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1.
Revista Katálysis ; 24(2):269-279, 2021.
Article in Portuguese | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-20234586

ABSTRACT

Este artigo busca problematizar o avanço do modelo ultraneoliberal presente no governo Bolsonaro e seus impactos na política de seguridade social brasileira, enquanto política pública e como tal, dever do Estado. O avanço das contrarreformas reacionárias destrói os sustentáculos essenciais da política de seguridade social: a saúde, previdência e assistência social. A metodologia escolhida consiste na pesquisa bibliográfica a partir de produções científicas publicadas em artigos e livros, como também, jornais e revistas sobre a temática. A agenda ultraneoliberal impõe uma perseguição sem precedentes aos direitos historicamente conquistados. Em tempos de pandemia pela Covid-19, as contradições da política de negação de direitos se evidenciam. O bolsonarismo tem implementado como política oficial a necropolítica, que advém de um domínio autoritário de definir quem deve morrer e quem merece viver, aprofundando ainda mais a barbárie social contra a classe trabalhadora.Alternate :This article seeks to problematize the advancement of the ultraneoliberal model present in the Bolsonaro government and its impacts on the Brazilian social security policy, as a public policy and as such, the duty of the State. The advance of reactionary counter-reforms destroys the essential pillars of the social security policy: health, social security and social assistance. The chosen methodology consists of bibliographic research based on scientific productions published in articles and books, as well as newspapers and magazines on the subject. The ultraneoliberal agenda imposes an unprecedented pursuit of the rights historically won. In pandemic times for Covid-19, the contradictions of the denial of rights policy are evident. Bolsonarism has implemented necropolitics as an official policy, which comes from an authoritarian domain of defining who should die and who deserves to live, further deepening the social barbarism against the working class.

2.
British Journal of Social Work ; 52(3):1765-1782, 2022.
Article in English | APA PsycInfo | ID: covidwho-2326162

ABSTRACT

This article presents a thematic analysis of 100 articles which appeared in 'SW2020 under COVID-19' online magazine, authored by people with lived experience, practitioners, students and academics. The magazine was founded by an editorial collective of the authors of this article and ran as a free online magazine during the period of the first UK COVID-19 lockdown period (March-July 2020). It contained a far higher proportion of submissions from the first three groups of contributors, above, than traditional journals. The analysis is organised under four analytic themes: 'Hidden populations;Life, loss and hope;Practising differently and Policy and system change'. The article concludes by describing the apparent divergence between accounts that primarily suggest evidence of improved working relationships between social workers and those they serve via digital practices, and accounts suggesting that an increasingly authoritarian social work practice has emerged under COVID-19. We argue that, notwithstanding this divergence, an upsurge in activism within social work internationally during the pandemic provides a basis for believing that the emergence of a community-situated, socially engaged social work is possible post-pandemic. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved)

3.
Estudios Románicos ; 32:303-323, 2023.
Article in Italian | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2301424

ABSTRACT

Da oltre due anni la vita di molte persone e cambiata notevolmente, il modo di passare il tempo, di lavorare e di comunicare ha subito grandi modifiche. La situazione pandemica ha influito molto anche sul modo di percepire il mondo, sul nostro comportamente, sulle scelte e sulle priorita. In molte lingue, compreso l'italiano, sono apparse sempre piú frequenti nuove parole e frasi riguardanti il contesto della pandemia di coronavirus. Lo scopo di questo lavoro e analizzare il modo in cui la realta influenza il linguaggio, in particolare la metaforicita della pandemia covid19 e il suo riflesso in esso. Il corpus di analisi sara costituito da articoli e testi giornalistici pubblicati per lo piú su Internet, su portali e riviste online, che riportano l'attualita sull'Italia e sul mondo.Alternate :For over two years the lives of many people have changed significantly, the way they spend time, work and communicate has undergone major changes. The pandemic situation has also greatly influenced the way we perceive the world, our behavior, choices and priorities. In many languages, including Italian, new words and phrases concerning the context of the coronavirus pandemic have appeared more and more frequent. The purpose of this work is to analyze the way in which reality influences language, particularly the metaphoricity of the covid19-pandemic and its reflection in language. The corpus of analysis will consist of journalistic articles and texts published mostly on the Internet, in portals and online magazines, which report current news on Italy and the world.

