13,896 research outputs found
Janet Halley and the Art of Status Quo Maintenance
Over the past few years, Janet Halley emerged as one of the most avid critics of campus rape feminist activists, activists who push for the reformulation of university investigative rules to shift the burden of proof from the accuser to the accused. Halley contends that Title IX policies, embedded with affirmative consent, are not only procedurally unsound, but bad for boys, bad for sex, and bad for feminism, charging its agenda with âradical feminismâ influences. Halleyâs stance on campus rape is consistent with her long-held âqueer theoryâ and its anti-feminist deregulatory drive. In this article, I argue that Halleyâs âqueer theory,â which she developed by polemically critiquing Catharine Mackinnonâs work, in an attempt to extol âsex positivismâ in legal academia with the dignity of âfancyâ theory, in effect stands Mackinnon on her head. By inverting Mackinnonâs gender/ sex constructions, Halleyâs theory fronts as an idealist proposition indicting feminism with the invention of sexual injury and inspiring women to manipulate innocuous facts into scandalous protest.
Flipping Mackinnonâs equality approach when it comes to legal rules takes Halley to the right of âconsentâ where Mackinnon had gone to its âleft.â By mirroring Mackinnonâs critique of âconsent,â except from the right, Halleyâs theorizing echoes a sexual libertarian agenda without/before feminism. It defends male sexual entitlement avant liberal feminism.
Ideologically, such theoretic formulations, along with the bundle of rules they advocate for, are designed to keep pressure on ruling liberal feminism from departing in its understanding of sex from the âpathologyâ model whereby all men are good except for those who are âpathologicallyâ violent (classical liberalism) in the direction of understanding sexual entitlement as part of the social construction of maleness. By clamoring from the right of liberal feminism, mainstream liberal feminism is kept in check.
In order to explain the various elements of Halleyâs theories on gender/sex and expose their underlying pre-feminist âclassical liberalâ orientation, I position her comparatively within the gender/sex theories of the non-liberal academic left: Mackinnon (her antagonist), Duncan Kennedy (her ally), and Judith Butler (her theoretical homebody). I analyze the way these theorists used the theoretical traditions of Marxism, post-modernism, and post-structuralism to posit a relationship between gender and sex: sex is gender simpliciter (Mackinnon), gender is sex simpliciter (Halley), and the split difference between gender and sex (Kennedy). This exercise illuminates the doctrinal approaches of each theory, be it to the left or right of consent. I conclude the article with a succinct critique of Halleyâs theoretic excursions and argue Halley is guilty of five themes of âmisrecognition:â (A) theoretical, oscillating between an antagonism to the very idea of sexual injury and proposing a neutral proceduralist approach to identifying it; (B) political, targeting radical feminism with her critique while smashing liberal feminism on the way; (C) sociological, reading womenâs sexual injury through the eyes of an âuninjurableâ promiscuous gay man advocating a radical sexual ideology; (D) ideological, attempting to ally her sexual libertarianism with the left when the ideological universe it travels is âclassical liberalism,â definitively, the leftâs most pronounced critic; and (E )historical, advocating a âsex positiveâ agenda in radically sex positivist times
Sex and Reproduction in the Transmission of Infectious Uveitis
Current data permit only speculations regarding sex differences in the prevalence of infectious uveitis between women and men because uveitis case surveys do not uniformly report gender data. Differences in prevalence that are reported in the literature could relate to simple differences in the number of women and men at risk for infection or to biological differences between men and women. Compared to other types of uveitis, infectious uveitis may be directly related to occupational exposures or sexual behaviors, which differ between women and men, and may mask actual biological differences in susceptibility to ocular manifestations of the infection and its prognosis. In infectious uveitis for which there is no element of sexual transmission and data is available, prevalence of ocular disease is roughly equal between women and men. Women also have a unique relationship with infectious uveitis in their role as mothers. Vertical transmission of infections such as herpes simplex, toxoplasmosis, and cytomegalovirus can produce severe chorioretinitis in neonates
