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American Society for Indexing Conferences: An Analysis of Major Topics, 1997-2011
Article offering an analysis of major topics at the American Society for Indexing Conferences from 1997 through 2011.
Applying Theory, Practice, and Research: The Key to the Development of Future Elementary Education Teachers in the Professional Development School (PDS) Model
Introduction to the special section on education featured in the 2012 edition of The Eagle Feather.
“Beast-Hunts” in Roman Amphitheaters: The Impact of the Venationes on Animal Populations in the Ancient Roman World
Paper explores the impact of ancient Roman venationes, or wild beast hunts, on animal populations around the world.
Briefing the Case: Constitution Day Outreach to Campus and Community
Article discussing Constitution Day outreach to campuses and communities.
Candy Jernigan’s Rejectamenta: Collage, Photography, and (Discarded) Body Memory
Paper discusses how Candy Jernigan Blood of a Vagrant uses the mixture of text, photography, and collage to explore remembrance of a subject that could otherwise remain anonymous.
Coming Home Again: Repatriation and Peace Durability
Paper explores the impact of repatriation on peace durability.
Comparative Immunity Analysis in Mycobacterium smegmatis and Mycobacteriophage
Paper describes research conducted with the goal of expanding the body of information related to mycobacteriophages and the relationship between those viruses and the bacteria that are immune to them.
Cultural Competency in the Learning Environment: Promoting the Development of Diversity Training
Paper looks at the effects of anti-gay bias and a lack of diversity training related to LGBTQ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgendered, and Queer/Questioning) issues on pre-service educators, and in turn on their students.
Do As the Romans: Greco-Roman Iconography in Eleanor Antin’s Last Days of Pompeii
Paper analyzes the commentary on the use of history in art in Eleanor Antin’s Last Days of Pompeii.
Environmental Disasters and Subnational Conflict: A Study on the Effects of Environmental Disasters and Environmentally-Induced Migration on Subnational Conflict
Paper examines the effect of migration precipitated by environmental disasters on the likelihood of conflict in host communities.
Five Experience Rooms of Snuggie in a Social Media
Paper explores Snuggie’s use of specific brand experience dimensions based on the Edvardsson and Enquist conceptualization of six experience rooms in hyper-reality contexts and social media.
Hanging on to Home: Representations of Handala and the Home
Paper examines the subjective relationships between the Palestinians, the Israeli West Bank Barrier ( or the “Apartheid Wall”), Handala (a cartoon character created by Naji al-Ali), and the concept of home.
High on Repression: How Military Involvement Increases Violence and Corruption When Fighting Drug Trafficking
Paper describes research that tests the effectiveness of a military approach versus an approach of social and judicial reform for fighting drug cartels.
Hitler as Sculptor: Molding Germany’s Collective Memory of “Degenerate” Art
Paper discusses the 1937 National Socialist exhibition “Entartete Kunst,” (Degenerate Art) and the ways it influenced the German public’s perceptions of the art displayed, as well as the cultural memory of modern art in general.
Introduction to Special Section in Art History: The Significance of Place: Emotional Geography, Collective Memory and Heritage
Introduction to the special section on art history featured in the 2012 edition of The Eagle Feather.
Judicial Independence and Peace Duration: An Assessment of Political Institutions in the Post-Conflict Environment
Paper assesses the role that an independent judiciary serves in the post-conflict environment.
Lethal Negotiation: The Effect of Violence on the Likelihood of State-Organization Negotiation
Paper explores the relationship between violence caused by an organization and the likelihood of negotiation with a state.
Modalities of Power and Peace: The Implications of the Nature of the State
Paper examines the impact of personalized and institutionalized power on the potential for lasting peace in post-conflict states.
Negative Attitudes Toward “Molly” Subculture in Eighteenth Century London: An Analysis of Textual Agencies Regarding the Emerging Gay Community
Paper explores how text and diction used in eighteenth-century British print culture, specifically street ballads and court cases, acted as active agents of negative attitudes towards homosexuals, or "Mollies".
ʔopʰoʔto ʔinšis. wɨxnat ʔinšiš ʔə•kʼa namaʔan xew: (Good afternoon. It is wonderful to see you all here.)
Keynote address for University Scholars Day 2012, as featured in the 2012 edition of The Eagle Feather.
Phage Hunters Advancing Genomics and Evolutionary Science (PHAGES): Implementing a Research-based Course for Freshmen at the University of North Texas
Paper describes the Phage Hunters Advancing Genomics and Evolutionary Science (PHAGES) program from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science Education Alliance as implemented at the University of North Texas.
