396 research outputs found
George Eliot\u27s Wesleyan Madonna
George Eliot\u27s favorite painting in all the world was Raphael\u27s Sistine Madonnaā, which she and George Henry Lewes first viewed at Dresden when she was writing Adam Bede. In her journal, she recorded that on her first sight of the painting she sat down briefly, but then a sort of awe, as if I were suddenly in the presence of some glorious being, made my heart swell too much for me to remain comfortably, and we hurried out of the room (Haight 264). Each day as they came to the gallery, they would return last to what Lewes termed āthis sublimest pictureā (Haight 264).
Hugh Witemeyer, in George Eliot and the Visual Arts, discusses in considerable detail Eliot\u27s artistic taste and knowledge of the visual arts. In commenting on her love for Raphael\u27s Sistine Madonnaā and European portraiture generally, he says that portraiture of course posed the problem that occupied her as a novelist: how best to represent human beings (22). After portraiture, she most admired the sacred and heroic painting of the Italian Renaissance and of Rubens because there she could see \la union of the ideal with the real that she Longed to recapture in her own art (22). Eliot shared Lewes\u27 view that āa well-painted face, with a noble expression, is the highest reach of art, as the human soul is the highest thing we knowā (Witemeyer 25). Commenting further on her taste, Witemeyer says:
On the one hand, she was culturally predisposed toward Raphael and a Raphaelite norm of beauty - classical, spiritualized, and serene. On the other hand, she could also take pleasure in the style of Rubens - baroque, fleshly and dynamic. (23).
To George Eliot, expression was all-important, being lithe gateway to the soul, the mind, the passions, the sentiments, transmitting the invisible life through a visible language of facial and corporal signs (Witemeyer 27)
Infrared Optical Properties of Ferropericlase (Mg1-xFexO): Experiment and Theory
The temperature dependence of the reflectance spectra of magnesium oxide
(MgO) and ferropericlase (Mg1-xFexO, for x=0.06 and x=0.27) have been measured
over a wide frequency range (~50 to 32000 cm-1) at 295 and 6 K. The complex
dielectric function has been determined from a Kramers-Kronig analysis of the
reflectance. The spectra of the doped materials resembles pure MgO in the
infrared region, but with much broader resonances. We use a shell model to
calculate the dielectric function of ferropericlase, including both anharmonic
phonon-phonon interactions and disorder scattering. These data are relevant to
understanding the heat conductivity of ferropericlase in the earth's lower
mantle.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
Risk, commercialism and social purpose: Repositioning the English housing association sector
Originally seen as the āthird armā of UK housing policy, the independent, not-for-profit housing association sector had long been seen as effective in āfilling the gapā where the state or market were unable to provide for households in need. Since the 1980s in particular, successive governments had viewed housing associations in favourable terms as efficient, semi-autonomous social businesses, capable of leveraging significant private funding. By 2015, in contrast, central government had come to perceive the sector as inefficient, bureaucratic and wasteful of public subsidy. Making use of institutional theory, this paper considers this paradigm shift and examines the organisational responses to an increasingly challenging operating environment. By focusing, in particular, on large London housing associations, the paper analyses their strategic decision-making to address the opportunities and threats presented. The paper argues that in facing an era of minimal subsidy, low security and high risk, the 2015 reforms represent a critical juncture for the sector. Housing organisations face a stark dilemma about whether to continue a strategy of āprofit for purposeā or to embrace an unambiguously commercial ethos. The article contends that the trajectory of decision-making (although not unidirectional) leads ultimately towards an increased exposure to risk and vulnerability to changes in the housing market. More fundamentally, the attempt to reconcile social and commercial logics is likely to have wider consequences for the legitimacy of the sector
On the optical conductivity of Electron-Doped Cuprates I: Mott Physics
The doping and temperature dependent conductivity of electron-doped cuprates
is analysed. The variation of kinetic energy with doping is shown to imply that
the materials are approximately as strongly correlated as the hole-doped
materials. The optical spectrum is fit to a quasiparticle scattering model;
while the model fits the optical data well, gross inconsistencies with
photoemission data are found, implying the presence of a large, strongly doping
dependent Landau parameter
Rash morphology as a predictor of COVID-19 severity:A systematic review of the cutaneous manifestations of COVID-19
Approximately 6% of those with COVIDā19 will experience cutaneous manifestations. Examining data from this cohort could provide useful information to help with the management of COVIDā19. To that end, we conducted a systematic review primarily to assess rash morphologies associated with COVIDā19 and their relationship with disease severity. Secondary outcomes include demographics, distribution, dermatological symptoms, timeline, diagnostic method and medication history. The literature was searched for all patients with skin manifestations thought to be related to suspected or confirmed COVIDā19. Patients with a history of dermatological, rheumatological or occupational skin disorders were excluded. Of the 2056 patients selected, the most common morphologies were chilblainālike lesions (54.2%), maculopapular (13.6%) and urticaria (8.3%). Chilblainālike lesions were more frequent in the younger population (mean age 21.5, standard deviation Ā± 10.8) and were strongly linked with milder disease, not requiring an admission (odds ratio [OR] 35.36 [95% confidence interval {CI} 23.58, 53.03]). Conversely, acroāischaemia and livedo reticularis were associated with worse outcomes, including a need for ICU (OR 34.01 [95% CI 16.62, 69.57] and OR 5.57 [95% CI 3.02, 10.30], respectively) and mortality (OR 25.66 [95% CI 10.83, 60.79] and OR 10.71 [95% CI 4.76, 24.13], respectively). Acral lesions were the most common site (83.5%). 35.1% experienced pruritus, 16.4% had pain and 4.7% reported a burning sensation. 34.1% had asymptomatic lesions. Rash was the only symptom in 20.9% and occurred before or alongside systemic symptoms in 12.4%. 28.3% had a positive polymerase chain reaction nasopharyngeal swab and 5.4% had positive antibodies, while 21.9% tested negative and 45.1% were not tested. In conclusion, COVIDā19 causes a variety of rashes, which may cause symptoms and add to morbidity. Rash type could be helpful in determining COVIDā19 prognosis
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