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Status and perceptions of ChatGPT utilization among medical students: a survey-based study. [PDF]

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Women's Literary Journals

The Library Quarterly, 1983
This article reports findings of a questionnaire survey, conducted in spring 1980, of 26 literary magazines edited by and for women. The information gained is discussed in the context of the little-magazine movement as a whole. Women's little magazines, it is discovered, share the independence of purpose, the commitment to encouraging unknown writers ...
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Literary Journalism

2018
“Literary journalism” is a highly contested term, its essential elements being a constant source of debate. A range of alternative concepts are promoted: the “New Journalism,” “literary non-fiction,” “creative non-fiction,” “narrative non-fiction,” “the literature of fact,” “lyrics in prose,” “gonzo journalism” and, more recently, “long-form journalism,
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Literary and Review Journalism

2020
This chapter explores the burgeoning of literary reviewing throughout the nineteenth century. Beginning with the landmark founding of the quarterly Edinburgh Review in 1802, it traces the practice through a period when literacy expanded greatly, and the range of reviewing outlets, among quarterlies, monthlies, magazines and newspapers, increased ...
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Lost Literary Journals

Library Review, 1957
The other day, when addressing a select gathering of publishers, I was asked by one of those present how reviewing today compared with the reviewing of fifty years ago. I said that fifty years ago an important book would be noticed in all the chief periodicals within a fortnight of publication, and that even a first novel by an unknown writer had ...
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LITERARY ASPECTS OF MEDICAL JOURNALISM

Archives of Surgery, 1952
AS I LOOKED over medical journals, I decided that they were just about half way between a trade journal and a general publication. A trade journal is obviously designed to make money for subscribers. I take it that medical journals have the ambition to help subscribers make money only incidentally.
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Georgian Literary Journalism

2003
‘Journalism is a profession like any other, and it has no more to do with lit-erary art than any other occupation… In writing for a paper one is writing for a public, and the best work, the only work that in the end counts, is writ-ten for oneself.’ So T. S. Eliot explained in 1919 why he worked for a bank rather than a paper (Letters, I 285).
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