02937nam 2200481Ia 450 991045111370332120200520144314.00-9761547-7-3(CKB)1000000000343856(EBL)285354(OCoLC)165008227(MiAaPQ)EBC285354(Au-PeEL)EBL285354(CaPaEBR)ebr10160683(CaONFJC)MIL534607(EXLCZ)99100000000034385620060807d2007 uy 0engur|n|---|||||Skinny boy[electronic resource] a young man's battle and triumph over anorexia /by Gary A. GrahlClearfield, Utah American Legacy Media20071 online resource (256 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-306-03356-X 0-9761547-4-9 Contents; Introduction; 1. Sign of the Obsession; 2. Helpless; 3. The Ride; 4. And Your Name is...?; 5. The Iron Giant; 6. The Fifty Cent Tour; 7. Chandra; 8. Group Therapy; 9. Atalanta The Private Investigator; 10. O. T.; 11. Scrabble; 12. The Doctor is In(sane); 13. Send the Alternate; 14. The Battle of O. T., 1986; 15. What about Bob?; 16. My Free Get-Out-of-Prom Card; 17. Chandra's Discharge; 18. My Post-Prom; 19. Let's Play Hide the Tunafish--Twice; 20. D-Day; 21. Illusion Theories for All Occasions; 22. The Letter; 23. Bacon Anyone?; 24. And the Award For Best Actor Goes To...25. Am I Ever Glad To Smell You26. One Sharp Package?; 27. Back So Soon?; 28. Dr. Buckmier's Warning; 29. Wet Dream; 30. Can't You See the "No Trespassing" Sign?; 31. The Power of YOU; 32. An Idol Visit; 33. The Warning; 34. The Infatuation Begins; 35. Busted; 36. Ariel's Lessons: Girls 101; 37. The Elevator Ride to Heaven; 38. Bad News; 39. Musical Toast; 40. The Session; 41. Courage; 42. Trash IT; Epilogue; AcknowledgementGary Grahl was both handsome and popular, a boy whose athletic abilities attracted the attention of the big leagues . . . until ""IT,"" a shaming inner-voice that convinced him to be ever thinner. His out-of-control compulsion to exercise and starve himself led to multiple hospitalizations, and a life and death battle to win control over the pervasive and dangerous ""IT.""Skinny Boy is a powerful story showing how anyone can win the internal battle between mind and body, and triumph over the out-of-control thoughts and feelings common to many mental disorders. SkAnorexia nervosaEating disordersElectronic books.Anorexia nervosa.Eating disorders.616.85/2620092 B616.852620092Grahl Gary A861637MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910451113703321Skinny boy1922744UNINA04820nam 2200829 a 450 991095513140332120251201170505.01-317-46918-61-315-70388-21-317-46919-41-282-55483-297866125548340-7656-2648-910.4324/9781315703886(CKB)2670000000018406(EBL)501510(OCoLC)608691469(SSID)ssj0000419158(PQKBManifestationID)12156703(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000419158(PQKBWorkID)10381620(PQKB)10360334(MiAaPQ)EBC1900131(MiAaPQ)EBC501510(Au-PeEL)EBL1900131(CaPaEBR)ebr10373252(CaONFJC)MIL255483(OCoLC)898771500(OCoLC)958109930(Au-PeEL)EBL501510(FINmELB)ELB141257(EXLCZ)99267000000001840620081212d2009 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrHandbook of brand relationships /Deborah J. MacInnis, C. Whan Park, Joseph W. Priester, editors1st ed.Armonk, N.Y. M.E. Sharpec20091 online resource (449 p.)Advertising and Consumer Psychology"Society for Consumer Psychology"--Cover.0-7656-2357-9 Includes bibliographical references and indexes.Half-title; Title; Copyright; Contents; Introduction; PART I. Fundamental Issues in Brand Relationships; 1. Lessons Learned About Consumers' Relationships With Their Brands; 2. Using Relationship Norms to Understand Consumer-Brand Interactions; 3. Brand Loyalty is Not Habitual; PART II. Goals, Needs, and Motives That Foster Brand Relationships; 4. Self-Expansion Motivation and Inclusion of Brands in Self: Toward a Theory of Brand Relationships; 5. Why on Earth Do Consumers Have Relationships with Marketers: Toward Understanding the Functions of Brand Relationships6. Self-Brand Connections: The Role of Reference Groups and Celebrity Endorsers in Creation of Brand Meaning; 7. When Brands are Build from Within: A Social Identity Pathway to Liking and Evaluation; 8. Group-Based Brand Relationships and Persuasion: Multiple Roles for Identification and Identification Discrepancies; PART III. Brand Meaning and Meaning Makers; 9. Collective Brand Relationships; 10. Building Brand Relationships Through Corporate Social Responsibility; 11. Ethnicity, Race, and Brand Connections; 12. Cultural Value Dimensions and Brands: Can a Global Brand Image Exist?13. Understanding Cultural Differences in Brand Extension Evaluation: The Influence of Analytic versus Holistic Thinking14. Luxury Branding; PART IV. Psychological and Behavioral Effects of Strong Brand Relationships; 15. Attitudes as a Basis for Brand Relationships: The Roles of Elaboration, Metacognition, and Bias Correction; 16. Putting Conext Effects in Context: The Construction and Retrieval as Moderated by Attitude Strength (CARMAS) Model of Evaluative Judgment; 17. The Connection-Prominence Attachment Model (CPAM): A Conceptual and Methodological Exploration of Brand Attachment18. Love, Desire, and Identity: A Conditional Integration Theory of the Love of Things19. Customer Coping in Response to Relationship Transgressions: An Attachment Theoretic Approach; PART V. Conclusions and Research Directions; 20. Research Directions on Strong Brand Relationships; About the Editors and Contributors; Name Index; Subject IndexBrand relationships are critical because they can enhance company profitability by lowering customer acquisition and retention costs. Featuring chapters by well-known marketing and psychology scholars, this is the first serious academic book to offer a psychological perspective on the meaning of and basis for brand relationships, as well as their effects.Advertising and Consumer PsychologyRelationship marketingBrand choiceBranding (Marketing)Customer relationsRelationship marketing.Brand choice.Branding (Marketing)Customer relations.658.8/27MacInnis Deborah J628365Park C. Whan1647514Priester Joseph W1859112Society for Consumer Psychology.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910955131403321Handbook of brand relationships4462501UNINA