Results 31 to 40 of about 6,175 (178)
Cuttings, Combings, Fettlings and Flock: Gender and Australian Wool ‘Waste’, 1900–1950
ABSTRACT As Australia's wool industry produced vast amounts of fine fleece from the nineteenth century, the wool processing and clothes manufacturing industries generated waste – products like cuttings, combings, fettlings and flock. Salvaged and then sold to waste merchants, these and other materials had a second life.
Lorinda Cramer
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Objective Evidence on the performance of foetal growth ultrasound parameters to detect the Small‐for‐Gestational‐Age (SGA) foetus for a selective cohort is limited. We report the performance of estimated foetal weight under the 10th percentile (EFW < 10th) at the last selective screening ultrasound to detect SGA based on gestational age of ...
Charles Arcus +17 more
wiley +1 more source
Review of Westerlund, F. (2020). Heidegger and the Problem of Phenomena. London: Bloomsbury.
Andriy Bogachov
doaj +1 more source
‘I, Me, Myself’: Selfhood and Melancholy in the Journals of Gertrude Savile (1697–1758)
Abstract This article examines the journals of Gertrude Savile from 1727 in light of recent scholarship on early modern and eighteenth‐century melancholy. The concept had myriad associations with medicine, physiology, the imagination, and feeling, but questions remain about how melancholy during this period was considered by those outside the narrow ...
Daniel Beaumont
wiley +1 more source
Machine Learning (ML) and Deep Learning (DL) models show potential in surpassing traditional methods including generalised linear models for healthcare predictions, particularly with large, complex datasets.
Jessica Caterson +2 more
doaj +1 more source
To belong or not to belong : variations autour du mythe associatif chez Virginia Woolf
Despite her personal and political involvement in many societies and circles, Virginia Woolf surprisingly displays a fairly ambivalent, if not critical, attitude towards them in her fiction. This is especially the case of a 1920 short-story, ‘A Society’,
Stéphanie Ravez
doaj +1 more source
Abstract The final Stuart monarch, Queen Anne, has often been overlooked in studies of visual and material culture, particularly of fashion and dress. This article is the first to undertake a qualitative and quantitative analysis of the wardrobe accounts of Queen Anne, situating her consumption within the context of the eighteenth‐century fashion ...
Sarah A. Bendall
wiley +1 more source
Bloomsbury and the Cinema: Practice and Theory of a New Form of Expression
Just as Bloomsbury introduced post-impressionism in Great Britain, the cinema was beginning to emerge as a new art, introducing new visual vocabularies and perceptions.
Floriane Reviron
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The Fountainpen and the Metronome: Bloomsbury Dancing, or not
When Lydia Lopokova, the Russian ballerina, married John Maynard Keynes, the world-famous economist, the match met with fierce disapproval on the part of his Bloomsbury friends.
Caroline Marie
doaj +1 more source