4.
Journal of Applied Research on Children ; 12(2), 2021.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2294134

ABSTRACT

The increased publicity of mass shootings and the COVID-19 pandemic have fueled American demand for firearm purchases. Firearm violence has largely been blamed on people with mental illnesses instead of firearm accessibility, despite the lack of population-level evidence associating mental illness with firearm violence perpetration. We support interventions and policies to limit firearm access in homes, schools, and by all intimate partners who have been convicted of domestic abuse. We advocate for restrictions on the civilian purchases of semi-automatic rifles and large capacity magazines. Finally, we call for research addressing firearm violence as an environmental and structural issue, not an intrapersonal one.Key Take Away Points [list] [list] [list_item] Despite worsening mental health outcomes among American youth, there is little population-based evidence supporting an association between firearm violence perpetration and mental illness. [/list_item] [list_item] Firearm accessibility increases the risk for firearm violence and injuries. [/list_item] [list_item] Preventing school shootings requires both promotion of socio-emotional learning and restrictions of firearm sales from young civilians. [/list_item] [list_item] Provisions in the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act to regulate access to firearms is an initial step to reducing firearm violence. [/list_item] [list_item] Long-term reductions in firearm violence require structural approaches to improve social determinants of health. [/list_item] [/list]

5.
Journal of Sociology ; 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2264379

ABSTRACT

As the Covid-19 pandemic caused schools, workplaces, and childcare centres to close, pressures in the home increased. Much of the additional unpaid work required under these conditions was done by women. Most women's magazines at this time urged women to stay positive and develop wellbeing routines to help them flourish. This approach reinforces normative neoliberal subjectivity with its roots in therapeutic culture and the happiness industry. While the focus on self-care may seem empowering, it puts more pressure on women in times of upheaval. Based on a thematic analysis of pandemic-related content in Australia's most popular women's magazine, The Australian Women's Weekly, we identified three key themes: ‘finding the silver lining', ‘making lifestyle choices', and ‘recognising hardships and social divides'. While self-responsibilising discourses were prominent, some articles acknowledged the broader structural issues impacting women, revealing a tension between competing discourses. © The Author(s) 2023.

6.
Leisure Studies ; 42(1):118-132, 2023.
Article in English | Academic Search Complete | ID: covidwho-2229234

ABSTRACT

Reading is a central leisure activity among older adults, serving as a means of entertainment, escape, connection, and/or education. COVID-19 public library closures drastically altered this activity. Based on interviews with 21 older adults across Ontario, Canada, this study explores how library closures in the province affected older adults' magazine leisure reading practices. Analysis yielded three themes: COVID-19 transforming experiences of library as place, COVID-19 as time of loss, and COVID-19 as catalyst for adaptation. Participants voiced the many ways COVID-19 has shaped (often restricting) their choices related to magazine reading (where, how, and what they read, and where they located their magazines). While libraries remained virtually open during the pandemic, many participants chose not to switch to digital platforms (despite their technical proficiency to do so). As a result, they often stopped reading magazines completely, despite the loss this stoppage represented. At the same time, pandemic restrictions compelled others to use the online library services they had previously avoided. Ultimately, participants' experiences of magazine reading during the COVID-19 pandemic further our understanding of reading as leisure in later life and also trouble prevailing assumptions that older adults' resistance to digital media engagement is merely a reflection of age-related incompetence. [ FROM AUTHOR]

7.
Missouri Medicine ; 117(3):211-213, 2020.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2147063

ABSTRACT

SLMMS actively opposed the medical marijuana ballot issues in Missouri, given that risks to the patient supersede the lack of any extensive research studies demonstrating its health benefits. Sam Page, MD, moved from chair of the St. Louis County Council to serving as St. Louis County Executive in 2019;Emily Doucette, MD, a current member of the SLMMS Council, was named acting co-director of the St. Louis County Department of Public Health in 2019;and George Hruza, MD, a SLMMS past president, was recently elected the 2020-2021 President of the Missouri State Medical Association. SLMMS has served as a conduit for providing information to its members and the St. Louis physician community, dedicating publication space to public health responses, summarizing the impact on physician practices, and creating an online resource page.

