3,918 research outputs found
Rugao Mao shi cong shu /
Double leaves, oriental style, in case.Blockprint.v. 1 Chang chao min xian sheng nian pu -- v. 2-5 Chaomin shi ji : 6 juan / Mao Xiang zhuan -- v. 6 Fu ren ji zhu : 1 juan / Chen Jisong zhuan ; Mao Bao zhu. Zhu cuo xuan shi ji / Mao Bao. Han bi tang shi ji -- v. 7-8 Pu chao wen xuan : 4 juan -- v. 8 Ying mei an yi yu -- v. 9 Xiang li yuan ou cun. Han pi ku yin. Ji mei ren ming shi. Fan xue xiao cao. Lan Yan. Zhen cha hui chao. Xuan lu ge zhu -- v. 10 Zhen yan tang shi ji. Shen yuan shi shuo : 4 juan -- v. 11 Qian hou yuan xi yan ji shi : 2 juan. Chen kan lu -- v. 12-15 Rugao Mao shi shi lue : 14 juan -- v. 16 Xie kang le ji shi yi / Xie ling yun. Xie kang le xiao shen ji. He xie kang le shi -- v. 17-19 Xiao san wu ting wen jia ji -- v. 18 Kuan liu chi / Wang Guan-- v. 20 Zhe shi shi lu / Zhou Murun zhuan. Ren an yi gao / Zhou Yuexiu zhuan. Chuan zhong tang xue gu wen / Zhou Xingjian zhuan -- v. 21 Ou tang sheng gao / Zhou Xingyu zhuan. Dong ou cao tang ci : 2 juan / Zhou Xingyu zhuan. [?]Kuang shi zhi / Zhou Xingyi. Wai jia ji wen.Mode of access: Internet
The portrayal of women in Mao Dun's early fiction 1927-1932
It is the prevailing critical assessment of Mao Dun's early creative writing that he displays a singular insight in his portrayal of women. This thesis seeks not only to challenge this assessment by a predominantly male body of criticism but also the assumptions on which it is based, namely that an intellectual sympathy for the women’s cause necessarily implies a transcendence of the patriarchal attitudes with which society is imbued. The major short stories and novellas written between 1927 and 1932 are analysed systematically to identify Mao Dun's underlying attitudes towards women. His portrayal of women is assessed from the following perspectives:~ his autobiographical accounts of his encounters with women in his political and personal life and his deliberate association of his female comrades with his creative inspiration;- traditional Chinese perceptions of women and gender roles as these are manifested in the classical tradition;-- Mao Dun's numerous articles and essays on the women's question written during the nineteen twenties and his work in the women's section of the Party in Shanghai;- Mao Dun's attempt to reconcile his conflicting sympathies for feminism and socialism. This thesis relies for its methodology on Western feminist criticism. While the approach is maintained, in its application to the context of early twentieth century China, its eurocentrism in terms of cultural assumptions and perceptions of gender has been replaced by a definition of Chinese values. Since a fundamental prerequisite, of feminist criticism is the assessment of the writer in his/her own cultural context, a historical survey of the portrayal of women in traditional literature is provided to serve as a standard against which to measure Mao Dun’s portrayal
Hai shan xian guan cong shu
UL copies lack v.121-122. CCL copies height: 18 cm.尤袤撰 ; [潘仕成輯]潘氏海山仙館藏.框12.4 x 8.9 cm., 9行21字, 黑口, 左右雙邊, 無魚尾, 版心中鐫分冊書名, 下鐫總叢書名.綫裝.Pan shi hai shan xian guan cang.Kuang 12.4 x 8.9 cm., 9 xing 21 zi, hei kou, zuo you shuang bian, wu yu wei, ban xin zhong juan fen ce shu ming, zhong juan zong cong shu ming.Xian zhuang.You Mao zhuan ; [Pan Shicheng ji
Gu hua pin lu.
