256 research outputs found

    The Group Theatre: A Reflection of the Theatre in the Thirties

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    Sing us a song of social significance Or you can sing until you\u27re blue Let meaning shine in every line Or we won\u27t love you. This snatch of lyrics, sung in the International Ladies Garment Workers. Union revue Pins and Needles of 1937 captures an important aspect of the literary spirit of the 1930\u27s. This decade was marked by a tendency of artists towards political and social commitment, a time when the reconstruction of American society and the menace of Fascism was a cause celebre to which artists could rally. American artists had always been interested in changing society, or at least exposing the evils they perceived. But the 1930\u27s saw a new kind of commitment and dedication. The economic breakdown caused by the depression had involved a search for social alternatives much more intense than the complacency of the prosperous 1920\u27s had witnessed. To many writers of the twenties, the social enemies were straw men, the Puritans and the Philistines, and not, significantly, the system which had nurtured them. To those writers who were disgusted by the emptiness they perceived in American during this decade, escape lay simply in flight to the bohemianism of Greenwich Village or the cultural richness of Paris. The only time the twenties had witnessed a consolidation of the artistic-intellectual community was the rally to defend Sacco and Venzettl. But the disparate elements brought together were dispersed after the execution of the anarchists, not, to converge again until the middle of the next decade. By this time, the writers had realized that their pens could be formidable weapons, and remained at home to fight

    The Group Theatre: A Reflection of the Theatre in the Thirties

    Get PDF
    Sing us a song of social significance Or you can sing until you\u27re blue Let meaning shine in every line Or we won\u27t love you. This snatch of lyrics, sung in the International Ladies Garment Workers. Union revue Pins and Needles of 1937 captures an important aspect of the literary spirit of the 1930\u27s. This decade was marked by a tendency of artists towards political and social commitment, a time when the reconstruction of American society and the menace of Fascism was a cause celebre to which artists could rally. American artists had always been interested in changing society, or at least exposing the evils they perceived. But the 1930\u27s saw a new kind of commitment and dedication. The economic breakdown caused by the depression had involved a search for social alternatives much more intense than the complacency of the prosperous 1920\u27s had witnessed. To many writers of the twenties, the social enemies were straw men, the Puritans and the Philistines, and not, significantly, the system which had nurtured them. To those writers who were disgusted by the emptiness they perceived in American during this decade, escape lay simply in flight to the bohemianism of Greenwich Village or the cultural richness of Paris. The only time the twenties had witnessed a consolidation of the artistic-intellectual community was the rally to defend Sacco and Venzettl. But the disparate elements brought together were dispersed after the execution of the anarchists, not, to converge again until the middle of the next decade. By this time, the writers had realized that their pens could be formidable weapons, and remained at home to fight

    Cardiac Trauma

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    Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation for Complex Multiorgan System Trauma

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    With growing experience, the indications for salvage extracorporeal membrane oxygenation continue to expand. We describe a successful application of extracorporeal support in a polytrauma patient presenting with profound hypothermia, respiratory failure, and whom was later found to have an intracranial hemorrhage. We advocate the role of salvage therapy even in patients with complex pathophysiology despite perceived relative or absolute contraindications to extracorporeal support

    Modeling Human Cancer-induced Cachexia

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    Talbert et al. developed an inducible mouse model of cachexia caused by pancreatic cancer. This model exhibits features of the human condition, including the progressive depletion of muscle and adipose tissue associated with tumor progression

    Ciprofloxacin Precipitates in the Corneal Epithelium

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    MORAL JUDGMENT AND DOGMATISM IN ADULT COLLEGE STUDENTS.

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