8.
1st LACCEI International Multi-Conference on Entrepreneurship, Innovation, and Regional Development: Ideas to Overcome and Emerge from the Pandemic Crisis, LEIRD 2021 ; 2021.
Article in Spanish | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2081208

ABSTRACT

This research article describes the importance of the English language as a foreign language within a inquiry, gamification, autonomous learning and digital reading process. The main objective was about developing a digital proposal that would promote the use of technical English applied to the reading plan in some courses of the civil engineering program through a virtual environment, it was based on interactive and digital magazines. They worked about the civil engineering discipline and they were focused on the ESP methodology. It was framed within the reading plan established through the syllabus of the four disciplinary courses. The mandatory quarantine situation generated by Covid-19 made part of the methodological process and fieldwork research. Just because it was 100% virtual. The research was carried out using a correlational quantitative methodological. The intervened sample was 161 students. Talking about the results obtained, it is highlighted that the reading plan proposed from the digital magazines enhanced the level of English to the civil engineering students, it was according to statistical facts used to measure different aspects from the type of research selected. The situation of virtualized education was used to strengthen disciplinary themes about civil engineering program and foreign language skills. © 2021 Latin American and Caribbean Consortium of Engineering Institutions. All rights reserved.

9.
FWU Journal of Social Sciences ; 16(3):120-131, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2067726

ABSTRACT

India is one of the countries with the highest number of kids under the age of 18 years. This paper adds value in understanding the usage in the current covid scenario. The research objectives for the current study are to examine how young kids in India use their time on internet for varied purposes, to study how young kids find the websites that are of interest to them and to examine how young kids obtain information about sensitive issues. A cross-sectional web survey was conducted to examine the various aspects of the use of the Internet and traditional media (television/radio/magazines/newspapers/billboards) among kids in India. Data was collected through a structured questionnaire. The sampling method used in the study was purposive sample (522 kids). Internet emerged as the first choice of media for kids for all the nine selected activities that include homework, shopping, restaurant/food-ordering, travel and tour, information search, health related information, weather forecast, entertainment, and news/current events. Girl respondents as compared to boys have consumed Internet at a higher rate for learning about the fashion (trends) and health related issues such as seeking preventative health care and specific information about medical issues.

10.
1st LACCEI International Multi-Conference on Entrepreneurship, Innovation, and Regional Development: Ideas to Overcome and Emerge from the Pandemic Crisis, LEIRD 2021 ; 2021.
Article in Spanish | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2056682

ABSTRACT

This research article describes the importance of the English language as a foreign language within a inquiry, gamification, autonomous learning and digital reading process. The main objective was about developing a digital proposal that would promote the use of technical English applied to the reading plan in some courses of the civil engineering program through a virtual environment, it was based on interactive and digital magazines. They worked about the civil engineering discipline and they were focused on the ESP methodology. It was framed within the reading plan established through the syllabus of the four disciplinary courses. The mandatory quarantine situation generated by Covid-19 made part of the methodological process and fieldwork research. Just because it was 100% virtual. The research was carried out using a correlational quantitative methodological. The intervened sample was 161 students. Talking about the results obtained, it is highlighted that the reading plan proposed from the digital magazines enhanced the level of English to the civil engineering students, it was according to statistical facts used to measure different aspects from the type of research selected. The situation of virtualized education was used to strengthen disciplinary themes about civil engineering program and foreign language skills. © 2021 Latin American and Caribbean Consortium of Engineering Institutions. All rights reserved.