Preface to The Eagle Feather 2012
Introduction to the 2012 edition of The Eagle Feather.
Preface to the Proceedings of the University of North Texas Department of Political Science 2012 National Science Foundation Research Experience for Undergraduates
Introduction to the Department of Political Science 2012 National Science Foundation Research Experience as featured in the 2012 edition of The Eagle Feather.
Reconciliation and Relapse: The Case for the Inclusion of Women
Paper investigates the effect that women’s inclusion in the public sphere has on reconciliation in post-civil conflict countries.
The Relationship Between Foreign Direct Investment and Intrastate Conflict
Paper examines the effect of corporate ethics and foreign direct investments (FDI) on the onset of intrastate conflict.
Resource Access in Multiethnic States: The Role of Economic Discrimination in Conflict Onset
Paper analyzes the relationship between economic opportunity across groups and ethnic conflict.
Shutters Shut and Open: Photographic Theory in Gertrude Stein’s Literary Portraits
Paper investigates how Gertrude Stein uses photographic theory in the formal construction of her literary portraits in order to create an autonomous work of art and an authentic resemblance to her human subjects.
Star Trek and “The Other”: Race, Gender and the Cultural Imagination
Paper examines the portrayal of the Other as an indicator of change in the cultural imagination in Star Trek.
Stoperators in Cluster A Bacteriophages
Paper discusses research which analyzed the genome of Mycobacteriophage ElTiger69, a subcluster A5 phage, to identify stoperator sequences.
“That One Congenial Friend:” Hawthorne’s Search for a Careful Reader
Paper discusses the prefaces to the novels and short stories of Nathaniel Hawthorne, and argues that the author uses this space to describe political views that are clear to only a select audience.
Towards a Theory of Electronic Communication and Protest
Paper seeks to explore the impact of electronic communication on social protest movements and how individuals petition for redress of grievances against the government.
An Unheard Voice: The American Muslim Struggle for Political Inclusion
Paper explores the effect of discrimination against American Muslims on their political participation.
New Directions for Academic Video Game Collections: Strategies for Acquiring, Supporting, and Managing Online Materials
Article discussing new directions for academic video game collections and strategies for acquiring, supporting, and managing online materials.
Resurrection Appearances of Jesus as After-Death Communication
Abstract: Scientific research into after-death communication began at the end of the 19th century. During this early period, psychical researcher James Hyslop and theologian Rudolph Otto wrote about the resurrection of Jesus as a visionary / spiritual experience -- as opposed to a physical, "bodily" resurrection. More recently, liberal theologians and religious experience researchers have also favored this view. The purpose of this article is to: (a) underscore the fact that the resurrection of Jesus as an after-death communication is solidly based in the only first-hand account of Paul and the verified secondary accounts of Peter and James (I Cor 15:5-8) in the New Testament, and (b) demonstrate that, although a physical resurrection is implied by the Gospel writers because of the empty tomb, the appearance stories of Jesus are more in accord with the phenomenology of modern after-death communications by Jesus, other divine figures, and ordinary people.
Resurrection Appearances of Jesus as After-Death Communication: Rejoinder to Gary Habermas
Abstract: Gary Habermas has chosen to respond to my paper on the resurrection of Jesus as an after-death communication using theological arguments that try to prove the resurrection of Jesus was somehow a religious event unique in all human history. I counter his assertions with data from religious/spiritual experience research and, to a lesser extent, liberal Christian scholars. I restate my conclusion that Paul's first-hand and verified second-hand accounts of the resurrection in I Corinthians 15 are comparable with modern after-death communications; the difference between Jesus and others is not one of kind but of degree. Over the past 150 years, religious experience researchers have successfully applied the tools of science and begun to unlock the mysteries of how humans experience God and afterlife.
Resurrection Appearances of Jesus as After-Death Communication: Response to Ken Vincent
Abstract: Jesus' resurrection appearances would in some sense comprise after-death messages. But this designation does not necessarily identify them as the sort of after-death communications (ADCs) that are well-known to readers of the Journal. More generally, to hold that the resurrection appearances were ADCs, at least as Ken Vincent has argued, seems to commit a logical fallacy, so that the form of the argument itself cannot sustain the weight of the conclusion. The most that the argument can indicate is that there are some similarities, not that they are necessarily the same class of events. More specifically, there are at least six crucial considerations that dispute Jesus' resurrection appearances being ADCs in the usual sense of these events.
