Tag: Happiness

Happiness Habits


Released 4/2023
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280×720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Skill Level: Beginner | Genre: eLearning | Language: English + srt | Duration: 48m | Size: 929 MB
Wouldn’t it be great to create more happiness in your life? But how do you fully take control of your experience? While we all have unique life circumstances, our individual happiness is still always under our control. In this course, best-selling author and keynote speaker Scott Mautz shows you a series of repeatable, powerful, research-backed exercises designed to help you create habits for happiness. Discover that how you experience the world, how you spend your time, how you think, and how you interact with others all impact your happiness level. Along the way, develop enjoyment-inducing routines to promote happiness in each of these areas. By the end of this course, you’ll be prepared to start cultivating your new habits through a tailored routine for greater fulfillment.

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The Keys to Happiness Sex and the Search for Modernity in Fin-de-Siecle Russia


Free Download The Keys to Happiness: Sex and the Search for Modernity in Fin-de-Siecle Russia By Laura Engelstein
2013 | 480 Pages | ISBN: 0801499585 | PDF | 60 MB
The revolution of 1905 challenged not only the social and political structures of imperial Russia but the sexual order as well. Throughout the decade that followed-in the salons of the artistic and intellectual avant-garde, on the pages of popular romances, in the staid assemblies of physicians, psychiatrists, and legal men–the talk everywhere was of sex. This eagerly awaited book, echoing the title of a pre-World War I bestseller, The Keys to Happiness, marks the first serious attempt to understand the intense public interest in sexuality as a vital dimension of late tsarist political culture. Drawing on a strong foundation of historical sources–from medical treatises and legal codes to anti-Semitic pamphlets, commercial fiction, newspaper advertisements, and serious literature–Laura Engelstein shows how Western ideas and attitudes toward sex and gender were transformed in the Russian context as imported views on prostitution, venereal disease, homosexuality, masturbation, abortion, and other themes took on distinctively Russian hues. Engelstein divides her study into two parts, the first focusing on the period from the Great Reforms to 1905 and on the two professional disciplines most central to the shaping of a modern sexual discourse in Russia: law and medicine. The second part describes the complicated sexual preoccupations that accompanied the mobilization leading up to 1905, the revolution itself, and the aftermath of continued social agitation and intensified intellectual doubt. In chapters of astonishing richness, the author follows the sexual theme through the twists of professional and civic debate and in the surprising links between high and low culture up to the eve of the First World War. Throughout, Engelstein uses her findings to rethink the conventional wisdom about the political and cultural history of modern Russia. She maps out new approaches to the history of sexuality, and shows, brilliantly, how the study of attitudes toward sex and gender can help us to grasp the most fundamental political issues in any society.

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