Lateral fricatives and lateral emphatics in southern Saudi Arabia and Mehri
Arabic was traditionally described as lughat al-ÎĄÄd âthe language of ÎĄÄdâ due to the perceived unusualness of the sound. From SÄ«bawayhiâs description, early Arabic ÎĄÄd was clearly a lateral or lateralized emphatic. Lateral fricatives are assumed to have formed part of the phoneme inventory of Proto-Semitic, and are attested in Modern South Arabian languages (MSAL) today. In Arabic, a lateral realization of ÎĄÄd continues to be attested in some recitations of the QurÎÄn. For Arabic, the lateral ÎĄÄd described by SÄ«bawayhi was believed to be confined to dialects spoken in ĐaÎĄramawt. Recent fieldwork by Asiri and al-Azraqi, however, has identified lateral and lateralized emphatics in dialects of southern ÎAsÄ«r and the Saudi TihÄmah. These sounds differ across the varieties, both in their phonation (voicing) and manner of articulation â sonorants and voiced and voiceless fricatives â in their
degree of laterality, and in their phonological behaviour: the lateralized ÎĄÄd in the southern Yemeni dialect of GhaylÎabbÄn, for example, has a non-lateralized allophone in the environment of /r/ or /l/. Recent phonetic work conducted by Watson on the Modern South Arabian language, Mehri, shows a similar range of cross-dialect variety in the realization of the lateral(ized) emphatic. In
this paper, we discuss different reflexes of lateral(ized) emphatics in four dialects of the Saudi TihÄmah; we show that some of these dialects contrast cognates of *ÎĄ and *Î; and we show that lateral emphatics attested in dialects of the Modern South Arabian language, Mehri, spoken in areas considerably to the south of the Saudi TihÄmah, show a similar degree of variation to that of the Arabic dialects of the Saudi TihÄmah
ISLAM RAកMATAN LI âL-âÄLAMÄȘN SEBAGAI LANDASAN DAKWAH MULTIKULTURAL: PERSPEKTIF MUHAMMAD FETHULLAH GĂLEN
This article aimed to analyze Fethullah GĂŒlenâs concept on raáž„matan li âl-âÄlamÄ«n. This concept can be used as an important basic for designing a multicultural daâwa that emphasizes: (1) love and affection; (2) tolerance; and (3) interÂfaith dialogue. This research used hermeneutic analysis. There are three important research findings. Firstly, Islam as raáž„matan li âl-âÄlamÄ«n to be reflected with love and affection. Secondly, Islam as raáž„matan li âl-âÄlamÄ«n to be reflected with interfaith dialogue. Thirdly, Islam as raáž„matan li âl-âÄlamÄ«n to be reflected as tolerance.***Artikel ini bertujuan untuk menganalisis konsep Fethullah GĂŒlen mengenai raáž„matan li âl-âÄlamÄ«n. Konsep ini dapat dijadikan landasan pentingnya memÂbangun dakwah multikultural yang menekankan pada: (1) cinta dan kasih; [2] toleÂransi; dan [3] dialog antar iman. Penelitian ini menggunakan analisis hermeÂneutika. Terdapat tiga temuan penting dalam penelitian ini. Pertama, Islam raáž„matan li âl-âÄlamÄ«n itu direfleksikan dengan cinta dan kasih. Kedua, Islam raáž„matan li âl-âÄlamÄ«n itu direfleksikan dengan dialog antar iman. Ketiga, Islam raáž„matan li âl-âÄlamÄ«n itu direfleksikan dengan toleransi
The amoebal MAP kinase response to Legionella pneumophila is regulated by DupA
SummaryThe amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum can support replication of Legionella pneumophila. Here we identify the dupA gene, encoding a putative tyrosine kinase/dual-specificity phosphatase, in a screen for D. discoideum mutants altered in allowing L. pneumophila intracellular replication. Inactivation of dupA resulted in depressed L. pneumophila growth and sustained hyperphosphorylation of the amoebal MAP kinase ERK1, consistent with loss of a phosphatase activity. Bacterial challenge of wild-type amoebae induced dupA expression and resulted in transiently increased ERK1 phosphorylation, suggesting that dupA and ERK1 are part of a response to bacteria. Indeed, over 500 of the genes misregulated in the dupAâ mutant were regulated in response to L. pneumophila infection, including some thought to have immune-like functions. MAP kinase phosphatases are known to be highly upregulated in macrophages challenged with L. pneumophila. Thus, DupA may regulate a MAP kinase response to bacteria that is conserved from amoebae to mammals
FK506 IN PEDIATRIC KIDNEY-TRANSPLANTATION - PRIMARY AND RESCUE EXPERIENCE
