Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Miles Groth

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Name
  
Miles Groth


Miles Groth httpscdnpsychologytodaycomsitesdefaultfile

Books
  
Translating Heidegger, Preparatory Thinking in Heidegger's Teaching

Education
  
Fordham University, Franklin & Marshall College, Duquesne University

Why we need campus men s centres dr miles groth at the university of toronto


Dr. Miles Groth (born 1946, Greensburg, Pennsylvania) is an American psychologist and philosopher.

Contents

Miles Groth httpsi1wpcomwwwavoiceformencomwpcontent

Dr. Miles Groth Endorsing the Canadian Centre for Men and Families


Background

Educated at Franklin and Marshall College, Duquesne University and Fordham University, he has taught psychology and philosophy at St. Vincent College (Latrobe, Pennsylvania) and Wagner College (Staten Island, New York).

Authorship

Groth is the author of three books about Martin Heidegger: Preparatory Thinking in Heidegger's Teaching (1987), The Voice that Thinks: Heidegger Studies (1997) and Translating Heidegger (2004), as well as a series of articles on existential analysis.

He is the author of several chapters in books on psychotherapy, and numerous articles in psychology and philosophy journals.

He is also the author of Pericopes (a privately printed collection of poems) and Engaging College Men: Discovering What Works.

Editorship

As founding editor of Thymos: Journal of Boyhood Studies and general editor of the International Journal of Men's Health, he has advanced the interdisciplinary study of boyhood and men's wellness. He has lectured on the topic of boyhood in Australia and Canada, as well as the United States. He is an editor for New Male Studies: An International Journal.

Activism

In 2013 Miles Groth gave a lecture at the University of Toronto titled "Caring About University Men - Why We Need Campus Men’s Centres in a Time of Crisis". There were mixed reactions to this. A "Men and Boys in Crisis" rally held the following day at 11am in Queen's Park by men's rights activists was disrupted by Bash Back! protesters from University of Toronto's OPIRG group. They had prepared via a workshop held the previous day."

References

Miles Groth Wikipedia