About Time We Stop Sweeping it Under the Carpet - The Effects of Psychological Abuse on Endocrine Conditions in Women in India. [PDF]
Bhat S.
europepmc +1 more source
A Rare Grotesque Skeletal Deformity: Munchmeyer's Disease. [PDF]
Mishra D, Dhooria A.
europepmc +1 more source
'The People are Hamlet’s Friend: Meta-Theatricality and Politics in Ivo Bresan’s Predstava Hamleta u selu Mrdusa Donja' [PDF]
Milutinovic, Z
core
Regressing to Nature: Culture Industry and Fascism in Times of Ecological Crisis
Constellations, EarlyView.
Heiko Stubenrauch
wiley +1 more source
‘Let's Turn the Grass Into Meat’: Animal Husbandry as Women's Work in Cold War North Korea
ABSTRACT In postcolonial North Korea, the future of the nation was said to be a function of the feedlot. Unobtainable on the battlefields of the recently ended Korean War, liberation and unification of the peninsula became a question of competitive developmentalism.
Sunho Ko, Derek J. Kramer
wiley +1 more source
"Fun for some, terrible for others" Gender, risk and responsibility in young people's stories about alcohol consumption. [PDF]
Rúdólfsdóttir AG, Guðjohnsen RÞ.
europepmc +1 more source
‘From the Fields Into the Bars’: The Story of Israel's First Transgender Novel, The Cut (1977)
ABSTRACT In 1977, an Israeli transgender woman, Judy Spotheim, published an autobiographical novel entitled The Cut. It describes the emergence of a trans community in the commercial‐sex areas of Tel Aviv‐Jaffa, hoping to humanise trans women (coccinelles). This article is the first to study the novel and present a biography of Spotheim.
Gil Engelstein, Iris Rachamimov
wiley +1 more source
Dynamics of sensory and decisional biases in perceptual decision making: Insights from the face distortion illusion. [PDF]
Gao Y, Chen S, Rahnev D.
europepmc +1 more source
Literary Traditions in \u3cem\u3eEl fabricante de fantasmas\u3c/em\u3e by Roberto Arlt [PDF]
Troiano, James J.
core +1 more source
Flap Anatomies and Victorian Veils: Penetrating the Female Reproductive Interior
ABSTRACT This article examines the reappearance in the early nineteenth century of anatomical flapbooks in the context of obstetrical education in Britain, America and France. It asks why liftable paper flaps were reintroduced at this time after their disappearance from medical atlases in the eighteenth century.
Margaret Carlyle, Marcia D. Nichols
wiley +1 more source

