6,387 research outputs found
Zola and the Physical Geography of War
Ămile Zolaâs account of the Franco-Prussian War and the Commune, La DĂ©bĂącle (1892), provides the basis for an account of the way in which the literary language of war speaks to the physical geography of mimetic fiction as broadly conceived, and in particular its precise concern for mud, earth, soil, and its wider concern for land and its borders
Gender Difference and Cultural Labour in French Fiction from Zola to Colette
To sketch out the parameters of the field of male and female fiction on the cultural labour of women in the early Third Republic, I offer as wilfully contrary examples: Ămile Zolaâs short story, Madame Sourdis (1880), about the art world; Guy de Maupassantâs novel of mainstream journalism, Bel-Ami (1885), and Marcelle Tinayreâs rather different novel of feminist journalism La Rebelle (1905); and finally, Coletteâs La Vagabonde (1910) which charts quasi-autobiographically RenĂ©e NĂ©rĂ©âs post-divorce journey between stage performance and writing. In thus comparing male and female accounts of womenâs role and status in the realm of cultural labour, this matrix of texts not only maps out the historical movement between centuries but also the aesthetic movement beyond the limits of exclusively male-authored French Naturalism, not simply in modernist fiction but in womenâs writing too
The Settlement of Decolonization and Post-Colonial Economic Development
Despite impressive growth in the early twenty-first century, Indonesiaâs economic performance in the post-colonial era lagged behind that of its neighbours in Malaysia and Singapore. The different development paths chosen, particularly in the treatment of foreign (and, especially, ex-colonial) investment, were central to thisâIndonesiaâs rejection of Western capital in the 1950s and 1960s, and continued suspicion of foreign economic influence in the 1970s, contrasted with the more open approach of Malaysia and Singapore. How the post-colonial foreign presence was dealt with was largely conditioned by how decolonization was settledâthe restrictive agreements reached between Indonesia and the Netherlands, and ongoing Dutch occupation of Irian Jaya, were sources of widespread resentment, and differed significantly from the more liberal approach of the British towards Malaysian and Singaporean independence. The short-term settlement of decolonization was therefore of greater significance than the longer-term nature of colonial rule in determining post-colonial economic patterns
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Seismic imaging of rapid onset of stratified turbulence in the South Atlantic Ocean
AbstractBroadband measurements of the internal wavefield will help to unlock an understanding of the energy cascade within the oceanic realm. However, there are challenges in acquiring observations with sufficient spatial resolution, especially in horizontal dimensions. Seismic reflection profiling can achieve a horizontal and vertical resolution of order meters. It is suitable for imaging thermohaline fine structure on scales that range from tens of meters to hundreds of kilometers. This range straddles the transition from internal wave to turbulent regimes. Here, the authors analyze an 80-km-long seismic image from the Falkland Plateau and calculate vertical displacement spectra of tracked reflections. First, they show that these spectra are consistent with the GarrettâMunk model at small horizontal wavenumbers (i.e., kx âČ 3 Ă 10â3 cpm). There is a transition to stratified turbulence at larger wavenumbers (i.e., kx âł 2 Ă 10â1 cpm). This transition occurs at length scales that are significantly larger than the Ozmidov length scale above which stratification is expected to modify isotropic Kolmogorov turbulence. Second, the authors observe a rapid onset of this stratified turbulence over a narrow range of length scales. This onset is consistent with a characteristic energy injection scale of stratified turbulence with a forward cascade toward smaller scales through isotropic turbulence below the Ozmidov length scale culminating in microscale dissipation. Finally, they estimate the spatial pattern of diapycnal diffusivity and show that the existence of an injection scale can increase these estimates by a factor of 2.M.F. is supported by the Department of Earth Sciences. Research activity of C.P.C. is supported by EPSRC Programme Grant EP/K034529/1 (âMathematical Underpinnings of Stratified Turbulenceâ). We thank C. Bond, A. Dickinson, K. Gunn, S. Holbrook, J. Klymak, J. Moum and S. Thorpe for their help. We are very grateful to J. Klymak for generously making available his MATLAB toolbox for calculating Garrett-Munk spectra. Department of Earth Sciences contribution number esc.XXXX.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Meteorological Society via http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/JPO-D-15-0140.
