scholarly journals NARASI TENTANG AUTISM DI FACEBOOK (Studi Autoetnografi pada Status K.W)

2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 57
Author(s):  
Frida Kusumastuti ◽  
Jeanne Leonardo ◽  
Radityo Widiatmojo

The narrative of a mother who is directly involved in living with a child with an autistic child's lifetime is worth noting because it can complement the narrative of the Professionals (doctors, psychiatrists, psychologists, educators). Especially if the narrative is done openly on social media such as Facebook. Social Media gives the opportunity of public voices that were originally being repossessed by large narratives. Thus the purpose of this research is to interpret the narrative of the subject about autism based on daily experience (everyday life). Narrative is the way someone tells his experience. The narrative about Autism, commonly referred to as "disability", is not necessarily the same as the people's narration or family. The narrative of experts and the general public about defects is often done in a dichotomistic, i.e. only when defects – including autism – are seen as sadness or suffering, and when a defective individual is successful with extraordinary achievement. This research was conducted on a Facebook social account, which is a KW account – a single-parent mother claiming to have five children, of which three of them (15 years old, 10 years old and 7 years old) were autistic. The choice on the subject of the study because the KW handled the children's autism with a full involvement with no shadower nor professional caregiver. Secondly, KW is capable of conducting autism narrative through social media (Facebook) which is open. The results showed (1) Narrative about the nature, attitudes, and principles of Autism, (2) narrative on the achievement of autism.

2006 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 160-163
Author(s):  
Valdis O. Lumans

Reading Karel C. Berkhoff's Harvest of Despair: Life and Death in Ukraine under Nazi Rule reaps reward but also some disappointment. For the general public unfamiliar with the historical issues and intricacies of the Nazi occupation of the Soviet Union, this book contains far more reward as a montage of vivid depictions of everyday life under German domination in the occupied East. But conversely, for those with a more advanced, research-level familiarity with the subject, the results are reversed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 143-157
Author(s):  
Alyona A. Antipova ◽  
Elena N. Kasarkina

Introduction. The article presents an empirical study on the actual problem of supporting single-parent families in modern sociocultural conditions. The purpose of the work is to conduct a comparative analysis of the features of everyday life, current problems and mechanisms of support for single-parent families in the social and cultural conditions in cities and villages in Mordovia. Materials and Methods. The theoretical and methodological basis of the work is presented by a set of concepts and theoretical approaches in accordance with the subject and problem of the study, the methodological tools of family sociology, cultural studies, and psychology. It used the methods of analysis, synthesis, generalization, comparison, secondary analysis of empirical data, and questionnaire. Results and Discussion. The authors conducted a questionnaire of parents from single-parent families in Saransk and Bolsheignatovsky district of the Republic of Mordovia. The subject of the study is everyday life, family culture and mechanisms of support for single-parent families in the conditions of urban and rural socio-culture. As a result, the conditions and factors that influence the spread of problems of single-parent families, their everyday features, are empirically revealed in comparison of social and cultural conditions of the city and the village. The article analyzes the support mechanisms that single-parent families can use in the city and in the countryside, taking into account their opinions. Conclusion. It is empirically proved that the life, family subculture and problems of modern single-parent families are mainly defined by the socio-cultural features of the area of residence. The families are influenced by the location and the infrastructure of the locality, the employment of a single parent, and the forms of interpersonal communication in the socio-cultural conditions of the locality. It was revealed that in Saransk there are state, charitable organizations, where single-parent families can address when having problems. The research novelty of the study is that a comparative analysis of the features of everyday life, current problems and mechanisms of support for single-parent families in the urban and rural social and cultural conditions of modern Mordovia is carried out at the theoretical and empirical levels.


FIKRAH ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 333
Author(s):  
Lutfiyah Lutfiyah

<span lang="EN-US">Digital era, <em>smartphone </em>gives birth to a new culture for its users. The news is true and the <em>hoax</em> is going back and forth on social media. The religious behavior between the servant and his Lord should be <em>private</em> and not become a private matter with evidence of the display of ritual worship on social media. Worship should be performed specifically and privately, starting to be displayed through a <em>smartphone</em> and can be consumed by the general public. The purpose of this research is to determine the function of a <em>smartphone</em> when it is clashed with the theory of sincere worship during the Industrial Revolution 4.0 era. This paper uses a closed interview technique with a questionnaire, and documentation to reveal how the theory of worship should be carried out, the sincere theory that has been defined by the salaf scholars and how the translation of Muslims in the digital age. The subject of this paper is a lecturer in Islamic Education (PAI) at the Walisongo State Islamic University (UIN) Semarang. The results of this paper indicate that PAI lecturers actively use <em>smartphones,</em> but do not pay attention to the content of the post ofworship <em>mahdhah</em> with more evidence of abstention.</span>


2012 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 627-645
Author(s):  
MATT CRAVEN

