User:ChromeKing/sandbox

Answers to Module 7 Questions


 * An image of my dog
 * Yes
 * JPEG
 * cco no rights reserved
 * Category: dogs
 * A medium sized JPEG format file of Lurcher terrier mixed rescue dog


 * Describe your media
 * Is it your own work (Links to an external site.)?
 * What is the file format (Links to an external site.)?
 * What license (Links to an external site.) have you chosen?
 * What category/gallery (Links to an external site.) will you add it to?
 * How will you describe (Links to an external site.) the file?

Activity 6.3.3

Eunicidae is a family of polychaetes. The family comprises of marine annelids distributed in diverse benthic habitats across Oceania, Europe, South America, North America, Asia and Africa (Rouse & Pleijel, 2001). The Eunicid anatomy comprises of paired mandibles and complex sets of maxillae in a muscular, eversible pharynx (Fauchauld & Jumars, 1979).

Lead section paragraph writing exercise 28/09
An archenemy, distinct from the broader classification of enemy, is a protagonist’s principal antagonist, and is a term primarily used to describe characters in fictional contexts. The characteristics of an archenemy might include, but are not limited to, behaving in a way that is philosophically or morally antagonistic toward a protagonist, possessing a protagonist’s ultimate weakness, proving impossibly difficult to defeat or being the most regular catalyst of a protagonist’s downfall.

Archenemies in Psychology
An archenemy, in the discipline of psychology, describes one’s fundamental predisposition toward or against certain personality types.

Practicing citations

Mead, N. L., & Maner, J. K. (2012). On Keeping Your Enemies Close: Powerful Leaders Seek Proximity to Ingroup Power Threats. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 102(3), 576–591.

https://doi.org/10.1037/a0025755.

This source is authoritative because it is written collaboratively by academics from reputable universities and is published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, a widely recognised peer-reviewed scientific journal that has published monthly since 1965.

Günsoy, C., Cross, S. E., Uskul, A. K., Adams, G., & Gercek-Swing, B. (2015). Avoid or Fight Back? Cultural Differences in Responses to Conflict and the Role of Collectivism, Honour, and Enemy Perception. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 46(8), 1081–1102.

https://doi.org/10.1177/0022022115594252.

This collaborative research piece is credible because it reports objectively on the findings of two recent independent studies examining cross-cultural behavioural tropes and the significance of enemies and archenemies in different cultural contexts.

Kincaid, J. (2016). Territorial Neutrality and Cultural Pluralism in American Federalism: Is the United States the Archenemy of Peripheral Nationalism? Swiss Political Science Review, 22(4), 565–584.

https://doi.org/10.1111/spsr.12230.

This independent political science study, published in a generalist political science journal is written by a widely recognised expert in the field of Federalism, John Kincaid, fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration and co-editor of the Routledge Book Series on Federalism and Decentralization.

Weiner, R. G., & Peaslee, R. M. (2015). I: The Changeable Trickster. In The Joker: A Serious Study of the Clown Prince of Crime (pp. 64). University Press of Mississippi.

This book is an authoritative source because it is published by the University Press of Mississippi and comprises of critical analysis of the Joker character, Batman’s archenemy.

Fink, J. (1999). Moriarty, Professor James. In R. Herbert (Ed.), Oxford Companion to Crime and Mystery Writing. Oxford University Press.

his companion text is authoritative because it is published under the widely recognised Oxford University Press.