謝赫撰 ; 毛晉訂. 續畫品錄 / 李嗣眞撰 ; 毛晉訂. 後畫錄 / 彥悰撰 ; 毛晉訂.綫裝, 1函.框19.2x13.5公分, 8行19字, 白口, 無魚尾, 左右雙邊, 版心上鐫題名, 中鐫葉次, 下鐫"汲古閣".原屬《津逮秘書》叢書第7集?With: 續畫品并序 / 姚最撰 ; 毛晉訂.Xian zhuang, 1 han.Kuang 19.2 x 13.5 gong fen, 8 hang 19 zi, bai kou, wu yu wei, zuo you shuang bian, ban xin shang juan ti ming, zhong juan ye ci, xia juan "Ji gu ge".Yuan shu "Jin dai mi shu" cong shu di 7 ji?Xie He zhuan ; Mao Jin ding. Xu hua pin lu / Li Sizhen zhuan ; Mao Jin ding. Hou hua lu / Yan Cong zhuan ; Mao Jin ding.With: Xu hua pin bing xu / Yao Zui zhuan ; Mao Jin ding
Chuzhou cong shu : di 1 ji /
Huai shang ... kai diao ... Runzhou xu ke ... ban gui Huai'an Hu xin si.Twenty-three works, of which two, with special title pages, were published by Huai'an zhi ju.Title from table of contents.No more published?Mode of access: Internet
Combined treatment with MAO-A inhibitor and MAO-B inhibitor increases extracellular noradrenaline levels more than MAO-A inhibitor alone through increases in β-phenylethylamine
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAO inhibitors) have been widely used as antidepressants. However, it remains unclear whether a difference exists between non-selective MAO inhibitors and selective MAO-A inhibitors in terms of their antidepressant effects. Using in vivo microdialysis methods, we measured extracellular noradrenaline and serotonin levels following administration of Ro 41-1049, a reversible MAO-A inhibitor and/or lazabemide, a reversible MAO-B inhibitor in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) of rats. We examined the effect of local infusion of β-phenylethylamine to the mPFC of rats on extracellular noradrenaline and serotonin levels. Furthermore, the concentrations of β-phenylethylamine in the tissue of the mPFC after combined treatment with Ro 41-1049 and lazabemide were measured. The Ro 41-1049 alone and the combined treatment significantly increased extracellular noradrenaline levels compared with vehicle and lazabemide alone. Furthermore, the combined treatment increased noradrenaline levels significantly more than Ro 41-1049 alone did. The Ro 41-1049 alone and the combined treatment significantly increased extracellular serotonin levels compared with vehicle and lazabemide alone, but no difference in serotonin levels was found between the combined treatment group and the Ro 41-1049 group. Local infusion of low-dose β-phenylethylamine increased extracellular noradrenaline levels, but not that of serotonin. Only the combined treatment significantly increased β-phenylethylamine levels in tissues of the mPFC. Our results suggest that the combined treatment with a MAO-A inhibitor and a MAO-B inhibitor strengthens antidepressant effects because the combined treatment increases extracellular noradrenaline levels more than a MAO-A inhibitor alone through increases in β-phenylethylamine
A systemic approach to translating style: a comparative study of four Chinese translations of Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea
The visibility of translators in translated texts has been increasingly recognised, yet research on the translator’s voice and the methodological issues concerned has remained sparse. Corpus-based methods allow only limited access to the motivation of the translator’s choices, and need to be complemented by other research tools to form a coherent methodology for investigating a translator’s style.
The thesis adopts an interdisciplinary approach, combining systemic linguistics and corpus studies with sociohistorical research within a descriptive framework to study the translator’s discursive presence in the text. This approach is as yet underexplored in translation studies.
My work examines four Chinese translations of Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea (1952), by Hai Guan (1956), Wu Lao (1987), Li Xiyin (1987) and Zhao Shaowei (1987). The investigation concerns the rendering of transitivity, modality, direct speech and free direct thought presentation as well as the transitions of modes of point of view. It also inquires into the causes of the variation in style between the four translators. I map textual features onto specific sociocultural and ideological contexts of production in an attempt to identify correlations between them. Another objective is to test the applicability of Halliday’s transitivity model (1994) and Simpson’s model of point of view (1993) to the analysis of Chinese translated texts, and to explore possible adjustments to these models to make them serviceable for translation comparison between English and Chinese. The thesis has six chapters: (1) Theoretical approaches, methodological tools and framework, (2) Location of the texts within the sociocultural contexts, (3) Translation of the transitivity system, (4) Translation of point of view, (5) Critical analysis of individual examples and (6) Motivations for translation shifts
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Narrative in Mao Dun's Eclipse Trilogy: A Conflicted Mao Dun
This dissertation is an exploration of the narrative mode of Mao Dun's (1896 - 1981) first work of fiction, the 1927-8 Eclipse trilogy. It focuses on explaining the context and nature of realism as it appears in the work. The dissertation includes a biography of Mao Dun that covers his early education, and his years as an editor and as a translator. The biography also shows the influence of western literary theory and ideology on his development as an intellectual and author. Realism as a literary mode is presented in its general form and as a type of realism that developed in China. The dissertation also analyzes realism and naturalism as Mao Dun explains the ideas in his own literary criticism. A close reading of samples from the Eclipse trilogy shows how Mao Dun used a type of realism with a shifting objective view, similar to a free indirect style. Finally the dissertation provides a textology study: a typology and analysis of the differences between the two major editions of the trilogy. The types include Clarity and Accuracy, Political Concerns, Narrative Voice, Simplification of Characters, and Problematic Sensuality. Through analysis of the differences between the two editions, the dissertation provides evidence that, although Mao Dun was willing to sacrifice some of the complexity and contradictions of his novel in 1954 when the second edition was edited, he strove to maintain the core of his most problematic central characters and the fundamental ideals of his narrative voice
Mao Zedong and the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis
This article provides an interpretation of Mao Zedong's political strategy during the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. The connection between the internal and external struggle towards revisionism - launched by Mao in the first half of 1962 to eradicate the critics of the Great Leap Forward from the CCP - was energised by Mao's ability to exploit the opportunities offered by the Cuban crisis. Mao managed to capitalise on Moscow's strained relations in the Caribbean: the propaganda campaign launched within the country to support the Cuban revolution and criticise Soviet revisionism helped Mao to consolidate his political struggle and win over his opponents.HistoryA&HCISSCI0ARTICLE173-881
sj-docx-1-jdr-10.1177_00220345231210547 – Supplemental material for Claudin-10 Decrease in the Submandibular Gland Contributes to Xerostomia
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-jdr-10.1177_00220345231210547 for Claudin-10 Decrease in the Submandibular Gland Contributes to Xerostomia by L. He, S.Z. Yuan, X.D. Mao, Y.W. Zhao, Q.H. He, Y. Zhang, J.Z. Su, L.L. Wu, G.Y. Yu and X. Cong in Journal of Dental Research</p
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