Results 181 to 190 of about 11,690 (228)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
International Journal of Middle East Studies, 2015
My starting point is the present—certainly a critical and loaded moment for scholars of the modern Middle East. It is incumbent upon us to take a step back and to rethink how to create new concepts, new narratives, new explanatory schemes, new historicities, and new visions of the future.
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My starting point is the present—certainly a critical and loaded moment for scholars of the modern Middle East. It is incumbent upon us to take a step back and to rethink how to create new concepts, new narratives, new explanatory schemes, new historicities, and new visions of the future.
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Archives of Ophthalmology, 1960
Heterotopia may be defined as a position other than the usual. The occurrence of small variations of the position of the macula in relation to the pupillary axis of the eye is evidenced by the variability of the angle K. If the macula is markedly displaced, an appearance of tropia may be simulated, or the apparent deviation in the case of a true tropia
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Heterotopia may be defined as a position other than the usual. The occurrence of small variations of the position of the macula in relation to the pupillary axis of the eye is evidenced by the variability of the angle K. If the macula is markedly displaced, an appearance of tropia may be simulated, or the apparent deviation in the case of a true tropia
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2023
Abstract Drawing on the intellectual archaeologies of Michel Foucault, the notion of the heterotopic—of the other place that is neither utopian nor dystopian, and of the other figures who might inhabit such places—uses configurations of abnormality as a way of interrogating our sense of the normal.
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Abstract Drawing on the intellectual archaeologies of Michel Foucault, the notion of the heterotopic—of the other place that is neither utopian nor dystopian, and of the other figures who might inhabit such places—uses configurations of abnormality as a way of interrogating our sense of the normal.
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Heterotopia is a term coined by Michel Foucault and literally means “other space.” The term is used to refer to spaces that constitute a break with normal spaces and can accommodate practices that cannot exist in these normalized situations.
Michiel Dehaene, Dehaene, Michiel
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The word "heterotopia" (Entrepreneurship as Heterotopia)
Revue de l’Entrepreneuriat, 2022Claire Champenois, Delphine Saurier
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The Diagnosis of Band Heterotopia
Pediatric Neurology, 2014Patient 1: A 6-year-old girl was admitted with a 1 year history of atonic seizures (head drops). Her motor and mental development had been normal until age 5 years, but her family had noted behavioral changes about 2 months after the onset of seizures. Her past medical history was remarkable for febrile seizures.
Nalbantoglu, Mecbure +3 more
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Adrenocortical Heterotopia in the Placenta
Pediatric Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, 1995We report two cases of term third-trimester placentas with microscopic nodules of cells histopathologically identical to adrenocortical tissue. Adrenocortical tissue within the placenta is exceedingly rare, with only one previous case reported. We discuss the possible histogenesis of this entity.
F, Qureshi, S M, Jacques
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2021
Human existence, in fact, until the second half of the fifteenth century and beyond, is dominated by the looming presence of death; and the end of time takes on the appearance of plagues and wars. It is an order that no one escapes, yet in the final years of the century, this great restlessness is transformed: the derision of madness takes the place of
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Human existence, in fact, until the second half of the fifteenth century and beyond, is dominated by the looming presence of death; and the end of time takes on the appearance of plagues and wars. It is an order that no one escapes, yet in the final years of the century, this great restlessness is transformed: the derision of madness takes the place of
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