Results 71 to 80 of about 40,650 (259)
In honor of Svetomir Hadži Jordanov’s 70th birthday
Editorial biography
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The Syphilis Ward: An Overlooked Turning Point in Sigmund Freud's Early Medical Career
ABSTRACT Historians of medicine have traditionally identified Sigmund Freud's encounter with Jean‐Martin Charcot at the Salpêtrière in Paris (1885–1886) as the decisive turning point in his intellectual development. Yet an earlier and largely overlooked phase of his medical formation may have played an equally formative role: his clinical service in ...
Bruno Halioua, Charles Taieb
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ABSTRACT The 2024 International Conference on Functional Neurological Disorders brought together clinicians, researchers, advocates, and service‐user representatives to discuss recent developments in functional neurological disorder and related functional disorders.
Yadira Velazquez‐Rodriquez +2 more
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URDU-A RESEARCH REVIEW OF MAULANA DIN MUHAMMAD WAFAI'S WORK ON RELIGIOUS AND LITERARY BIOGRAPHY
Maulana Din Mohammad Wafai was an eminent religious scholar, freedom fighter, journalist, columnist, historian, and best biographer. There are many important aspects of his life, each of which is required to write permanent articles.
Asfan Khatoon Khushk, Bashir Ahmed Rind
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Are Academic Executives Greener? Evidence From China
ABSTRACT This paper investigates the impact of executives with academic backgrounds (“academic executives”) on corporate green patents. We find that both the presence of academic executives and the proportion of academic executives have a significantly positive impact on firms' green patents, and this effect is positively associated with the firm's ...
Kai Xing +4 more
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Julien Green and the Art of Biographical Writing
Contemporary critics agree that biographical writing belongs as much to the domain of Literature as it does to History. Mauriac saw parallels between biographical writing and the novel form.
Michael O’Dwyer
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How digitisation of herbaria reveals the botanical legacy of the First World War
Digitisation of herbarium collections is bringing greater understanding to bear on the complexity of narratives relating to the First World War and its aftermath – scientific and societal. Plant collecting during the First World War was more widespread than previously understood, contributed to the psychological well‐being of those involved and ...
Christopher Kreuzer, James A. Wearn
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“I Liked Reading the Kids’ Stories Best”: Notes from a Kids’ Book Club in Australia
Biography remains a highly popular genre in children’s literature internationally, yet, at least in the Australian context, we know relatively little about how children engage with it.
Kate Douglas
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Capacity building needed to reap the benefits of access to biodiversity collections
Global conservation efforts increasingly depend on digitised natural history collections, yet the benefits of this digital data are not equally shared. We analysed biodiversity specimens and citation data from Montserrat and the Cayman Islands to assess who collected these specimens, how they are used, and by whom.
Quentin Groom +16 more
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Virginia Woolf’s “New School of Biographies” and Eighteenth-century Life-Writing: a Sense of Kinship
Woolf was often critical of the way biographers practiced their art and the instances of her commendation of them are rare. However, in the 1920s, it became clear to her that a stark change had come over the way lives were being written. This resulted in
Maryam Thirriard
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