The shame of existing' is defined as shame about existing as we are and especially at the fact that we are.
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Shame On You, Shame On Me? Nussbaum on Shame Punishment

Journal of Applied Philosophy, 2008
abstract  Shame punishments have become an increasingly popular alternative to traditional punishments, often taking the form of convicted criminals holding signs or sweeping streets with a toothbrush. In her Hiding from Humanity, Martha Nussbaum argues against the use of shame punishments because they contribute to an offender's loss of dignity ...
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SHAME AND MODERNITY

The British Journal of Criminology, 1993
If shaming is crucial to crime control, then is not the task of controlling crime hopeless in modern urbanized societies? It is argued here that any such pessimism must be qualified by a broader understanding of shame in human history. First, the article considers the arguments of Elias that shame became more important in the affect structure of ...
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Shame in Literature

Psychiatry, 2020
Trumbull joins Kenneth Wright and others in emphasizing an important dynamic of shame: that it is based on interpersonal traumatization.
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The Shame of the Cities

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1968
The totality of urban life is the only rational focus for concern with mental illness. No longer can we be concerned solely with treatment institutions; our problem now embraces all of society and we must examine every aspect of it to determine what is conducive to mental health. And just as the psychiatric patient must participate in his own treatment,
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Shame, shame

Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy, 1990
Richard C. Robertiello   +1 more
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A shame to Honour‐a shame to suffer

Ethnos, 1990
The following article, based on field work in a mestizo village in Mexico, argues that suffering is an essentially female virtue, reflecting the life experience of women. The experience of suffering is related to the concepts of virginity, chastity, honour and shame.
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