Between December 14, 1989, and December 17, 1993,43 patients undergoing kidney transplantation alone at the Childrenâs Hospital of Pittsburgh received FK506 as the primary immunosuppressive agent. The mean recipient age was 10.2 ± 4.8 years (range 0.7â17.4), with 7 (16%) children under 5 years of age and 2 (5%) under 2 years of age. Fifteen (35%) children underwent retransplantation, and 5 (12%) had a panel reactive antibody level greater than 40%. Twenty-two (51%) cases were with cadaveric donors, and 21 (49%) were with living donors. The mean follow-up is 25 ± 14 months. There were no deaths. One and three year actuarial graft survival was 98% and 85%. The mean serum creatinine and BUN were 1.2 ± 0.6 mg/dl and 26 ± 11 mg/dl; the calculated creatinine clearance was 75 ± 23 ml/min/1.73 m(2). Twenty-four (62%) patients have been successfully withdrawn from steroids, and 24 (62%) require no anti-hypertensive medication. Improved growth was seen, particularly in pre-adolescent children off steroids. Between July 28, 1990, and December 2, 1993, 24 children were referred for rescue therapy with FK506, 14.6 ± 16.4 months (range 1.1â53.2) after transplantation. Nineteen (79%) were referred because of resistant rejection; 4 (17%) were referred because of proteinuria; 1 (4%) was switched because of steroid-related obesity. There were no deaths. One and two year graft survival was 75% and 68%. Seventeen (71%) patients were successfully rescued, including 1 of 2 patients who arrived on dialysis. Four (24%) of the successfully rescued patients were weaned off steroids. While not without side effects, which include nephrotoxicity, neurotoxicity, diabetogenicity, and viral complications, FK506 appears to be an effective immunosuppressive agent for both primary and rescue therapy after kidney transplantation. Its steroid-sparing qualities may be of particular importance in the pediatric population
High Strength E-Glass/CNF Fibers Nanocomposite
Glass fibers are among the most versatile industrial materials known today, where 4 billion pounds of glass are used every year. They are readily produced from raw materials, which are available in virtually unlimited supply. To compensate for its low tensile strength, glass is usually mixed with other materials such as nanofibers and nanospheres, to form what is called glass nanocomposites . Nevertheless, glass composites still suffer from different weaknesses such as: poor dispersion, poor alignment and orientation of reinforcing materials (due to their short lengths relative to the defect sizes in the composite matrices), in addition to the difficulties associated with handling randomly oriented nanofibers and nanotubes in an industrial setting. The aim of this work is to develop a novel method for utilizing carbon nanofibers to increase the strength of glass fibers by producing continuous hybrid glass fibers. The method makes use of the high aspect ratio of the CNFs along with the glass filament drawing process to imbed, disperse and align the CNFs in glass fibers. Short CNTs will bridge the small cracks in the glass fiber filaments, whereas, relatively long CNFs will take care of the larger defects. The novel hybrid glass fibers will have a wide range of applications particularly in aerospace and automotive industrie
Re-composing the digital present
This paper investigates the temporality that is produced in some recent and historical examples of media art. In exploring works by Janet Cardiff, Dennis Del Favero, and Omer Fast, I use the philosophy of Michel Serres and Gilles Deleuze to understand the convergence of temporalities that are composed in the digital present, as one moment in time overlays another moment. Developing Serres' concept of multi-temporality and Deleuze's philosophy of time and memory into a means to understand the non-linear time presented in these works, I argue that the different compositional strategies enacted by these artists provide the aesthetic grounding to experience âtemporal thickness.â From here I investigate the interactive digital artworks Frames by Grahame Weinbren and Can You See Me Now? by the artist group Blast Theory. In this investigation, I understand interaction with technology, and the way that it shapes our sensory and processual experience, as a specifically temporal and temporalizing transaction, where human movements in the present are overlayed by technological processes
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