11.
East Asian Journal of Popular Culture ; 8(2):179-182, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2054402

ABSTRACT

This issue of the East Asian Journal of Popular Culture (EAJPC) includes a thematic section, edited by Scott Sommers, consisting of four papers dealing with various cultural ramifications of a modern popular culture in middle-class Japan, particularly in relation to gender and consumerism. It further features articles analysing the role of humour in the Sinophone world: one (by Charles Lam and Genevieve Leung) on the emergence during the 1970s of a conscious-ness of distinctive Hong Kong identity through the prism of the television sketch comedy, the Hui Brothers Show and another (by Jacob Tischer) investigating the use of a humorous social media strategy by Taiwan’s government in its attempts to manage the COVID-19 pandemic. The issue concludes with a paper by Marketa Bajgerová Verly on the representation of female victims of the Sino-Japanese War in the museums of the PRC. The book reviews section features commentary on four recently published works that relate to themes discussed in the research articles. © 2022 Intellect Ltd Editorial. English language.

12.
Journal of International Women's Studies ; 24(2):1-16, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-1918536

ABSTRACT

Contemporary feminism manifests itself in the form of blogs, hashtags, e-magazines, and digitally planned protests through online communities that address the prevailing concerns of feminists in the digital age. This feminist approach to digital activism aims to reclaim the power of technology which is inherently hegemonic and masculinist by creating alternate spaces and modes of protest. Transnational feminism is increasingly being shaped by online discourses and the new digital space enables social movements in shaping feminist solidarity and complex netizen identities. This paper adopts discourse analysis of online contents that question the prevalent patriarchal system in South Asia and thus situate it in the changing socio-cultural context globally. Popular hashtag movements in various countries such as #YesAllWomen, #notallmen, #MeToo, #SheInspiresMe, #WomenMarch4Change, #WhyLoiter, #IWillGoOut, #AuratMarch #GirlsAtDhabas, #SafeCityIndia #PinjraTod as well as other online forums which raise the voices of women against various forms of violence will be analysed with a view to uncover their multi-layered impact. These multifaceted discourses on gender-based violence have reached a wider audience across the world through social media, and academic webinars during the Covid-19 pandemic have also largely contributed to the debate. The resonance of these dialogues has transcended the local to the global level;a close study of the transnational character of these digital messages in social media aims to examine the strict demarcation between the public and the private, thus challenging the concept of gendered spaces. This paper employs a multidisciplinary approach to methodologically analyse the online resources and nature of activism in India and investigate its global relevance. Additionally, the paper will also explore how the online campaigns are establishing networks notwithstanding time and place, by interrogating and understanding the relationship between online activism and its significance in conceptualizing transnational feminism.

13.
Cultural Politics: an International Journal ; 18(1):44-63, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-1892260

ABSTRACT

Examining women's magazines and lifestyle coaching, the article explores how positivity imperatives in contemporary culture call forth a happy, confident, hopeful, and vibrant subject during the COVID-19 pandemic. The analysis shows how these positivity imperatives acknowledge stress and difficulty, and at times highlight their gendered impacts, yet nevertheless systematically figure responses and solutions in individual, psychological, and often consumerist terms. The discussion demonstrates how positivity imperatives operate not only through verbal advice but also through visual, embodied, and affective means and through an emphasis on developing new social practices—from holding one's body differently, to keeping gratitude journals, to cultivating a new virtual persona for online work meetings. The article highlights a profound paradox: in times of a global pandemic that has affected women disproportionally, and when structural injustices and inequalities have been made ever more visible, positivity and individualized self-care interpellations to women flourish, anger is muted, and critiques of structural inequality are largely silenced. Thus seemingly benign and often undoubtedly well-meaning messages of confidence, calm, and positivity during the pandemic work to buttress a neoliberal imaginary and persistent social inequalities.

14.
Journal of Psychosocial Studies ; 15(1):2-15, 2022.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-1886977

ABSTRACT

Weekly real-life magazines (RLMs) for women form a genre that has experienced sustained popularity for more than three decades and are constructed from claims to represent their readerships' lives. Strikingly, during the COVID-19 pandemic where other magazines have witnessed a decline in sales and many closures, real-life titles have experienced continuous success. This article reads RLMs through a psychosocial lens as a symptom of an emerging social melancholia that began to form from the late 1970s in the United Kingdom. Through an analysis of Chat magazine, the article illustrates how the genre was constructed and argues that it resonates with a form of melancholia that has led to the creation of communities bonded through shared collective experiences that have found the semblance of resolution within this genre's creation.

