Results 61 to 70 of about 322,035 (228)

Growth strategies across life‐history stages and generational turnover of cryptobenthic coral reef fishes of the genus Trimma

open access: yesJournal of Fish Biology, EarlyView.
Abstract Somatic growth influences survival and reproduction, with flow‐on effects on population dynamics and energy fluxes within ecosystems. Small‐bodied cryptobenthic reef fishes may contribute significantly to productivity due to their life‐history traits, including growth rates and rapid generational turnover.
Nisha C. Goldsworthy   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

James Joyce’s Echoes in Caitriona Lally’s Portrait of Dublin City

open access: yesPhilologica Canariensia, 2016
James Stephens and James Joyce have been mentioned as referents for Caitriona Lally’s highly acclaimed debut novel, Eggshells (2015). The present contribution intends to study this new brilliant rendering of the city of Dublin through the eyes of ...
José Manuel Estévez-Saá
doaj   +1 more source

Ulysses: The Human Bodyssey [PDF]

open access: yes, 2010
Among other things my book is the epic of the human body. -James Joyce Ulysses by James Joyce is a paragon of modernist literature. Taking place over the course of a single day, June 16, 1904, Joyce allegorically retells Homer\u27s The Odyssey for the ...
O\u27Gorman, Faculty Advisor, Kathleen   +2 more
core   +1 more source

First occurrences of Trionychidae (Testudines, Cryptodira) from the Miocene of Poland: Detailed cranial anatomy and biogeographic implications

open access: yesJournal of Anatomy, EarlyView.
Fossil finds from three Middle Miocene sites in Poland reveal the northernmost known presence of trionychid turtles in Europe, tentatively identified as Trionyx cf. vindobonensis, suggesting a warmer climate that supported thermophilic species in Central Europe during this period. Abstract Modern trionychids (Testudines, Cryptodira) have a pan‐tropical
Yohan Pochat‐Cottilloux   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

Language comprehension and the rhythm of perception

open access: yesMind &Language, EarlyView.
It is widely agreed that language understanding has a distinctive phenomenology, as illustrated by phenomenal contrast cases. Yet it remains unclear how to account for the perceptual phenomenology of language experience. I advance a rhythmic account, which explains this phenomenology in terms of changes in the rhythm of sensory capacities in both ...
Alfredo Vernazzani
wiley   +1 more source

Deconstructing the Question of Irish Identity

open access: yesABEI Journal, 2002
Eugene O’Brien. The Question of Irish Identity in the Writings of William Butler Yeats and James Joyce. Lewiston New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 2001. pp. 281.
Tony Corbett
doaj   +1 more source

Supersymmetric Electroweak Baryogenesis [PDF]

open access: yes, 2000
We re-examine the generation of the baryon asymmetry in the minimal supersymmetric standard model (MSSM) during the electroweak phase transition. We find that the dominant source for baryogenesis arises from the chargino sector.
Cline, James M.   +2 more
core   +2 more sources

Digitalizing Newspaper Journalism: Instituting and Negotiating New Temporalities in the Digital Workplace

open access: yesNew Technology, Work and Employment, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Digitalization of the labour process has occasioned the emergence of new temporal orders at work. For newspaper journalists, it has resulted in a radical reorganization of newsrooms and the temporalities of news production, offering a key site for studying this process of temporal reordering.
Xanthe Whittaker
wiley   +1 more source

Lucia Joyce: To Dance in the Wake by Carol Loeb Shloss

open access: yesABEI Journal, 2004
The life of Lucia Joyce, so Carol Loeb Shloss tells us, “is a story that was not supposed to be told.” (p. 11) In her attempts to recount the tale of James Joyce’s troubled daughter, Shloss met many obstacles, chief among them, she implies, the ...
John Banville
doaj   +1 more source

Text as tape: On the voice in the late prose of Friederike Mayröcker

open access: yesOrbis Litterarum, EarlyView.
Abstract For a text to have a voice means to be caught in a paradox: the text obviously does not speak, so what is that tone rising from the pages? Taking hold of a striking ambivalence, this essay examines the relationship between text and voice in the late prose of Austrian poet Friederike Mayröcker.
Astrid Elander
wiley   +1 more source

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