Sexual Misconduct with Congregants or Parishioners: Crafting a Model Statute
Article discussing sexual misconduct with congregants or parishioners and crafting a model statute.
State of Apparent Death and Origin of Dreams: A Historical Review of German Literature of the 19th and Early 20th Centuries
Abstract: In this article I review the German literature of the 19th and early 20th centuries that addressed two phenomena: the state of apparent death and the origin of dreams. Because the term near-death experiences (NDEs) did not yet exist, many features of those phenomena as they are currently understood were subsumed under the broad concept of the state of apparent death, whereas early theories of the origin of dreams included spiritual views that have similarities to current views of NDEs.
''Til Death Do Us Part:' Marital Aftermath of One Spouse's Near-Death Experience
Abstract: Research has revealed that following a near-death experience (NDE) a majority of experiencers (NDEers) change fundamentally in values, religious/spiritual beliefs, and relationship to paranormal phenomena. Much less is known about the relationship between aftereffects of one spouse's NDE and subsequent marital adjustment and stability. In this preliminary retrospective study, we addressed this question quantitatively with supplementary narrative data. Using the framework of John Gottman's (1999) Sound Marital House, we analyzed self-reported adjustment in and stability of the marriages of 26 NDEers before and after a self-identified life-changing event (LCE) unrelated to NDEs. Results indicated a significant reduction in marital meaning (p = .008), adjustment (p = .007), and stability (p = .005) in NDE compared to LCE couples, with a majority of NDE (65%) but only a minority of LCE (35%) couples' marriages ending in divorce. Implications for health professionals are discussed.
Are We There Yet? Toward a Workable Controlled Vocabulary for Music
This article discusses moving toward a workable controlled vocabulary for music.
Building a Better Librarian: Why Your Work As A Librarian Begins LONG Before Your Graduate Program
This articles discusses why ones work as a librarian begins long before their graduate program.
On the Removal of Download Access to Grateful Dead Soundboards from the Live Music Archive
Article on the removal of download access to Grateful Dead soundboards from the Live Music Archive.
Inadvertent RDA: New Catalogers' Errors in AACR2
This article discusses Resource Description and Access (RDA) and new catalogers' errors in Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, 2nd ed. (AACR2).
Feeling Animal: Pet-Making and Mastery in the Slave's Friend
Article on an American Anti-Slavery Society periodical, the 'Slave's Friend,' which ran from 1836 to 1839. The author describes the abolitionist sentiment and the animal metaphor.
Biography indexes reviewed
Article discussing research on biography reviews and indexes.
Cataloguing in 2012: On The Cusp Of RDA
This article discusses changes in music cataloguing systems.
Does N,N-Dimethyltryptamine (DMT) Adequately Explain Near-Death Experiences?
Abstract: Some NDE researchers have suggested that because some users of psychedelic drugs have experiences purportedly similar to near-death experiences (NDEs), neural receptors and neurotransmitters affected by a particular drug may underlie out-of-body experiences and NDEs. One of the most recent psychedelic candidates that allegedly causes NDE-like experiences is N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT), a natural substance that the body produces in small amounts. If DMT experiences are phenomenologically similar to NDEs, then it is possible that the human body in extremis may produce larger amounts of DMT that reach psychedelic experience-causing levels in the blood. In this paper, I explore the issue of whether DMT might play a causal role in the production of NDEs. The first section summarizes basic information of about NDEs, focusing on their phenomenological aspects. The second section classifies theories of NDEs to place the DMT theory in some context of the history of the debate over the cause of NDEs. The following section discusses DMT's chemical composition, physical effects, and psychological effects. The final section explores whether NDE and DMT experiences have a sufficient degree of phenomenological similarity to justify a causal role for DMT in the production of NDEs and concludes that such similarity is lacking.
Obituary: Harold A. Widdison
Obituary of Dr. Harold A. Widdison, a researcher in the field of near-death studies for over 30 years. The article discusses Dr. Widdison's background, career, family, and contributions to the study of near-death experiences.
Food for Fines: Helping Students and the Community
Article on a Food for Fines program at the University of North Texas (UNT) Libraries. The Food for Fines drive offers a way for the library to help students take care of their library fines and help the local community as well.
ASI conference presentations: a content analysis of major topics, 1997-2012
Article on the American Society for Indexing (ASI) conference presentations. This article identifies major topics discussed at ASI conferences from 1997 through 2012 and explores how topics have changed over time.
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