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Page "Anti-psychiatry" ¶ 13
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book and Asylums
In his book Asylums Goffman describes how the institutionalisation process socialises people into the role of a good patient, someone " dull, harmless and inconspicuous "; in turn, it reinforces notions of chronicity in severe mental illness.
In 1961, Goffman published the book Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates which was one of the first sociological examinations of the social situation of mental patients, the hospital.
* Asylums ( book ), a 1961 nonfiction book by Erving Goffman
After graduating from Harvard in 1972, his first book, Asylums, was published in 1975.

book and Erving
In contrast to this view, some I – O psychologists believe that employees engage in OCBs as a form of " impression management ," a term coined by Erving Goffman in his 1959 book The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life.
Santayana is quoted by the Canadian-American sociologist Erving Goffman as a central influence in the thesis of his famous 1959 book The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life.
* Stigma ( book ), a 1963 book written by Erving Goffman
Erving and Miriam Polster started a training center in La Jolla, California, which also became very well known, as did their book, Gestalt Therapy Integrated, in the 1970s.
In the book, Dawkins writes of some of the racism he encountered during his NBA career, playing alongside 76ers superstar Julius Erving, and his off-the-court experiences with drugs, parties and women.
In the 20th century, Erving Goffman also followed a dramaturgical analogy in his seminal book The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, in which he said, " All the world is not, of course, a stage, but the crucial ways in which it isn't are not easy to specify.
The term was first adapted into sociology from the theatre by Erving Goffman, who developed most of the related terminology and ideas in his 1959 book, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life.
The sociologist Erving Goffman introduced the concept of " face " into social theory with his ( 1955 ) article " On Face-work: An Analysis of Ritual Elements of Social Interaction " and ( 1967 ) book Interaction Ritual: Essays on Face-to-Face Behavior.
The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life is a seminal sociology book by Erving Goffman.

book and Goffman
This was Goffman ’ s first and most famous book, for which he received the American Sociological Association ’ s MacIver award in 1961.
This book is a collection of six of Goffman ’ s essays ; the first four essays were published around the 1950s, the fifth is published in 1964, and the last essay was to finish the collection.
Even though it was written in 1981, Goffman ’ s book remains one of the leading sources on analyzing talk.
In his book on ingratiation, he utilized the models of Goffman, Homans, Thibaut, and Kelley to arrive at the following working definition:
Pulished in 1959, it was Goffman ’ s first and most famous book, for which he received the American Sociological Association ’ s MacIver award in 1961.

book and coined
The descriptive term for the smallest living biological structure was coined by Robert Hooke in a book he published in 1665 when he compared the cork cells he saw through his microscope to the small rooms monks lived in .< ref name =" Hooke ">"< cite >...
Ulric Neisser coined the term " cognitive psychology " in his book Cognitive Psychology, published in 1967 wherein Neisser provides a definition of cognitive psychology characterizing people as dynamic information-processing systems whose mental operations might be described in computational terms.
The species name troglodytes, Greek for " cave-dweller ", was coined by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach in his book De generis humani varietate nativa liber (" on the natural varieties of the human genus ") published in 1776, This book was based on his dissertation presented one year before ( it had a date 16 Sep 1775 printed on its title page ) to the University of Göttingen for internal use only, thus the dissertation did not meet the conditions for published work in the sense of zoological nomenclature.
The term " ecology " () is of a more recent origin and was first coined by the German biologist Ernst Haeckel in his book Generelle Morphologie der Organismen ( 1866 ).
Author Robert A. Heinlein coined the term in his best-selling 1961 book Stranger in a Strange Land.
The term was coined by Reformed Baptist pastor John Piper in his 1986 book Desiring God.
Ted Nelson ( who had also originated the words " hypertext " and " hypermedia ") coined the term " transclusion " in his 1982 book, Literary Machines.
Hierarchiology is the term coined by Dr. Laurence J. Peter, originator of the Peter Principle described in his humorous book of the same name, to refer to the study of hierarchical organizations and the behavior of their members.
In his book, Rhine popularized the word " parapsychology ," which psychologist Max Dessoir had coined over 40 years earlier, to describe the research conducted at Duke.
The name " quine " was coined by Douglas Hofstadter, in his popular science book Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid, in the honor of philosopher Willard Van Orman Quine ( 1908 – 2000 ), who made an extensive study of indirect self-reference, and in particular for the following paradox-producing expression, known as Quine's paradox:
The technique is common in superhero comics, where it has been used so frequently that the term comic book death has been coined for it.
According to the OED, John Paul Scott coined the word " sociobiology " at a 1946 conference on genetics and social behaviour, and became widely used after it was popularized by Edward O. Wilson in his 1975 book, Sociobiology: The New Synthesis.
Darwin's book legitimised scientific discussion of evolutionary mechanisms, and the newly coined term Darwinism was used to cover the whole range of evolutionism, not just his own ideas.
In 1998, Jewish theologian Zachary Braiterman coined the term anti-theodicy in his book ( God ) After Auschwitz to describe Jews, both in a Biblical and post-Holocaust context, whose response to the problem of evil is protest and refusal to investigate the relationship between God and suffering.
He coined the term Engaged Buddhism in his book Vietnam: Lotus in a Sea of Fire.
The word was coined in Greek by Sir Thomas More for his 1516 book Utopia, describing a fictional island in the Atlantic Ocean.
The terms uniformitarianism for this idea, and catastrophism for the opposing viewpoint, were coined by William Whewell in a review of Lyell's book.
In the " Definitions " chapter of Jung's seminal work Psychological Types, under the definition of " collective " Jung references representations collectives, a term coined by Lucien Lévy-Bruhl in his 1910 book How Natives Think.
The term was coined by Bertrand Meyer in connection with his design of the Eiffel programming language and first described in various articles starting in 1986 and the two successive editions ( 1988, 1997 ) of his book Object-Oriented Software Construction.
The term was coined in 1914 by Friedrich von Wieser in his book "".
Landon Jones, who coined the term " baby boomer " in his book Great Expectations: America and the Baby Boom Generation, defined the span of the baby-boom generation as extending from 1943 through 1960, when annual births increased over 4, 000, 000.
According to the book A History of Murphy's Law by author Nick T. Spark, differing recollections years later by various participants make it impossible to pinpoint who first coined the saying Murphy's law.

