Testimony in Counterpoint by Stefania Pandolfo introduces Roqiya, a Moroccan patient who’s under hospitalized care. Roqiya was traumatized ever since her husband left her: she constantly thought not only about the breakup but also about the negative connotations from which others would view her: an example of such would be to call her a fasda. “The other day a man approached her by the side of the river in her village and insulted her, accusing her of being fasda, defiled” (Pandolfo 78). Nonetheless, the reading essentially caters a psychological analysis of the patient Roqiya and how a psychiatrist can be of the best help to her.…
For centuries Spanish composers were overlooked due to the simple fact that they were never given the opportunity to become legendary. However, the Spanish composer and famous pianist Alicia de Larrocha made certain that she, as well as her fellow Spanish composers, were not overlooked any longer. Beginning in the early 1920’s, she began her extremely successful life and accomplished every one of her dreams and aspirations before she passed away in 2009. Alicia’s success can be exemplified through her personal relationships with those around her, by her distinct playing style, and the astonishing way she overcame obstacles she was faced with throughout her life that lead to the abundance of rewards she received.…
Not all artists use characters or gods which symbolize beauty and fertility in their masterpieces, although Botticelli certainly did in his piece La Primavera. Botticelli, an artist during the early piece of the Renaissance, was an artist unlike any seen before. Botticelli was trained under the apprenticeship of Filippo Lippi, who was a famous Medici, or a member of a political dynasty or family with much power during the Renaissance. Individualism, classical naturalism, and scientific naturalism were all important aspects of the Renaissance time period, which helped it to differ from the previous Medieval times. Botticelli’s artwork, especially La Primavera, was very individualistic, which set him apart from the other artists that came before…
In her writing, Margaret starts out by using an anonymous student as an example describing how a boy, Alex attended an Ivy League school and describes how he lied to a doctor about a list of symptoms that he supposedly had. This lie allowed him to get a prescription of this ADHD medicine. She says how he took fifteen milligrams most every evenings and built a dependency on the drug. She draws a comparison to how throughout schools there are many students who feel the need to use stimulants to achieve greater amounts of focus in school.…
This module requires students to explore and evaluate a specific text and its reception in a range of context. It develops students’ understanding of questions of textual integrity. Students explore the ideas in Gwen Harwood’s poetry through analysing its construction, content and language. They research others’ perspectives of the poems and test these against their own understanding and interpretation of the text.…
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity disorder may seem very controversial to many people, but in reality there has become an overwhelming amount of information and evidence that support’s the existence of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder globally by scientist and psychiatric association. The Center for Diseases Control is the biggest health authority in the United States. It is one of the components of the Department of Health and Human Services it was created to help individuals and communities to protect their health. The Center for Disease control is trying to inform parents, care givers and teachers on how to handle this illness among school aged children. The rhetorical elements of ethos, pathos, and logos are utilized in an appropriate…
The purpose of Freidson’s article was to analyze the social organization of the medical profession and its members. In his study, he explored how the medical profession has gained a monopoly in its field, which grants it complete jurisdiction over determining what illness is therefore how people must act in order to be treated as ill (Freidson 1970:205). Because medicine has the ability to label one person’s grievance an illness and another one not, Freidson believes that medicine creates the social role of illness. Illness is thought of as a deviance from a set of norms that represent normal or healthy behavior. “Human, and therefore social evaluation of what is normal, proper, or…
Frida Kahlo was a Mexican surrealist artist born on July 6th 1907, in Coyoacán, Mexico. Kahlo is best known for her self-portraits that were usually created with the purpose of depicting her physical and mental struggles. Kahlo is also known as one of the first feminist icons. Her unconventional characteristic and behaviour, that would have been seen as rebellious in the early 1900’s, inspired countless other female artists and influenced feminist movements around the world.…
The author makes a good point in that our children are showing more and more signs of ADD and ADHD. Also that most of these diagnoses are of boys age’s three to nine (One in four US schoolkids doped on Ritalin, 2000, para. 9). However…
