No "ordinary day": The Hours, Virginia Woolf and Everyday Life’
- Authors: Sim, Lorraine
- Date: 2005
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Hecate Vol. 31, no. 1 (2005), p. 60-70
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- Description: Examines the representation of the relationship of author Virginia Woolf to everyday life in the motion picture "The Hours." Plot of the film; Suggestion that the feminist agenda of Woolf was centrally concerned with escaping her everyday life; Antipathy of Woolf towards food in the film.
- Description: 2003004409
The impact of fatigue on daily activity in people with chronic kidney disease
- Authors: Bonner, Ann , Wellard, Sally , Caltabiano, Marie
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Journal of Clinical Nursing Vol. 19, no. 21-22 (2010), p. 3006-3015
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: Aims and objectives: To examine the impact of fatigue on the daily activity levels of people with chronic kidney disease, compare whether being predialysis or receiving different renal replacement therapies had any effect on fatigue and activity and identify whether any items in the fatigue severity scale were more predictive of daily activity levels. Background: Chronic kidney disease is a complex and long-term disease where people commonly experience fatigue and reduced levels of fitness; both of which impact on an individual's ability to carry out routine activities of daily life. Design: A descriptive cross-sectional design. Methods: A convenience sample of 112 people completed the fatigue severity scale and Human Activity Profile. Participants differed in their renal history and were either predialysis or receiving renal replacement therapy. Results: Women or older participants were significantly more fatigued and less active than men or younger participants. A significant difference between mean fatigue and activity scores was found for type of renal replacement therapy, with participants receiving peritoneal dialysis being the most fatigued and the least active. Additionally, lower levels of albumin were significantly correlated with greater levels of fatigue and the ability to engage in fewer activities. Conclusion: People with chronic kidney disease regardless of whether they are predialysis or receiving either peritoneal or haemodialysis experience high levels of fatigue and are able to engage in fewer daily activities. The fatigue severity scale and the Human Activity Profile are useful indicators of fatigue and physical activities which can be used in routine assessment practices. Relevance to clinical practice: Renal nurses are ideally positioned to engage in early identification and regular monitoring of both fatigue and activity levels in people with chronic kidney disease. Individual care plans can be developed to incorporate supportive rehabilitative strategies which aim to reduce fatigue and maximise activity levels.
- Description: 2003008244
The nursing home as a home : A field study of residents' daily life in the common living rooms
- Authors: Hauge, Solveig , Heggen, Kristin
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Journal of Clinical Nursing Vol. 17, no. 4 (Feb 2008), p. 460-467
- Full Text: false
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- Description: Aim. This Norwegian-based study investigates how and to what extent the idea of the nursing home as a home has been realized. Background. For the last two decades, Norway, as other Western Country has had an explicit national policy that nursing homes should become more like homes. The research literature indicates that residents in nursing home seem to lack the opportunities to maintain a private sphere. Design. A field study design was conducted. Methods. Data were collected in 1999 in two long-term units in a traditional nursing home by using participant observation and interviewing the residents. A phenomenological hermeneutic analysis strategy was used to get an impression of the residents' everyday life. Results. The residents spend most of their time in the common living room. The common living room has an ambiguous boundary between the public and private spheres, unlike the clear boundaries characterizing a home. The relationship among the residents is fragile, and the residents who can, withdraw from the common living room. Conclusions. Despite having single rooms and more home-like interior decoration, the residents in nursing home still have reduced opportunity to develop a private everyday lifestyle. The long-term unit examined in this research had a forced relationship between the residents, and the residents with best health resources systematically withdraw from the common area to control both where and with whom they wish to spend their time. Relevance to clinical practice. This study lays the foundation for rethinking daily routines in long-term units in nursing homes. One way to realize the idea of the nursing home as a home could be to define the living room as a clear public area and to give the residents a chance to develop a more private lifestyle by alternating between their private rooms and a public common living room.
- Description: C1
Modernist women's memoir, war and recovering the ordinary : H.D.'s The Gift
- Authors: Sim, Lorraine
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Women's Studies Vol. 38, no. 1 (2009), p. 63-83
- Full Text: false
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- Description: A literary criticism of the book "The Gift," by H.D. is presented. The author discusses the contrast of war with everyday life in literature and the depiction of war by women authors. She comments how the book, a memoir of H.D.'s experiences during the bombing of London, England in World War II, illustrates H.D.'s concepts of creativity and psychological healing.
A different war landscape : Lee Miller’s war photography and the ethics of seeing
- Authors: Sim, Lorraine
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Modernist Cultures Vol. 4, no. 1 (2009), p. 48-66
- Full Text: false
- Description: This essay examines the war photography of Lee Miller in terms of the ways it negotiates ethical challenges integral to the visual documentation of war, and the means by which her photography achieves what Susan Sontag terms an “ethics of seeing” (On Photography). In often eschewing, or figuring in unconventional ways, the horrors of war and directing the viewer’s attention to typically unprivileged scenes and moments, I argue that the moral tone and sensibility of Miller’s war photography is a function of her complex engagement with ideas, and the subject matter of, the ordinary and everyday. The essay focuses on two bodies of work: Miller’s photographs of London during the Blitz which were published in Britain and America in 1941 in the book Grim Glory: Pictures of Britain Under Fire, and some of the photographs she took on the Continent when working as a U.S. accredited war correspondent for British Vogue in 1944 and 1945.
- Description: 2003008045