1.

Record Nr.

UNICASSBL0531945

Autore

Condrau, Gion

Titolo

Angoscia e colpa : questioni fondamentali di psicoterapia / Gion Condrau

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Firenze, : La Nuova Italia, 1966

Titolo uniforme

Angst und schuld als grundprobleme der psychotherapie

Descrizione fisica

IX, 215 p., [4] c. di tav. : ill. ; 21 cm

Collana

Problemi di psicologia ; 8

Disciplina

157

Soggetti

Angoscia

Lingua di pubblicazione

Italiano

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Traduzione di Mario Chiarenza.



2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910438234003321

Titolo

Science Fiction and Speculative Fiction : Challenging Genres / / edited by P. L. Thomas

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Rotterdam : , : SensePublishers : , : Imprint : SensePublishers, , 2013

ISBN

9789462093805 : (ebk : EbookCentral)

Edizione

[1st ed. 2013.]

Descrizione fisica

vii, 215p. ; : ill. (b&w)

Collana

Critical Literacy Teaching Series: Challenging Authors and Genre

Altri autori (Persone)

ThomasPaul Lee <1961->

Disciplina

016.8093876

Soggetti

Education

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references.

Nota di contenuto

Intro -- Science Fiction and Speculative Fiction: Challenging Genres -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: Challenging Science Fiction and Speculative Fiction -- 1. A Case for SF and Speculative Fiction: An Introductory Consideration -- 2. SF and Speculative Novels: Confronting the Science and the Fiction -- 3. SF Novels and Sociological Experimentation: Examining Real World Dynamics through Imaginative Displacement -- 4. "Peel[ing] apart Layers of Meaning" in SF Short Fiction: Inviting Students to Extrapolate on the Effects of Change -- 5. Reading Alien Suns: Using SF Film to Teach a Political Literacy of Possibility -- 6. Singularity, Cyborgs, Drones, Replicants and Avatars: Coming to Terms with the Digital Self -- 7. Troubling Notions of Reality in Caprica: Examining "Paradoxical States" of Being -- 8. "I Try to RememberWho I Am and Who I Am Not": The Subjugation of Nature and Women in The Hunger Games -- 9. "It's a Bird . . . It's a Plane . . . It's . . . a Comic Book in the Classroom?": Truth: Red, White, and Black as Test Case for Teaching Superhero Comics -- 10. The Enduring Power of SF, Speculative and Dystopian Fiction: Final Thoughts -- Author Biographies.

Sommario/riassunto

Why did Kurt Vonnegut shun being labeled a writer of science fiction (SF)? How did Margaret Atwood and Ursula K. Le Guin find themselves in a public argument about the nature of SF? This volume explores the broad category of SF as a genre, as one that challenges readers, viewers, teachers, and scholars, and then as one that is often itself challenged (as the authors in the collection do). SF, this volume



acknowledges, is an enduring argument. The collected chapters include work from teachers, scholars, artists, and a wide range of SF fans, offering a powerful and unique blend of voices to scholarship about SF as well as examinations of the place for SF in the classroom. Among the chapters, discussions focus on SF within debates for and against SF, the history of SF, the tensions related to SF and other genres, the relationship between SF and science, SF novels, SF short fiction, SF film and visual forms (including TV), SF young adult fiction, SF comic books and graphic novels, and the place of SF in contemporary public discourse. The unifying thread running through the volume, as with the series, is the role of critical literacy and pedagogy, and how SF informs both as essential elements of liberatory and democratic education.