The New Woman was conveyed through the artists illustrations beginning in the 1880’s and continuing through the years, ending in the 1920’s. These images such as the works titled, “What Are We Coming To”, “In a Twentieth Century Club”, “Picturesque America”, and “Women Bachelors In New York”, all conveyed this idea of a “New Woman”. The qualities that a New Woman must have included a woman who pursued the highest education and made effort to move up in the professional world. “She (the New Woman) also demonstrated new patterns of private life, from shopping in the new urban department stores, to riding bicycles, and playing golf.” (pg. 374) The artists attempted to create this perfect all around woman who’s lives closely resembled what the men of that time were doing. Such as in figure 6.8 titled “In a Twentieth Century Club” which shows women dressed in clothing which closely resembled that of a mans attire for that era, at leisure, socializing with other woman. This “club” looked very similar to a men’s drinking and eating club. “ Although role reversal still provides the humor, the women waitresses and patrons are physically attractive, while the women’s unladylike posture and clothing would have been viewed as shocking equally significant is the cross dressing entertainer.” (pg. 374) Not only did artists attempt to convey a way that the New Woman should act, but they also created this popular physical image of what one should look like such as the Gibson Girls pictured in image 6.9. Most all of the illustrations showed a white woman of the leisure class, however African American women still envisioned and strived to become a New African American Woman.…
Are young children early on exposed to psychotropic medications due to lack of medical attention? Do millions of children in these countries really have ADD or ADHD? These questions arise all over North America, Great Britain, and Australia. Drugging of children at young ages is the result of self-diagnoses, teacher diagnoses, and lack of medical care and treatment for children with the “disease” of Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). In the documentary The Drugging of our Children, Gary Null, Forever Living Products, 2005, DVD Web, brings about the argument. Back in the 1980’s and 1990’s children began to be put on many different drugs for their behavior in school, the main drug being Ritalin. In the documentary, Null speaks out to parents of children that are on medication by interviewing many different parents, physicians, and education committees about the use of Ritalin and other psychotropic medications in young children. All of these things that are being evaluated of the child’s behavior is at school, and is compared to the expected behavior of that particular teacher’s classroom. The film goes on explain how teachers diagnose those more challenging students with either ADD or ADHD and have them forced to put their kid on a medication to “cure” their so called disease. After showing each case and their stories, the film also reflects the long term effects of the medications also.…
Now knowing that I had Attention-Deficit/ Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) as a child, I can make much more sense of the different ways I acted out in my elementary years, and why I was constantly viewed negatively by my peers and teachers. Although there has been much study to the connection between drug and alcohol use in pregnancy being a cause of ADHD in children, my mother never had a history of using either. However, there is also ongoing research in regards to ADHD as a result of high prenatal stress.…
Cooper, P. (1997). The reality and hyperreality of adhd: an educational and cultural analysis. The Association of Workers for Children with Emotional and Behavioral Difficulties: East Sutton: South London Press.…
A five year old boy comes home with a note from the teacher stating “Johnny has been acting up again in class for third time this week. In my professional opinion Johnny has ADHD. Please take him to the pediatrician to get him evaluated.” That was a scenario that many parents have had as a reality. “74% of youth who sought mental health treatment received prescription medications” (National 13). Are our youth being medicated too much because teachers say they are acting up, when it is just normal childhood behavior and needs a little discipline? In his article “Twenty Years of Medicating Youth: Are We Better Off?” Robert Foltz presents information to help explain just that. Foltz talks about how in today’s society, medicating children with ADHD, or Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, has become a cure-all treatment for this disorder. I tend to agree with Foltz’s viewpoint on this subject. Too many people today are willing to just medicate children to help control them in and out of the classroom instead of taking time to find out what would really help them focus.…
Success is to achieve something that we truly long for. “Sometimes failure is more beneficial than success.” Written by Darren Roberts. This is a very inspiring quote for all species of mankind. I agree rightfully with this quote as it states that even sometimes there are ups and downs, falls and disruptions in life, but those problems make us even stronger and prevent us from making the same mistake and make us more successful in life. Although, if losing things sometimes make us closer to something we want, we must make a go for it. As In Homers’, The Odyssey, and Nancy’s’, The House of The Scorpion, the main characters deal with personal loss and face many hardships, but finally reach to their own respected homes and families, safe and soundly.…