8 research outputs found

    Popular History, Postwar Liberalism, and the Role of the Public Intellectual in Richard Hofstadter's The American Political Tradition (1948)

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    This article examines the status of Richard Hofstadter's classic work The American political tradition (1948) as a 'popular history.' It uses documents drawn from Hofstadter’s personal papers, those of his publisher Alfred A. Knopf Inc., as well as several of his contemporaries, to pursue a detailed reconstruction of the manner in which the book was written, edited and reviewed, and to demonstrate how it circulated within, and was defined by, the literary culture of the 1940s and 1950s. The article explores Hofstadter’s early-career conception of himself as a scholar writing for audiences outside of the academy, reframes the significance of so-called 'middlebrow' literature, and, in doing so, offers a fresh appraisal of the links between popular historical writing, liberal politics, and the role of public intellectuals in the postwar United States

    Cohort Profile: Post-Hospitalisation COVID-19 (PHOSP-COVID) study

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    Monodisperse Metal Nanoparticle Catalysts: Synthesis, Characterizations, and Molecular Studies Under Reaction Conditions

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    We aim to develop novel catalysts that exhibit high activity, selectivity and stability under real catalytic conditions. In the recent decades, the fast development of nanoscience and nanotechnology has allowed synthesis of nanoparticles with well-defined size, shape and composition using colloidal methods. Utilization of mesoporous oxide supports effectively prevents the nanoparticles from aggregating at high temperatures and high pressures. Nanoparticles of less than 2 nm sizes were found to show unique activity and selectivity during reactions, which was due to the special surface electronic structure and atomic arrangements that are present at small particle surfaces. While oxide support materials are employed to stabilize metal nanoparticles under working conditions, the supports are also known to strongly interact with the metals through encapsulation, adsorbate spillover, and charge transfer. These factors change the catalytic performance of the metal catalysts as well as the conductivity of oxides. The employment of new in situ techniques, mainly high-pressure scanning tunneling microscopy (HPSTM) and ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (APXPS) allows the determination of the surface structure and chemical states under reaction conditions. HPSTM has identified the importance of both adsorbate mobility to catalytic turnovers and the metal substrate reconstruction driven by gaseous reactants such as CO and O-2. APXPS is able to monitor both reacting species at catalyst surfaces and the oxidation state of the catalyst while it is being exposed to gases. The surface composition of bimetallic nanoparticles depends on whether the catalysts are under oxidizing or reducing conditions, which is further correlated with the catalysis by the bimetallic catalytic systems. The product selectivity in multipath reactions correlates with the size and shape of monodisperse metal nanoparticle catalysts in structure sensitive reactions.close11111

    Synthesis of heterocyclic compounds via gold-catalysed enyne rearrangements

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    Syntheses of heterocycles using different gold-catalysed rearrangements of enynes are discussed in this chapter. The term skeletal rearrangement has been used in a broad sense to include reactions involving cyclopropyl gold carbene intermediates formed by initial enyne cyclisation, which can undergo many different transformations to give a wide range of heterocyclic structures. Other transformations involving rearrangement of propargylic esters and [3,3]-rearrangement (concerted or stepwise comprising metallic intermediates), as well as special cases, have also been covered. References to earlier work in this area and to recent reviews have been included, but the focus of the chapter is to present recent developments, interesting cases and an overview on how subtle differences in the enyne starting materials, the catalyst used or the reaction conditions can alter the reaction pathway increasing the structural diversity towards complex heterocyclic structures of high value

    Muscle Quality in Aging: a Multi-Dimensional Approach to Muscle Functioning with Applications for Treatment

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    Aging is often accompanied by declines in physical functioning which impedes older adults’ quality of life, sense of independence, and ability to perform daily tasks. Age-related decreases in skeletal muscle quantity, termed sarcopenia, have traditionally been blamed for these physical decrements. However, recent evidence suggests that the quality of muscle tissue may be more functionally relevant than its quantity. ‘Muscle quality’ has been emerging as a means to elucidate and describe the intricate intramuscular changes associated with muscle performance in the context of aging and sarcopenia. While muscle quality has most commonly been defined in terms of muscle composition or relative strength, at the core, muscle quality really describes muscle’s ability to function. Skeletal muscle displays a strong structure–function relationship by which several architectural characteristics factor into its functional capacity. This review describes the structural, physiological, and functional determinants of muscle quality at the tissue and cellular level, while also introducing other novel parameters such as sarcomere spacing and integrity, circulating biomarkers, and the muscle quality index. Muscle qualitative features are described from the perspective of how physical exercise may improve muscle quality in older adults. This broad, multidimensional perspective of muscle quality in the context of aging and sarcopenia offers comprehensive insights for consideration and integration in developing improved prognostic tools for research and clinical care, while also promoting translational approaches to the design of novel targeted intervention strategies designed to maintain function and mobility into late life

    Gold- and Platinum-Catalyzed Reactions of Enynes

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