Papaloteando
by Nersys Felipe
It is a book of short stories written for Children by Nersys Felipe winner of the Casas de las Américas Literary Prize.
It is a book of short stories written for Children by Nersys Felipe winner of the Casas de las Américas Literary Prize.
The name of this book is Oikoá, which means life in the language of the Guarani Mbya people. This name was chosen because the indigenous peoples have been the guardians of life on planet Earth: it is in their territories that there are more types of trees and plants, animals, fish, birds, insects, and where the rivers and forests are best preserved.
This book considers the most electorally successful political party in Spain, the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE), which was in government for two of the three decades since it won office under Felipe González in 1982. Providing rich historical background, the book's main focus is on the period since General Franco's death in 1975. It charts Spain's modernisation under the PSOE, with a particular focus on the role played by European integration in this process. Covering events including the 2011 general election, the book is one of the most up-to-date works available in English and will be of great interest to academics and undergraduate and postgraduate students in the field of Spanish and European studies. ;
Thirty-four poems, one for each of the young children (all under the age of 14) that were executed, arrested or disappeared during the Chilean dictatorship. A book dedicated to all those little Chilean victims, but also to all the children that each day suffer the consequences of violence.
"Hidden in his horn he guards the secret of the jungle”. This might be as well the beginning of a novel, but it's an inspired riddle about wild animals. The illustrations in high varnish of this edition highlight the different skin textures of each animal and invites the reader to discover a new way of reading in a tactile and playful way.
Texas, 2033. Black Deker and his partner, Top Chop, recover the Lady in the Dark, an old Mississippi steamboat patched together with the remnants of old war materials. Scrap dealers by trade, they use the boat to salvage the scrap from battles fought in the rivers and jungles of the new state. But Black Deker decides to take on an unusual assignment: rescue A. Bierce, a prisoner of the fearsome Coronel Snark, from death row at the China (New León) maximum-security prison. A new instalment from the Fernando De Felipe library, which collects the complete works of the Aragonese author in a series of new editions with additional unpublished material. The perfect introduction or a chance to rediscover one of our seminal graphic novel artists.
Recognizing that many marginalized communities experience the damaging mental health impacts of oppression and discrimination, Clinical Interventions for Internalized Oppression offers practitioners with theoretical frameworks, treatment recommendations, and practice guidelines for addressing bias in their own work, as well as specific interventions for treating the deleterious impacts of inequity.The book introduces readers to conceptual frameworks for internalized oppression and the interactive nature of systems of privilege, power, and oppression within individual and collective experiences. Later chapters identify where different facets of internalized oppression may present themselves in broad clinical domains. Readers explore the ways in which internalized negative beliefs emerge from historic oppression and how they present and manifest.Throughout, queer and/or Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) practitioner spotlights, clinical vignettes, somatic reflections, self-reflection, and discussion questions deepen readers’ learning experiences and promote real-world application.Clinical Interventions for Internalized Oppression is part of the Cognella Series on Advances in Culture, Race, and Ethnicity. The series, co-sponsored by Division 45 of the American Psychological Association, addresses critical and emerging issues within culture, race, and ethnic studies, as well as specific topics among various multicultural groups.Chapters and contributors include:Chapter 1: IntroductionJan E. Estrellado, Ph.D., Lou Collette S. Felipe, Ph.D., and Jeannie Estella Celestial, Ph.D., M.S.W.Chapter 2: An Intersectional ApproachLou Collette S. Felipe, Ph.D., Tamba-Kuii M. Bailey, Ph.D., and Niyeli Herrera, B.A.Chapter 3: Therapeutic AllianceJan E. Estrellado, Ph.D., and Lou Collette S. Felipe, Ph.D.Chapter 4: Issues in SupervisionJeannie Estella Celestial, Ph.D., M.S.W., and Jan E. Estrellado, Ph.D.Chapter 5: Case ConceptualizationJeannie Estella Celestial, Ph.D., M.S.W., and Jan E. Estrellado, Ph.D.Chapter 6: Treatment PlanningKenedy Ramos, M.A., Keali’i Kauahi, M.A., Jan E. Estrellado, PhD, Julii M. Green, Ph.D., and Jeannie Estella Celestial, Ph.D., M.S.W.Chapter 7: Internalized Racism: Manifestations, Mental Health, Implications, and Clinical InterventionsEmilie Loran, M.S., and E. J.R. David, Ph.D.Chapter 8: Internalized SexismMarli Corbett-Hone, M.Ed., Morgan J. Benner, B.S., Natania S. Lipp, B.S., and Nicole L. Johnson, Ph.D.Chapter 9: Internalized Homophobia, Biphobia, and TransphobiaAmy Prescott, M.S., Rose K. Dhaliwal, M.S., Samantha LaMartine, Psy.D., and Nadine Nakamura, Ph.D.Chapter 10: Exploring the Impact of Internalized Ableism in Clinical PracticeAnthea A. Gray, Psy.D., Katlin R. Schultz, Psy.D., Rebecca P. Cameron, Ph.D., Linda R. Mona, Ph.D., and Kristina M. Moncrieffe, Psy.D.Chapter 11: Internalized ClassismWilliam Ming Liu, Ph.D., and Klaus E. Cavalhieri, Ph.D.Chapter 12: ConclusionLou Collette S. Felipe, Ph.D., Jeannie Estella Celestial, Ph.D., M.S.W., and Jan E. Estrellado, Ph.D.
Originally published between 1990 and 1992 in the magazine Zona 84, the stories making up Marketing & Utopia Made in U.S.A. allowed Fernando De Felipe as sole author to introduce his vision of a future where marketing has become Big Brother, with us humans subject to its whims. Stories not without humour that, somewhere between dystopian and prophetic, make it clear that even when everything is going wrong, it can always get worse. A new instalment from the Fernando De Felipe library, which collects the complete works of the Aragonese author in a series of new editions with additional unpublished material. The perfect introduction or a chance to rediscover one of our seminal graphic novel artists.
In 1991, the magazine Comix Internacional started to serialise Museum, a work by Fernando De Felipe depicting a mind-bending tour through the museum of the Compulsive Collector. Thanks to this disturbing guide and host, the visitors to this strange gallery get to hear the macabre tales behind the apparently conventional objects that play a fundamental role in the development of grisly stories sprinkled with dark humour. An inimitable comic, which in 1995 won the award for the best work by a Spanish author at the Barcelona International Comic Fair. Museum is the sixth instalment from the Fernando De Felipe library, which collects the complete works of the Aragonese author in a series of new editions with additional unpublished material. The perfect introduction or a chance to rediscover one of our seminal graphic novel artists.
After Nacido Salvaje, Fernando De Felipe and Óscar Aibar continued their collaboration creating nine short stories originally published in the magazine Zona 84. With this foray into the field of science fiction, the authors turned their gaze on the most terrible past and disturbing future to reflect on the limits of ethics and morality surrounding genetic modification. ADN is the second instalment of the Fernando De Felipe library, which collects the complete works of the Aragonese author in a series of new editions with additional unpublished material. The perfect introduction or a chance to rediscover one of our seminal graphic novel artists.