1,259 research outputs found

    The competing claims of crime versus heritage in A Memento for Istanbul, Ahmed Umit

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    This article notes the competing narrative drives, in A Memento for Istanbul byAhmed Ümit, of a crime police procedural and of a celebration of the history of Istanbul. It examines the tensions in play with these competing trajectories and questions whether they compete for attention in an expansive layering of the readerly experience, or pull in opposite and damaging directions? Noting that readers are always plural, and some will look for the whodunit while others will enjoy the historical information, the paper traces the different ways in which history is used in the novel, beginning with the obvious placing of the murder victims at the various cultural sites which trace the emerging history of the city, starting with Byzantium and ending in the present. This mix of taut crime narrative and travel guide, the article concludes, could perhaps be most usefully considered as a hybrid text, a ‘cross-over’ novel incorporating two separate generic expectations where neither is secondary to the other

    Jeanette Winterson: interrogating masculinity with violence

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    Jeanette Winterson is known for the way she questions gender categories and confounds expectations of the feminine, from Villanelle’s active swashbuckling to the Dog Woman’s casual violence, from the unknown narrator of Written on the Body who rejects gendered identity to the fluid interplay of the narrator of The PowerBook shuffling between masculine and feminine via the engorged tulip, Winterson is someone we look to for texts that can unpack gender stereotypes. Her self-reflexive post modern texts deconstruct the divisions between masculinity and femininity

    Method of measuring the thickness of radioactive thin films

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    Thickness monitor consists of proportional X-ray counter coupled to pulse counting system, copper filter over face of counter, rotatable collimator containing radioactive source, and rotatable shutter. Monitor can be used as integral part of neutron generator. It has been used to measure titanium tritide film thicknesses from 0.1 to 30 micrometers

    Bankruptcy

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    Collagenolytic and phosphatase activity in the rat mandible after functional protrusion

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    The effect of chronic mandibular protrusion on the collagenolytic and phosphatase activity of several mandibular bone sites and the condylar cartilage was evaluated. Ninety-three male Sprague-Dawley rats were equally divided into two experimental and one control group. One experimental group wore a protrusive appliance for 2 weeks, the other for 4 weeks. All animals were killed at 59 days of age. Collagenolytic, alkaline and acid phosphatase activities were determined in the condylar cartilage, the subchondral bone and condylar neck, and in the gonial angle and coronoid process. In the cartilage and subchondral bone, the protrusive appliance caused a reduction in collagenolytic and alkaline phosphatase activity. In the condylar neck, it caused a large increase in collagenolytic activity and a decrease in alkaline phosphatase activity in both experimental groups. In the gonial angle and coronoid process, the appliance increased the collagenolytic activity only in the 2-week group. In the 4-week group, the alkaline phosphatase and collagenolytic activities were not different from the activities in those tissues in the control animals. Thus a protrusive appliance induced quantitative changes in enzyme activities in condylar cartilage and mandibular bone. The increase in collagenolytic activity (representing increased bone resorption) occurred typically in areas of muscle attachment and might have been the result of the neuromuscular changes induced by the protrusive appliance. The recovery to normal values of collagenolytic activity in the coronoid process and gonial angle of the 4-week group suggests that at these sites the muscles (and subperiosteal bone) might have adapted to their new biomechanical environment after the longer period of appliance wear.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/28165/1/0000617.pd

    PediDraw: A web-based tool for drawing a pedigree in genetic counseling

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Drawing a pedigree is a prerequisite in genetic counseling. In medical records, a pedigree is useful to document the family history of the patient. Drawing a pedigree is also necessary in collecting genetic resources for medical research such as positional cloning. Currently, most pedigrees are drawn by hand or by drawing software. Due to the special requirements in a standardized pedigree, generating a pedigree by these methods is usually time-consuming and requires professionals. This limits the usage of a pedigree as demanded in remote diagnosis or online counseling from the counselees to send an electronic pedigree.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We developed an online pedigree drawing tool, PediDraw, which enables users to generate pedigrees after inputting the family information step-by-step on web. It outputs a pedigree or table to present a family history to the counselors.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>PediDraw is a user-friendly web-based drawing tool. It is accessible via Internet.</p

    Characterization of the “in vitro pulp chamber” using the cytotoxicity of phenol

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/71980/1/j.1600-0714.1989.tb00744.x.pd

    Performance of Water Recirculation Loop Maintenance Components for the Advanced Spacesuit Water Membrane Evaporator

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    Water loop maintenance components to maintain the water quality of the Advanced Spacesuit Water Membrane Evaporation (SWME) water recirculation loop have undergone a comparative performance evaluation with a recirculating control loop which had no water quality maintenance. Results show that periodic water maintenance can improve performance of the SWME. The SWME is a heat rejection device under development at the NASA Johnson Space Center to perform thermal control for advanced spacesuits. One advantage of this technology is the potential for a significantly greater degree of tolerance to contamination when compared to the existing sublimator technology. The driver for the evaluation of water recirculation maintenance components was to enhance the robustness of the SWME through the leveraging of fluid loop management lessons learned from the International Space Station (ISS). A patented bed design that was developed for a United Technologies Aerospace System military application provided a low pressure drop means for water maintenance in the SWME recirculation loop. The bed design is coupled with high capacity ion exchange resins, organic adsorbents, and a cyclic methodology developed for the Extravehicular Mobility Unit (EMU) Transport Water loop. The maintenance cycle included the use of a biocide delivery component developed for the ISS to introduce a biocide in a microgravity compatible manner for the Internal Active Thermal Control System (IATCS). The leveraging of these water maintenance technologies to the SWME recirculation loop is a unique demonstration of applying the valuable lessons learned on the ISS to the next generation of manned spaceflight Environmental Control and Life Support System (ECLSS) hardware
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