F IS FOR FALCON: THE TRUE STORY OF THE ‘NOVELLE’
ABSTRACT This article takes a closer look at the Boccaccio story upon which Paul Heyse based his famous ‘Falken‐Theorie’ of the ‘Novelle’. The essay then links Boccaccio to a general account of storytelling as an aid to survival amid the hostility of nature and human circumstances.
Michael Minden
wiley +1 more source
Transforming Traditional Korean Medicine hospital EHRs into the OMOP common Data Model: methodology and implications. [PDF]
Park MY +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Review: John R. Hinnells & Alan Williams (eds.): Parsis in India and the Diaspora. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2007. [PDF]
Hintze, Almut
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ROBERT WALSER'S ‘BLEISTIFTWEG’: POETICS OF ATTENTION AS CRAFT
ABSTRACT This article examines Robert Walser's entry into what he called his ‘Bleistiftgebiet’ in the early 1920s, when in response to a profound crisis as a writer he began to produce manuscripts in minuscule size, the so‐called ‘Mikrogramme’ (microscripts). Intertwining the analysis of the short prose form with Walser's reflections on the short‐lived
Anne Fuchs
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Urban-Rural Differences in Preferences for Environmentally Friendly Farming from the Perspectives of Oriental White Stork Conservation. [PDF]
Zhang L +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Review of Rudiger Frank, James Hoare, Patrick Kollner and Susan Pares, eds, Korea Yearbook 2008: POlitics, Economy and Society [PDF]
Howard, Keith
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Indoleamine 2,3‐dioxygenase (IDO) activity modulates immune responses to the therapeutic HBV vaccine NASVAC. Genetic or pharmacological suppression of IDO enhanced vaccine efficacy in mice, and lower serum kynurenine levels predicted favorable responses in humans, suggesting IDO as both a therapeutic target and a biomarker.
Yohei Shirakami +15 more
wiley +1 more source
Dietary shifts and gut microbiota plasticity correlates of habitat micromodification in wild oriental storks: implications for conservation physiology. [PDF]
Zhou Y, Sun M, Zhang Z, Wu H, Zhao D.
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT In 1955, Hisayuki Miyakawa published an article that sought to introduce American and European scholars to the work of the Japanese Sinologist Naitō Konan (1866–1934). Miyakawa drew particular attention to what he called the “Naitō hypothesis”—that is, Naitō’s argument that China became modern during the Song dynasty (960–1279).
CHRISTIAN DE PEE
wiley +1 more source