15.
5th International Conference on Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence, CSAI 2021 ; : 352-358, 2021.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1752918

ABSTRACT

The corona virus causes reducing production and distribution the Indonesian coffee and tourism business. Since the increase of COVID-19 pandemic, there was not any tourist that visited an island called Belitung, and it caused to the falling down of coffee industry in the island. This paper describes how to develop a tool that focuses on coffee industry in attracting tourists and enhance the economics in Belitung island through branding activity. To support the program, it is important to create digital magazine. This research is conducted using WDLC model that consists of 5 stages such as requirement analysis, conceptual design, mockups and prototype, production and launch. The research subjects are people who use digital magazine. This research has been conducting and the researchers try to present the system design. Findings of the research show that digital magazine is the most feasible model to be implemented for introducing Indonesian coffee and tourism business since the COVID-19 pandemic. © 2021 ACM.

16.
Femspec ; 21(2):68-102,129, 2021.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-1609990

ABSTRACT

1492 The Play: The Conquest Through Native Eyes (play excerpt, 1992) 20.2, 76 abortion 18.1,16;19.1, 116 Abundantly Well: The Complementary Integrated Medical Revolution (nonfiction, 2020) 19.2, 106 academia 16.2,71;18.1, 100;18.2, 10;21.1, 126 Act ofRefipuj, The (short story, 1931) 16.2, 79 Activism into Art into Activism into Art: A Personal History of Feminist Art (nonfiction, 2018) 19.2, 97 Activist Art in Social Justice Pedagogy: Engaging Students in Global Issues through the Arts (nonfiction) 19.1, [144] activism / activists 17.1,37;17. 2, 89;16.2, 91 aircraft 16.2, 69;16.2, 83 alternative healing 19.2, 106 Always More Than Clearing Up Act 9 (poem) 20.1, 50 Amazing Stories (literary magazine) 16.2, 54 Amazons 16.2, 54;16.2, 74;19.1, 94 Ancient One Rises (artwork) 19.2, 61 Andes 16.2, 69 androids See: cyborgs and robots Angel of Polk Street, The (novel, 2017, review) 18.1, 87 Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter (fiction series) 19.2, 95 Anthony, Susan B., dollar 19.2, 105 apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction 17.2, 71;18.1, 16;19.1, 118;19.1, 120;19.1, 140;21.1, 45 Apollo 13 (motion picture, 1995) 18.2, 10 archaeomythology 19.1,94 Arete (play) 20.1, 22 art 17.1,37;17.1, 186;17.1,202;17.1,207;18.2,40;18.2, 94;19.1, 13;19.1,53;19.1,94;19.1, [144];20.1, 8 art, feminist 19.1, 33;19.1, 53;19.1, [144];19.1, 148;19.2, 25;19.2, 56;19.2, 97 art, sacred 18.2, 94;19.1,8;19.1, 33;19.1,94;19.2, 97 art historians 19.2, 56 art history 18.2, 40 Artemis of Ephesus (artwork) 19.2, 58 Arthurian legend 18.1, 70 artificial women 16.2, 54;16.2, 72 artists, men 21.1, 17 artists, women 17.1,9;17.1,37;17.1, 181;17.1, 186;17,1, 193;17.1,202;17.2,2;18.2,40;19.1,8;19.1, 13;19.1,33;19.1,53;19.1,85;19.1,94;19.1, [144];19.1, 148;19.2, 25;19.2, 56;19.2, 97;19.2, 106;20.1, 5;20.1, 8 Association for the Study of Women and Mythology (conference) 19.2, 97 Association for the Study of Women and Mythology (organization) 18. 