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British Society of Gastroenterology guidelines on the management of irritable bowel syndrome
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) remains one of the most common gastrointestinal disorders seen by clinicians in both primary and secondary care. Since publication of the last British Society of Gastroenterology (BSG) guideline in 2007, substantial ...
Dipesh H Vasant +2 more
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This is the first UK national guideline to concentrate on acute lower gastrointestinal bleeding (LGIB) and has been commissioned by the Clinical Services and Standards Committee of the British Society of Gastroenterology (BSG). The Guidelines Development
Kathryn Oakland +2 more
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Tři pohledy na Posvátný hlad Barryho Unsworthe [PDF]
Barry Unsworth’s novel Sacred Hunger (1992) is one of the most notable works of British fiction that deal with the country’s involvement in the slave trade in the eighteenth century and its continuing impact. This essay focuses on Sacred Hunger, analyses
Petra Johana Poncarová
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Gender and Genre: From the Female Bildungsroman to the Postfeminist Coming-of-Age Novel [PDF]
The paper draws attention to the fact that the introduction of gender perspectives into the studies of the Bildungsroman, or novel of development, has opened up the possibility of delineating specific female versions of the genre, ranging from the ...
Soňa Šnircová
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London's Burning: Structuralist Readings of the Urban Inferno in the 1950's British Literature of Multi-culturalism [PDF]
This article examines a literary triangle treating a modern re-imagining of the Dantean Inferno in Caribbean migrant experience. Sam Selvon’s The Lonely Londoners advanced a stylistic and intellectual revolution in post-World War II British literature ...
Tadd Graham Fernée
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Between In-Vocation and Pro-Vocation. A Hermeneutics of the Poetic Prayer [PDF]
This article investigates the phenomenon of poetic prayer as one that happens in the liminal space between the in-vocation of a close relationship with God and the provocation of versatile responses to God’s presence.
Małgorzata Hołda
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Two Sides of Fear – Gothic Terror in Neil Gaiman’s Coralin [PDF]
This article is an analysis of Neil Gaiman’s children’s novel entitled Coraline, which rests on the premise that it enacts two different types of Gothic terror.
Karolina Kordala
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Upon gaining independence from Great Britain, the newly formed United States of America underwent a rapid process of cultural decolonization, including the development of a native and self-sovereign ‘American Literature’ throughout the long 19th century.
Adam Nemmers
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A.S. Byatt and the “perpetual traveller”: a reading practice for new British fiction
While most readers enjoyed, or at least admired A.S. Byatt’s Booker prize-winning novel “Possession”, many are puzzled by her work before and since. This essay argues that the problem is not the novels themselves, but rather the way that readers approach
Nicole Flynn
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“The Brontë Myth” Reception in “«Brontë’s Mistress”» by Finola Austin
The article is aimed to analyze how the novel of the contemporary British-American writer Finola Austin “Brontë’s Mistress”, through the category of intertextuality, implements a new, close to feminist, reading of the history of the Brontë’s family and ...
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