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Imagination and Arts-Based Practices for Integration in Research examines bold and innovative ways for using arts-based and narrative research techniques to propose a model for using the researcher's imagination to truly 'mix methods' - a model for integrating qualitative and quantitative research designs and data.
On a cold January morning, thirteen-year-old Karl Zimmer awakens to find the public square of his city draped in crimson-colored flags. Hitler has been named Chancellor. Karl doesn't know what this means but he understands danger is in the air.
An endearing, thoughtful collection of prose vignettes illuminating some of life's ordinary (and extraordinary) moments. Poet, prose writer, and psychoanalyst Nancy Gerber offers these short pieces as sources of pleasure and reflection. Received 2nd Place in the RELATIONSHIP Category in the 2019 Royal Dragonfly Book Awards.
In this thought-provoking memoir, Nancy Gerber maps the wrenching terrain of caring for an elderly parent. In the fall of 1995, at the age of 73, the author''s father suffered a massive stroke on the right side of the brain, rendering him permanently disabled. This catastrophic event plunged the author and her family into a crisis for which they were completely unprepared, one that included financial worries; the need to hire full-time, live-in help; and the specter of putting her father into a nursing home. Even more wrenching was the demise of the parent she had always known. From an active, gregarious man with hobbies and friends - a man who had been working at the time of the stroke - her father became withdrawn, hostile, and silent. This profound loss was aggravated by the stress and anxiety that characterize family caregiving. In honest, evocative prose, the author describes her struggle to negotiate the competing demands of love, filial responsibility, familial conflict, and personal autonomy that arise when a parent becomes ill.
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