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    ORIENTALISM IN THE TALE OF GENJI’S TRANSLATIONS AS WORLD LITERATURE by Dewi Christa Kobis

    Published 2019-03-01
    “…We cannot take lightly the role of translation. Regarding to the translation issue, it is also important to know closely about the translators’ perspective towards The Tale of Genji. …”
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    The Symbolism and Aesthetics of the Window as a Visual Motif in the TV Series “The Handmaid’s Tale” by Ángeles Martínez-García, Mónica Barrientos-Bueno

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Despite the fact that the TV series "The Handmaid’s Tale" has been widely researched, most studies have addressed aspects like narrative, feminism, violence against women or visual and compositional elements, such as the use of light and the symbolism of colour. …”
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    Discourse Structure Analysis of Hasanak-e-Vazir’s Hanging Tale: A Study based on Van Dijk’s (2007) Socio-Cognitive Approach by Nader Abyar, Mousa Ghonchepour, Zahra Iranmanesh

    Published 2024-09-01
    “…Additionally, examining this socio-political and cultural event sheds light on the feelings, thoughts, and beliefs of the participants of that time.      …”
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    Optogenetic regulation of endogenous gene transcription in mammals by E. S. Omelina, A. V. Pindyurin

    Published 2019-03-01
    “…The factors include zinc finger proteins, transcription activator-like effectors (TALEs), and the CRISPR/Cas9 technology. We also discuss the advantages and disadvantages of these DNA targeting tools in the context of the light-inducible gene regulation systems.…”
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    Poetică și ornamentică by Laurențiu Hanganu

    Published 2007-12-01
    “…The study discusses the relationship between poetry and ornamentation in the light of Baudelaire’s theory of correspondences. …”
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    Apollo in the North: Transmutations of the Sun God in Walter Pater’s Imaginary Portraits by Lene Østermark-Johansen

    Published 2014-09-01
    “…Where does it end? Is it a place of light or of darkness? Pater’s dark Apollo challenges conventional notions of the sun god and testifies to the strong presence of paganism in Pater’s late writings.…”
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    “From place to place and sea to sea”: The Art of Relating in R. L. Stevenson’s The Wrecker by Julie GAY

    Published 2022-06-01
    “…It is my contention that analysing the relationship between these two concurrent meanings may help shed new light on Robert Louis Stevenson’s fictional art, which could be defined as essentially geopoetic. …”
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    A Guiding Line? Rethinking the Road in American Post-Apocalyptic Narratives by Cécile DO HUU

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…This study delves into this evolution, analyzing pessimistic yet realistic post-apocalyptic road novels and films like Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, John Hillcoat’s adaptation, Dave Eggers’s Heroes of the Frontier, and Casey Affleck’s Light of my Life. Drawing from Bakhtin’s chronotope theory and the transmedial nature of the road narrative, it investigates how the road operates as a space-time for individual travel tales and the American national narrative, undergoing shifts in mobility, history, and narration. …”
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    “Dissociating Form and Meaning in Bilingual Creative Writing and Creative Translation Workshops” by Sara GREAVES, Marie-Laure SCHULTZE

    Published 2012-03-01
    “…The study of New Englishes is also revealing in this light, with creativity often being looked upon as error. …”
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    Transformations of the Evil Forest in the Swedish Television Series Jordskott by Souch Irina

    Published 2020-09-01
    “…The link unveiled between natural ecology and cultural mythology allows the series to surpass the limitations of the regionally informed folkloric story and to evolve into an ecological cautionary tale of global significance.…”
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    Madame Bovary and the Sandman : Flaubert’s Uncanny Memories by Anne Green

    Published 2019-12-01
    “…Once these intrusive memories are recognised in Flaubert’s writing, new light is shed on his fiction and on the relationship between traumatic memory and literary practice.…”
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    ‘He crossed and re-crossed the way repeatedly’: Illegible Crossings in Poe’s ‘The Man of the Crowd’ by Estelle Murail

    Published 2016-06-01
    “…The sense of illegibility which pervades this enigmatic tale stems from these different forms of croisements. …”
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    On the Afterlives of Daphne Du Maurier’s Rebecca: Spinoffs and Transfictions by Armelle Parey

    Published 2021-11-01
    “…If the process “preserves the traditional canon’s centrality” (as Jeremy Rosen says about minor character elaborations), it also participates in the critical reassessment of the source text as it throws a new light on it. This article discusses very diverse transfictions based on Du Maurier’s novel and examines the workings of the various narrative strategies adopted to reactivate the well-known novel. …”
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    The Fantastic-Grotesque in Beh’Āzin’s “The Snake Stone” by Nahid Shahbazi Moghaddam

    Published 2024-07-01
    “…The main aim of discussing “The Snake Stone” as a tale of the fantastic-grotesque is to highlight how this theoretical frame can help to shed light on the socio-cultural aspects of the work and how the link between the author’s ideology and the narrative intricately reinforces the reading beyond the story world. …”
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    Mettre en question le grapho-phonocentrisme: la langue des signes au dix-huitième siècle by Edward Nye

    Published 2024-11-01
    “…To tackle this subject, we turn to Diderot, Graffigny and Rétif de La Bretonne, whom we consider in the light of the ideas of the most important eighteenth-century teacher of deaf people, the abbé de L’Épée. …”
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    The Incredible Shrinking Man in Paul Auster’s Report from the Interior: The Film and the Myths by Marie GOURRUT

    Published 2019-12-01
    “…The plot undeniably recalls the process of regression, the so-called “art of hunger” that most Austerian protagonists experience. It also casts a light on the theme of the depletion of material resources which pervades Auster’s fictions and conveys, in multiple ways, the idea of “a return to origins” as Mircea Eliade, for instance, analyzed it. …”
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    Pre-Modern Bosom Serpents and Hippocrates' <i>Epidemiae</i> 5: 86: A Comparative and Contextual Folklore Approach by Davide Ermacora

    Published 2016-03-01
    “…A short Hippocratic passage (Epidemiae 5: 86) might constitute the earliest Western surviving variant of the well-known narrative and experiential theme of snakes or other animals getting into the human body (motif B784, tale-type ATU 285B*). This paper aims: 1) to throw light on this ancient passage through a comparative folkloric analysis and through a philological-contextual study, with reference to modern and contemporary interpretations; and 2) to offer an examination of previous scholarly enquiries on the fantastic intrusion of animals into the human body. …”
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    Pseudomonas Aeruginosa and Cystic Fibrosis: Antibiotic Therapy and the Science behind the Magic by Noni E MacDonald

    Published 1997-01-01
    “…Research that stemmed from the discovery of the CF gene has shed new light on the inter-relationship of these microbes and the respiratory epithelial lung changes secondary to the CF gene. …”
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