Cenozoic epeirogeny of the Indian peninsula
Peninsular India is a cratonic region with asymmetric relief manifest by eastward tilting from the 1.5 km high Western Ghats escarpment toward the flood-plains of eastward-draining rivers. Oceanic residual depth measurements on either side of India show that this west-east asymmetry is broader scale, occurring over distances of >2,000 km. Admittance analysis of free-air gravity and topography shows that the elastic thickness is 10 ± 3 km, suggesting that regional uplift is not solely caused by flexural loading. To investigate how Indian physiography is generated, we have jointly inverted 530 river profiles to determine rock uplift rate as a function of space and time. Key erosional parameters are calibrated using independent geologic constraints (e.g. emergent marine deposits, elevated paleosurfaces, uplifted lignite deposits). Our results suggest that regional tilt grew at rates of up to 0.1 mm aâŸÂč between 25 Ma and the present day. Neogene uplift initiated in the south and propagated northward along the western margin. This calculated history is corroborated by low-temperature ther- mochronologic observations, by sedimentary flux of clastic deposits into the Krishna- Godavari delta, and by sequence stratigraphic architecture along adjacent rifted margins. Onset of regional uplift predates intensification of the Indian monsoon at 8 Ma, suggesting that rock uplift rather than climatic change is responsible for modern-day relief. A positive correlation between residual depth measure- ments and shear wave velocities beneath the lithosphere suggests that regional uplift is generated and maintained by temperature anomalies of ±100 â°C within a 200 ± 25 km thick asthenospheric channel
A proposed method of grading malaria chemoprevention efficacy
The efficacy and effectiveness of antimalarial drugs are threatened by increasing levels of resistance and therefore require continuous monitoring. Chemoprevention is increasingly deployed as a malaria control measure, but there are no generally accepted methods of assessment. We propose a simple method of grading the parasitological response to chemoprevention (focusing on seasonal malaria chemoprevention) that is based on pharmacometric assessment
Radial viscous fingering of hot asthenosphere within the Icelandic plume beneath the North Atlantic Ocean
© 2017 The Icelandic mantle plume has had a significant influence on the geologic and oceanographic evolution of the North Atlantic Ocean during Cenozoic times. Full-waveform tomographic imaging of this region shows that the planform of this plume has a complex irregular shape with significant shear wave velocity anomalies lying beneath the lithospheric plates at a depth of 100â200 km. The distribution of these anomalies suggests that about five horizontal fingers extend radially beneath the fringing continental margins. The best-imaged fingers lie beneath the British Isles and beneath western Norway where significant departures from crustal isostatic equilibrium have been measured. Here, we propose that these radial fingers are generated by a phenomenon known as the SaffmanâTaylor instability. Experimental and theoretical analyses show that fingering occurs when a less viscous fluid is injected into a more viscous fluid. In radial, miscible fingering, the wavelength and number of fingers are controlled by the mobility ratio (i.e. the ratio of viscosities), by the PĂ©clet number (i.e. the ratio of advective and diffusive transport rates), and by the thickness of the horizontal layer into which fluid is injected. We combine shear wave velocity estimates with residual depth measurements around the Atlantic margins to estimate the planform distribution of temperature and viscosity within a horizontal asthenospheric layer beneath the lithospheric plate. Our estimates suggest that the mobility ratio is at least 20â50, that the PĂ©clet number is O(104), and that the asthenospheric channel is 100±20 km thick. The existence and planform of fingering is consistent with experimental observations and with theoretical arguments. A useful rule of thumb is that the wavelength of fingering is 5±1 times the thickness of the horizontal layer. Our proposal has been further tested by examining plumes of different vigor and planform (e.g. Hawaii, Cape Verde, Yellowstone). Our results support the notion that dynamic topography of the Earth's surface can be influenced by fast, irregular horizontal flow within thin, but rapidly evolving, asthenospheric fingers
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La DĂ©bĂącle d'Ămile Zola : une fiction rĂ©publicaine de la fin du Second Empire
La guerre franco-prussienne commence plusieurs fois Comment est-ce quâun nouveau rĂ©gime devrait parler du rĂ©gime quâil remplace ? Il va sans dire que Les Rougon-Macquart offrent, pendant les premiĂšres dĂ©cennies de la nouvelle RĂ©publique, la plus cĂ©lĂšbre relecture romanesque de lâEmpire, une relecture dont lâhistoricitĂ© spĂ©cifique est soulignĂ©e par ce sous-titre que lâon connaĂźt trĂšs bien : Histoire naturelle et sociale dâune famille sous le Second Empire. La publication du feuilleton du premier roman dans la sĂ©rie, La Fortune des Rougon, Ă©tait interrompue par la guerre franco-prussienne, Le SiĂšcle le publiant du 28 juin au 10 aoĂ»t 1870, et du 18 au 21 mars 1871. A lâĂ©dition originale chez Lacroix, Verboeckhoven et Cie, du 14 octobre 1871, Zola ajoute cette prĂ©face cĂ©lĂšbre qui commence ainsi : « Je veux expliquer comment une famille, un petit groupe dâĂȘtres, se comporte dans une sociĂ©tĂ©, etc.1 ». De façon peut-ĂȘtre plus symbolique quâauthentique, Zola prĂ©cise en bas de la page de cette prĂ©face son lieu et sa date : « Paris, le 1er juillet 1871 », comme si pour marquer la fin de cette « annĂ©e terrible », la dĂ©pĂȘche dâEms ayant Ă©tĂ© envoyĂ©e le 13 juillet 1870. Cette annĂ©e a Ă©tĂ© dĂ©crite rĂ©cemment par lâhistorien Quentin Deluermoz dans Le CrĂ©puscule des rĂ©volutions comme « un mille-feuille dans lequel il faut dĂ©couper avec prĂ©caution si lâon veut Ă©viter tĂ©lĂ©ologie et raccourcis2 »
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