AbstractEven if Foucault was generally disposed to avoid the category of sovereignty in his genealogy of governmentality, his lectures on the subject nevertheless have much to offer for our understanding of the historical tradition of international legal thought. The purpose of this article is to try to situate Christian Wolff's account of the jus gentium within Foucault's work, focusing in particular upon the way in which Wolff might be seen to exemplify elements of the transition identified by Foucault from government according to raison d'état to a new art of government informed by the emergence of political economy. This, it is argued, not only makes legible certain elements of Wolff's work that have otherwise remained obscure, but points also to the place of international law in the fine-grained materiality of everyday life.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Wagner ◽  
Nicky Hayes

The past decade has seen a shift in the way that minorities exert their influence in society. Where in previous decades the emphasis was on winning the hearts and minds of the population at large, a recent strategy has been to ignore general public discourse and only to target specific influential bodies, along with an emphasis on victimhood. In this paper we use the example of transgender issues to analyse the socio-psychological dimensions of this approach. We show that where possible, those promoting these issues eschew a wider social discourse and debate in the mass media, and how their strategy rests on a self-construction as victims of the hetero-normative society, with a concomitant appeal to moral rather than factual argumentation. This is combined with a programme of aggressive challenge to opponents through social media, which effectively closes discussion on the topic. We conclude that these methods have much in common with the oppressive politics of undemocratic rule.


Author(s):  
Ole Dreier

The aim of the paper is to give a brief presentation of an approach to developing the conception of subjectivity in psychology. This conception is developed on the background of the science of the subject of critical psychology as founded by Holzkamp (1983) which considers subjectivity as a core concept in human psychology. In the conception presented in this paper, it is argued that human subjectivity must be grasped as grounded in a subject’s ongoing situated participation and conduct of everyday life in and across various, structurally arranged social practices. It is argued why such a conception of subjectivity is necessary and its main concepts are briefly presented. A critical identification of methodological and conceptual inadequacies in narrower notions of the psyche and subjectivity paves the way for the line of arguments leading to this broader conception of subjectivity.


2011 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 129-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanna Tokarska-Bakir

On the subject of the Polish-Jewish postwar relations, this paper deals with the pathology of public discourse known as the “conspiracies of silence” phenomenon (see Eviatar Zerubavel, The Elephant in the Room: Silence and Denial in Everyday Life , 2008). The concept in question may be applied to the Polish historic conditions. It helps to problematize the circumstances in which social conspiracies were accumulating around the Polish-Jewish relations in the postwar period so as to pave the way for analysis of the current difficulties in researching the title issues, particularly those that emerged while using a quantitative and qualitative approach to research Polish attitudes toward Jews. The resulting polemical analysis is made on the basis of a text by one of the most renowned Polish sociologists, Prof. Antoni Sułek. His lecture titled “Ordinary Poles Looking at Jews” was delivered at the University of Warsaw, Poland, on 17 December 2009, within the cycle “Ten Lectures for a New Millennium.” It summarises the Polish twenty-year poll-based researches of Poles’ attitudes towards Jews.


Author(s):  
Mohd Muttaqin Mohd Adnan

The old method of teacher-centric learning has been criticized as a less effective method of teaching and learning. Academics have been implementing newer and better initiatives that are more student-centric, which has proven to be more meaningful and effective in delivering the knowledge needed for students to grow and obtain the necessary skills to be future leaders. However, through self-observation and feedback from students, the author noticed that some subjects are still using the old methods in delivering the subject to the students. The problem statement here is that there are still subjects taught today that are teacher-centric, which might not be suitable to develop students as future leaders. The author argues that a good educator should focus in creating a healthy self-guided learning environment. Several initiatives were made by the author to change the way of teaching and learning. By analyzing the previous performance and gathering students' feedback, the outcome of the initiatives has been successful in ensuring students have better learning experiences.


Kudankulam ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 267-293
Author(s):  
Raminder Kaur

Digitalia or the significance of social media to everyday life and modern movements is no less significant to the case of Kudankulam. Chapter 9 therefore foregrounds digital activism by focusing on the content and reception of a public letter from British to Indian politicians on the Kudankulam issue. It was written collaboratively in May 2012 by diverse activists in Britain to highlight concerns about mandatory procedures and environmental, democratic, and human rights abuses against non-violent protestors. The letter’s reception evident in news readers’ commentaries point to another series of debates that highlight, on one end of the spectrum, colonial legacies, the stranglehold grip of nationalism and suspicions about the ‘foreign hand’; and on the other, the promise of transparency, accountability, and recompense. In its fallout, the potentials and hurdles in the way of forging a transnational anti-nuclear movement across the global south and north, the formerly colonized and colonizing, are highlighted.


2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 198-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Milan Ismangil

AbstractIn August 2016, Wings Gaming won the sixth edition of the International, a tournament for the videogame Dota 2. Wings Gaming, a team consisting of five Chinese players, was praised for bringing honour to China. This article explores various ways in which this Chinese Dota 2 community frames its fandom using nationalistic rhetoric. Teams identified as Chinese represent the country, honouring or disappointing the nation when they square off in tournaments. This article focusses on the everyday experience in this online community, arguing that the way in which people cheer for their teams stems from a nationalistic filter that makes nationalism the normative discourse in the community. A further comparison is made to American social media to discuss the role that truth plays when nationalism is discussed in the daily experience. This study concludes that a combination of factors surrounding the Chinese community creates a form of banal (cold) nationalism, which normalizes and strengthens national truths and myths.


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