2,673 research outputs found

    Protein hydrogen exchange in denaturant: quantitative analysis by a two-process model

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    Multiculturalism and the formation of a diasporic counterpublic in Roy K. Kiyooka's StoneDGloves

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    This essay considers how recent diasporic writing has questioned the liberal democratic claims of Canada’s multicultural policies to recognise the history and culture of its diasporic citizens. At the core of the essay is a detailed reading of Roy Kiyooka’s catalogue of poems and photographs, StoneDGloves (1970), which considers how Kiyooka traces a history of race-labour in the foundations of the Canadian nation state, and attempts to redress state policies of racial exclusion and discrimination in Canada’s national narrative. But the essay also supplements this reading with a discussion of the ways in which the history of race-labour migrancy and the discourse of racial exclusion is figured in Larissa Lai’s Salt Fish Girl (2002) and Roy Miki’s Random Access File (1995). In so doing, I suggest that these texts contribute to the formation of a diasporic counterpublic, or a rhetorical site for articulating histories of migration and racialization

    A Poetics of Place in the World-System: West Coast Modernism and the Integration of Vancouver into the Global Economy

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    Considerations of place and the local can help to shed light on the specific ways in which literature and culture have mediated the global process of accumulation and dispossession associated with the capitalist world-system. If social geography and world-systems analysis can help to map and historicise space and place in terms of a global history of capitalist expansion, literature can also help to make sense of the ways in which the unequal and uneven development of capitalist modernity is experienced, understood and contested in specific locations. By situating the West Coast avant-garde poetics associated with the literary magazine TISH and the Kootenay School of Writing in relation to Vancouver’s place in the changing global economic system, this essay considers how the local provides a provisional site for an anti-imperialist poetics that defamiliarizes global processes of capital accumulation and its economies of dispossession and exclusion. In so doing, it suggests that contemporary West Coast experimental writing can be read as a form of peripheral modernism that interrupts the uneven and unequal logic of capitalist modernity and invites readers to reflect on the historical forms of dispossession and exploitation associated with globalization

    Robert J.C. Young. Postcolonialism: An Historical Introduction.

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    A business plan for iXa walker

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    Thesis (S.B.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, 2010.Each author submitted a separate title page. Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references.A market study was performed to determine the feasibility of the iXa Walker. The walker industry is about to enter a large growth due to the entry of millions of baby boomers into the durable medical equipment market. Using data from the United States Census, the industry databases Hoovers and Frost and Sullivan, and market interviews we determined the market potential for the iXa Walker and drafted recommendations for bringing the product to market. We recommend a limited initial launch of the product to a test market consisting of Boston area nursing home patients in order to gather feedback on the product's capability as a geriatric walker. This should be followed by a launch in local retail stores and a low cost marketing campaign aimed at generating buzz for the product and educating potential users of its capabilities. After two years the iXa walker should be marketed more aggressively to a national audience. At a price of 240wepredictaprofitmarginof38240 we predict a profit margin of 38% and a gross margin of 52% by the fifth year of sales. In the fifth year we expect revenues of 193 thousand and that the product will become marketable by the third year of sales.by Stephen A. Morton and Geng Tan.S.B

    Integrated control of vector-borne diseases of livestock--pyrethroids: panacea or poison?

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    Tick- and tsetse-borne diseases cost Africa approximately US$4-5 billion per year in livestock production-associated losses. The use of pyrethroid-treated cattle to control ticks and tsetse promises to be an increasingly important tool to counter this loss. However, uncontrolled use of this technology might lead to environmental damage, acaricide resistance in tick populations and a possible exacerbation of tick-borne diseases. Recent research to identify, quantify and to develop strategies to avoid these effects are highlighted
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