26 research outputs found

    Catheter-associated bacteremia by Mycobacterium senegalense in Korea

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    BACKGROUND: Rapidly growing mycobacteria is recognized as one of the causative agents of catheter-related infections, especially in immunocompromised hosts. To date, however, Mycobacterium senegalense, which was known as the principal pathogen of bovine farcy, has not been reported in human infection. CASE PRESENTATION: We describe the first case of human infection by M. senegalense, which has caused catheter-related bloodstream infection in a cancer patient in Korea. The microorganism was identified by the 16S rRNA gene, rpoB, and 16S-23S rRNA gene internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequence analyses. CONCLUSION: Our first report of catheter-associated bacteremia caused by M. senegalense suggests the zoonotic nature of this species and indicates the expansion of mycobacterial species relating to human infection. M. senegalense should be considered as one of the causes of human infections in the clinical practice

    Between Speech and Writing: ‘La nouvelle litterature antillaise’?

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    The Criticism of Postcolonial Critique

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    Introduction

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    First paragraph: The publication of Retour à Reims in 2009 gained new readerships for, and to an extent renewed scholarly attention on, a thinker whose intellectual engagement is characterised by both a relevance and even an urgency with regard to contemporary cultural and political debates, and by a range of issues - pertaining to class and sexuality, most notably - that eloquently speak to each other. This was no more evident than in the Retour, which sought in a highly personal journey to trace those processes of subjectivation involved in growing up gay in a rather harsh working-class environment, in navigating - and ascending - the structures of the republican education system, in acquiring cultural capital and (some) social status, and in casting anew an eye on that itinerary with its mix of contradiction, shame and eagerness to understand past and present familial ‘choices' and the parameters within which a class-stratified society permitted them (or not). Among other insights, the text makes crucial reading for anyone wishing to understand the transformations - and continuities - in French working-class identities across the switch from support for the Communist Party to the Front national
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