book and term
David Roberts, in his book " In Search of the Old Ones: Exploring the Anasazi World of the Southwest ", explained his reason for using the term " Anasazi " over a term using " Puebloan ", noting that the latter term " derives from the language of an oppressor who treated the indigenes of the Southwest far more brutally than the Navajo ever did.
" This term apparently also inspired the name of the alternate history book list, uchronia. net.
The earliest recorded use of this term in English is in Thomas Hacket's 1568 translation of André Thévet's book on France Antarctique ; Thévet himself had referred to the natives as Ameriques.
The term was taken and redefined by the anthropologist Sir Edward Tylor in his 1871 book Primitive Culture, in which he defined it as " the general doctrine of souls and other spiritual beings in general.
) The book also introduces the term " Absalonism ", as a generic term for a son's rebellion against his father.
The book of Daniel uses the term " Chaldean " to refer both to an ethnic group, and to astrologers in general.
Whenever the book was written and whatever the historicity of the events recounted in it, clearly by the time it was written the term " Yehudim " ( יהודים-Jews ) already gained a meaning quite close to what it means up to the present — i. e. an ethnic-religious group, scattered in many countries, organised in autonomous communities and a target of hatred.
The phrase Great White Way has been attributed to Shep Friedman, columnist for the New York Morning Telegraph in 1901, who lifted the term from the title of a book about the Arctic by Albert Paine.
Another relatively early use of the term in a German-language work was in a book by Fritz Sternberg, a Jewish Marxist political economist who was a refugee from the Third Reich.
One of the earliest articulations of the anthropological meaning of the term " culture " came from Sir Edward Tylor who writes on the first page of his 1897 book: “ Culture, or civilization, taken in its broad, ethnographic sense, is that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society .” The term " civilization " later gave way to definitions by V. Gordon Childe, with culture forming an umbrella term and civilization becoming a particular kind of culture.
This book was responsible for supplanting the chemical affinity for the term free energy in the English-speaking world.
The abomination of desolation ( or desolating sacrilege ) is a term found in the Hebrew Bible, in the book of Daniel.
The term was first used in a 1994 book by Joseph Jenkins that advocates the use of this organic soil amendment.
One of the first mentions of the term " computational chemistry " can be found in the 1970 book Computers and Their Role in the Physical Sciences by Sidney Fernbach and Abraham Haskell Taub, where they state " It seems, therefore, that ' computational chemistry ' can finally be more and more of a reality.
The term " comic book " arose because the first comic books reprinted humor comic strips.
While the Platinum Age saw the first use of the term " comic book " ( The Yellow Kid in McFadden's Flats ( 1897 )), the first known full-color comic ( The Blackberries ( 1901 )), and the first monthly comic book ( Comics Monthly ( 1922 )), it was not until the Golden Age that the archetype of the superhero would originate.
In the reworked version of the book in 1955, Philip Hershkovitz and Hartley Jackson led him to drop Thos both as an available scientific term and as a viable subgenus of Canis.

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