1, 45 authors, Chicana feminist 18.1, 60 authors, Jewish women 16.2, 122;17.1,27;18.1, 16;18.1,22;18.1,29;18.1,30;18.1,66;19.1, 118;19.1, 119 authors, male 16.2, 54;16.2, 128;17.1,215;17.2,3;17.2,71;181,90;18.2,61;18.2, 85;19.1, 120;19.1, 145;19.2,83;19.2,37;19.2, 86;19.2, 102;20.1,60;20.1,62;20.1,65;20.1, 74;20.2, 26;21.1,45;21.1, 154 authors, women 16.2, 54;16.2, 91;16.2, 120;16.2, 122;17.1,202;17.1,207;17.1,210;17.1, 215;17.1,216;17.1,221;17.1,222;17.2,20;17.2,21;17.2, 34;17.2,71;17.2, 74;18.1, 16;18, 1,60;18.1,66;18.1,70;18.1,73;18.1,75;18.1,81;18.2, 10;18.2, 29;18.2, 59;18.2, 68;18.2, 69;18.2, 73;18.2, 77;18.2, 82;18.2, 87;18.2, 92;19.1, 8;19.1, 16;19.1, 76;19.1, 79;19.1, 82;19.1, 114;19.1, 116;19.1, 118;19.1, 120;19.1, 124;19.1, 140;19.1, 142;19.2, 37;19.2,47;19.2,51;19.2, 52;19.2, 104;19.2, 105;20.1, 16;20.1,39;20.1,60;20.1, 62;20.1,65;20.2, 46;21.1, 17;21.1,45;21.1, 90;21.1, 149 Away from the Here and Now (short story anthology, 1947) 18.2, 27 Aztecs 16.2, 79;20.2, 76 Balcony, The (play, 1956) 18.2,61 Batya Weinbaum Papers (Duke University) 20.1, 14 beauty 21.1, 17 Beloved (novel, 1987) 19.2, 52 Beyond Pluto (short story, 1932) 16.2, 81 Big Mama Rag (Denver newspaper) 19.2, 47 Birth of the Snake Goddess (artwork) 19.2, 61 birth control See: reproduction, sterility, and birth control birth work 19.1, 94 Bitch Planet: Extraordinary Machine (graphic novel, 2015, review) 21.1,8;21.1, 17 Black American fiction 19.2, 52;20.1,60;20.2, 26;20.2, 46;21.1, 37;21.1,45;21.1, 154 Black American women 17.1,215;17.2, 74;19.2, 52;20.2, 26;21.1, 17;21.1,45 Black Americans 19.2, 52;20.1, 60;20.2, 26;21.1, 17;21.1,45;21.1, 154 Black Hand, The (short story, 1931) 16.2, 78 Black Tides of Heaven, The (novella, 2017, review) 18.2, 90 Blinking Eyes of Enlightenment, The (artwork) 191, [13] blood 16.2, 70;16.2, 72;16.2, 79;16.2, 87 body art 19.1, 53 Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story (documentary film, 2018) 19.1, 127 Boneless Horrors, The (short story, 1929) 16.2, 71 Book of Dust, The (fantasy novel trilogy, 2017-2020) 18.2, 85 Book of Martha (short story, 2005) 20.2, 26 Boy, Snow, Bird (novel, 2014) 20.2, 46 BULBIEGnass Spirit of Achievement Award 19.1, 127 But What Can / Do? A Handbook for Change, My Self My Community, My Country (nonfiction) 19.2, 103 California 19.1,33;21.1, 154 California (novel, 2014, review) 17.2, 71 Canadians 17.2,2;18.1,84;18.2, 77;19.1,76;20.1,65;21.1, 17 cancer 16.2, 71 capitalism 19.1, 105;21.1, 17;21.1, 131 careers, women's 18.2, 10;18.2,77 Cartomancy and Tarot in Film 1940-2010 (nonfiction, 2016) 17.1,215 Casa Redención (community) 18.1, 39 Cathedra Goddess Demeter with Cornucopia (artwork) 19.2, 64 Catholicism 18.1, 39;19.1, 33 cave art 18.2, 40;18.2, 54 Celestial Visitor, The (short story, 1935) 16.2, 87 Centre for Research in Social Sciences and Humanities (organization) 19.2, 8;20.2, 16 Charting New Waters (nonfiction, 1980) 19.2, 105 chemical elements 16.2, 61;16.2, 69;16.2, 72 Chicago, Illinois 16.2, 73 Chicago 1042 AD (short story, 1930) 16.2, 73 Chicanas / Latinas 17.1,216;18.1, 16;18.1,60;18.2, 92;19.1, 