Results 191 to 200 of about 276,773 (330)
Afterword: Reading Eighteenth‐Century Rape Culture in the Trump Era
Abstract This afterword frames eighteenth‐century rape culture and scholarship through our current political moment and reflects on the concerns raised by the essays in this special issue. Twenty‐first‐century interest in the cultural histories of sexual violence has been galvanized by motivational presentism, an increasingly explicit sense that ‘what ...
Rebecca Anne Barr
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From plaques to pocks: carrying over bacteriophage assay techniques to the study of influenza and other animal viruses. [PDF]
Sankaran N.
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Two memoirs upon the Catholic question, occasioned by recent events. [PDF]
John Joseph Dillon
openalex
ABSTRACT This article explores how educator‐kibbutzim recruit socialist‐Zionist learning traditions to construct new forms of kinship. Bringing communities of practice theory to new kinship studies, we expand on the role of knowledge in bridging the social/biological.
Lauren Erdreich, Rotem Bar Israel
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Physician, Restore Thyself? The Digital Gap in Physician Well-Being Support. [PDF]
Cato JC.
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Minor epic: Notes toward a different “Anthropoetry”
Abstract Anthropologists have often turned to poetry as a means of accessing emotional registers of which conventional academic prose is unable to avail. In doing so, they have tacitly conflated poetry with lyric poetry, today probably the most widely practiced poetic genre, associated in particular with the expression of inner feelings and subjectival
Stuart McLean
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Thomas E. Starzl, M.D., Ph.D-the <i>Sui Generis</i> Medical Pioneer and Mentor. [PDF]
Fung JJ, Remzi M.
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Jannotta, Jr. Joseph E., Extraordinary Leaders. World War II Memoirs of an American Naval Officer and an Imperial Japanese Naval Officer [PDF]
Patrick Fridenson
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Maps and Diaspora: Affect, Agency and Epistolary Praxis
Short Abstract Following discussions, interactions and reflections during the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) conference ‘Map Room Conversations’ sessions, this paper examines maps and diaspora through an affective lens. By utilising an auto‐ethnographic epistolary praxis of letter writing and employing the therapeutic prompt, ‘What came up for ...
Rohini Rai, Iqbal Singh
wiley +1 more source

