Memoir is the meaning-making genre, and meaning-making is a specious, slippery project, a dance I distrust. |
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It will also make a case for the importance of studying information behaviour and meaning-making in play environments. |
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He uses a meaning-making medium to short-circuit the possibility of meaning. |
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The notion of action signs in semasiological theory, for example, presupposes a view of human beings as meaning-making agents. |
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This means that complex, multilayered languaging behaviour is marginally emphasized in the study of meaning-making. |
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Further along the recovery path, there may be more need for meaning-making efforts or grief counselling. |
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There is a view that promoting children's initiatives and meaning-making strongly supports their cognitive development. |
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The meaning-making process provides a condition for better understanding the situation, making inferences, and developing possible diagnostic logics. |
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This seems to be part of meaning-making, so the person not only wonders why they were a victim but also why they survived while others were injured or died. |
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In developmental evaluation, meaning-making is a collective process. |
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Reflecting on the client's process, capacity and product in meaning-making may highlight why consideration of the religious dimension is an important aspect of therapy. |
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Meaning-making must include, but transcend the culture making impulses of religious communities. |
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