13;19.1,33 children's literature 19.2, 105 children's literature See also: young adult literature Chinese American women 16.2, 128;19.1, 140 class conflict 16.2, 62;16.2, 66;16.2, 86 colonialism/ colonization 16.2, 76;18.2, 10;19.2, 70;19.2, 83;21.1,72 Color Purple, The (novel, 1982) 20.2, 46 Colossal Eternal (short story, 1934) 16.2, 85 comedians and women's humor 16.2, 122;17.1, 210 Comet Doom, The (short story, 1928) 16.2, 70 Comic-Con (conference, 2019, San Diego) 19.2, 54 Coming of Lilith, The (nonfiction, 2005) 18.1, 16 Coming of the Ice, The (short story, 1926) 16.2, 67 Commedia dell'Arte 17.1,210 communication 19.1, 16 communication with animals 19.2, 76 Congo, the 21.1, 72 Conquest of the Earth, The (short story, 1930) 16.2, 76 Conquest of the Planets (The Mother World) (short story, 1935) 16.2, 86 conquistadors 20.2, 76 Contemplative Woman (artwork) 19.2, 6 cosmic rays 16.2, 69 COVID-19 pandemic 21.1, 126 creativity 20.2, 26 Crete, Greece 19.2, 46 cryonics 16.2, 62 cults 16.2,81;16.2, 82 cultural appropriation 19.1,33;20.2, 56 curses 16.2, 70 cyborgs and robots 16.2, 56;16.2, 65;16.2, 67;16.2, 72;16.2, 74;16.2, 76;16.2, 79;16.2, 82;16.2, 88;18.1, 16;18.1,90;19.1, 118 Dance Trance Formation (artwork, 2010) 20.1, 9 daughters 18.1, 81;19.2, 52;20.1,69;20.2, 107 Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers: Monstrosity, Patriarchy and the Fear of Female Power (nonfiction, 2019) 20.2, 107 death and dying 16.2, 119;17.2, 23;18.1, 97;18.2, 69 Death ofVivek Oji, The (novel, 2020, review) 21.1, 152 Death Valley 16.2, 72 Desert Priestess: A Memoir (nonfiction, 2011) 19.1, 73 Devolution: A Firsthand Account of the Rainer Sasquatch Massacre (novel, 2020, review) 21.1, 134 Dialogue with the Goddess and Marquis de Sade discussing the principles of Secular Scientific Spirituality (nonfiction, 2020) 20.1, 74 disabled people 21.1, 72 Discus Men ofEkta (short story, 1935) 16.2, 86 diversity 19.2, 54 divination 17.1,215 Divine Feminine See: Sacred Feminine, the Divine Mother / Great Mother myth 18.1,39 Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (novel, 1968) 18.1,90 Doctor Who (TV series) 19.2,86 domestic violence 17.1, 181 Dreamers, The (novel, 2019, review) 20.1,60 Drop by Drop (novel, 2018, review) 19.1, 120 Dump Trump: Legacies of Resistance. 19.1, 145 Dynasty of Blue-black Rays, The (short story, 1930) 16.2, 75 dystopias 16.2, 79;18.1, 16;18.1,73;18.1,84;18.1,90;19.1,8;19.1,76;19.1, 116;19.1, 118;19.1, 120;20.1,60;20.1, 72;21.1, 17;21.1, 45;21.1, 134;21.1, 154 Earth domination 16.2, 70;16.2, 76;16.2, 79 Earth the Marauder (short story, 1930) 16.2, 78 Echoes in Space (artwork, 1963) 18.2, 50 ecofeminism 19.1, 85;19.1, 105;19.2, 105 economics 19.1, 105 economics See also: gift economy / maternal gift economy;market economy education- feminism 16.2, 12 education, online 16.2, 12 Egypt 16.2, 73 El is a Spaceship Melody (short story, 2018) 20.2, 26 elderly women 16.2, 64;16.2, 65;17.1, 12 Electrical Experimentation (periodical) 18.2, 0 Electronic Frontier Foundation Pioneer Award 19.1, 127 Electronic Wall, The (short story, 1927) 16.2, 68 End of the Universe, The (short story, 1934)

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