| Carol Gilligan - 1993 - 220 Seiten
...and buy her a root beer float and sit at her bedside just so there would be somebody there for her." The ideal of care is thus an activity of relationship,...the web of connection so that no one is left alone. While the truths of psychological theory have blinded psychologists to the truth of women's experience,... | |
| Anna Case-Winters - 1990 - 256 Seiten
..."that masculine set of mind intent on domination and regulation." Soelle, p. 46. "Gilligan, p. 19. '""The ideal of care is thus an activity of relationship,...the web of connection so that no one is left alone." Gilligan, p. 62. z°GilIigan, pp. 167-168. study, women also generally manifest a stronger repulsion... | |
| Anne H. Bishop - 1991 - 128 Seiten
...Furthermore, she makes evident the inadequacy of over-stressing autonomy in health care. She defines caring as "an activity of relationship, of seeing and responding...the web of connection so that no one is left alone" (p. 62). This feminine image of relationships as a web contrasts sharply with the masculine image of... | |
| Peggy L. Chinn - 1991 - 374 Seiten
...relationship to what Gilligan (1982) calls a "web of connection." She defines a caring relationship as "an activity of relationship, of seeing and responding...the web of connection so that no one is left alone" (p. 62). This feminine image of relationships as a web contrasts sharply with the image of a hierarchy.... | |
| Samuel M. Natale, Brian M. Rothschild, Joseph W. Sora, Tara M. Madden - 1995 - 348 Seiten
...and centers around an understanding of responsibility and relationships. It is, in Gilligan's words, "an activity of relationship, of seeing and responding...sustaining the web of connection so that no one is left alone."29 The ethic of care recognizes the importance, of connection between one's self and others... | |
| David L. Middleton - 1997 - 348 Seiten
...critical to the emergence of a secure sense of female self. As Gilligan notes, "The ideal of care is ... an activity of relationship, of seeing and responding...the web of connection so that no one is left alone" (Different Voice, 62). Partially because male psychology and literature have denigrated women's caretaking... | |
| Frida Kerner Furman - 1997 - 234 Seiten
...identifying what care or caring involves, I begin with Gilligan's own words: "The ideal of care is ... an activity of relationship, of seeing and responding...the web of connection so that no one is left alone. "" Social ethicist Barbara Andolsen expands this definition when she writes, "Care names an ongoing... | |
| Ulf Leonhardt - 1997 - 236 Seiten
...identifying what care or caring involves, I begin with Gilligan's own words: "The ideal of care is ... an activity of relationship, of seeing and responding...sustaining the web of connection so that no one is left alone."22 Social ethicist Barbara Andolsen expands this definition when she writes, "Care names an... | |
| Marjorie Bass Zucker, Howard D. Zucker - 1997 - 224 Seiten
...care," with its emphasis on "stepping out of one's personal frame of reference into the other's" and on "sustaining the web of connection so that no one is left alone," fails against the ideologic thrust of fundamental beliefs (Jecker and Schneiderman 1995:155). Jecker... | |
| David Forte - 1998 - 428 Seiten
...(1984). 17. Gilligan does not use the term nurture, but an "ethic of care." For example, she writes, "The ideal of care is thus an activity of relationship,...the web of connection so that no one is left alone." CAROL GILLIGAN, IN A DIFFERENT VOICE 62 (1982). 18. Even Aristotle noticed the particular excellence... | |
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