1,527 research outputs found
Deux inscriptions palmyréniennes relevées par M. E. Bertone
Chabot Jean-Baptiste. Deux inscriptions palmyréniennes relevées par M. E. Bertone. In: Comptes rendus des séances de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, 42ᵉ année, N. 3, 1898. p. 339
Le recueil des inscription palmyréniennes réunies par M. E. Bertone
Berger Philippe. Le recueil des inscription palmyréniennes réunies par M. E. Bertone. In: Comptes rendus des séances de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, 42ᵉ année, N. 2, 1898. pp. 157-159
Queerying Families of Origin
This book provides an original insight into how families of origin of Gay, Lesbian,
Bisexual and Transgender (GLBT) people are involved in negotiating meanings and
experiences of sexuality and intimacy, an underexplored dimension of queer family
life. Delving into the perspectives of families of origin and showing the complexity
and heterogeneity of the ways people with their different gender and sexual identities
“do” families across generations, it contributes to querying the very distinction
between families of origin and families of choice, and questions the (hetero)normative
assumptions about forms and boundaries of family this distinction rests upon.
A focus on marginal contexts, such as Southern Europe, and on marginal subjects,
like bisexuals or black lesbians, is proposed as a way to challenge the universality of
privileged narratives within heteronormativity, homonormativity and anglocentrism,
and to reveal unexpected resources families of origin mobilise to make sense of
GLBT identities and lived experiences. The book poses a crucial question: how can
alliances along family ties develop on the basis of shared stories of family diversity
and marginalised identities, rather than of loving (and normative) support to GLBT
people in need and an advocacy in their name from a position of heterosexual
privilege?
This book was originally published in Journal of GLBT Family Studies
Società controllate e società collegate (commento all'art. 2359 c.c.)
in Commentario alla riforma delle società, diretto da P. Marchetti, L.A. Bianchi, F. Ghezzi, M. Notar
Thevenetimyia spinosavus Maass & Bertone, sp. nov.
Thevenetimyia spinosavus Maass & Bertone, sp. nov. Material examined. Holotype ♂: MADAGASCAR, Tuléar Province: Zombiste National Park near road, 22°50.43'S, 44°43.87'E, 822 m, 16–31 October 2002 (M. Irwin & R. Harin’Hala colls.), MAO 2-13 B-40. Diagnosis. Features that distinguish this fly from the only other Afrotropical Thevenetimyia species include: smaller size (~ 6.2 mm), terminal flagellomere with blunt tip, spine-like tubercles on scutellum (Fig. 4 B), body setae white or black (not golden), and features of the wing venation. TABLE]. ƂOmbyliiđae kŊOwŊ fľOm Mađagascaľ (MOđifieđ fľOm ŧhe World catalog of bee flies (Diptera: Bombyliidae), (EveŊhuis & Gľeaŧheađ, 2015b) aŊđ Tľue flies: The Ŋaŧuľal hisŧOľy Of Mađagascaľ, IľwiŊ et al., 2003) Subfamily Genus Species Afrotropical Types Available: Described by: Distribution EclimiŊae (buŧ see Thevenetimyia spinosavus Mađagascaľ HOlOŧype iŊ CAS Maass and Bertone, ŧhis sŧuđy Yeaŧes, 1995, TľauŧweiŊ 2011) TOxOphOľiŊae Geron candidulus Mađagascaľ HOlOŧype iŊ NHMƂ ƂOwđeŊ, 1974 dilutus Alđabľa, AsŧOve Is, HOlOŧype iŊ MNHN ƂOwđeŊ, 1974 COsmOleđO Is, Mađagascaľ varicapillis Mađagascaľ HOlOŧype iŊ NHMƂ ƂOwđeŊ, 1974 arcuata Mađagascaľ Type iŊ uŊkŊOwŊ cOllecŧiOŊ (OľigiŊally iŊ Macquaľŧ, 1847 đe Villeľs COllecŧiOŊ) flammicoma Mađagascaľ HOlOŧype iŊ MRAC FľaŊçOis, 1964 madagascariensis Mađagascaľ HOlOŧype iŊ ƂMNH Macquaľŧ, 1850 melanaspis Mađagascaľ 3 syŊŧypes iŊ ƂMNH Ƃezzi, 1924 nigrispina Mađagascaľ HOlOŧype iŊ ƂMNH Ƃezzi, 1924 vayssierei Mađagascaľ SyŊŧype iŊ MNHM Séguy, 1934 Heteralonia dolichoptera Mađagascaľ HOlOŧype iŊ ƂMNH Ƃezzi, 1924 (as Exoprosopa dolichoptera) Villa unifasciata Mađagascaľ, LecŧOŧype iŊ MNHN; Type iŊ uŊkŊOwŊ Macquaľŧ, 1840 (as Anthrax Mauľiŧius, RéuŊiOŊ, cOllecŧiOŊ (OľigiŊally iŊ đe Villeľs unifasciata) ROđľiguez COllecŧiOŊ); SyŊŧype iŊ NHRS Male. Head (Fig 3): Head slightly wider than thorax. Ocellar tubercle pronounced, rounded, covered in long black setae. Eyes holoptic. Antennae with three segments, length approaching length of head, black, and dusted with grey pollinosity; pollinosity dense on scape and pedicel, more diffuse on flagellum. Scape covered in black setae of varying lengths; pedicel covered in short black setae; flagellum without setae. Scape approximately two and one-half times length of pedicel. Flagellum slightly longer than scape, about as wide as previous segments, width even throughout, and with blunt tip. Buccal cavity deep, with setose swelling under anterior rim. Palpus halflength of proboscis, covered in gray pollinosity and black setae. Terminal segment of palpus slightly swollen at about midlength and with shorter setae than previous segment. Proboscis black, about two times as long as head. Face and occipital area with long black setae. Gena and lower portions of postgena with white setae (Fig. 4A). Thorax (Fig 4A and B): Mesothoracic scutum and scutellum dull black. Ground color of remaining thorax similar to scutum and scutellum, but with a dense dusting of grey pollinosity, especially on the pleura. Scutum with sparse, long black setae. Sparse, irregularly spaced, prominent spines on anterior half of scutum, becoming much smaller and sparser posteriorly (need high magnification to observe on posterior half). Anterior scutal spines often with an associated seta attached to base. Scutellum prominent, projecting over first abdominal tergite, and with numerous, small, spine-like tubercles, becoming more dense on posterior face (Fig. 4 B). Anepisternum densely covered with long black setae. Anepimeron, katepisternum, and ventral portion of anepisternum with patches of long white setae of varying density. Notopleural area just before wing base with three prominent black bristles (Fig. 4A). Wings (Fig. 5): Wings smoky brown, darker along costal margin and gradually fading posteriorly. Venation typical for genus Thevenetimyia. Costa with two rows of evenly spaced, spine-like setae along length, becoming more densely spaced but individually finer beyond intersection of veins C and R2+3. M1 ending in the wing margin. CuA and A each terminating separately at wing margin. Crossvein r-m placed before middle of cell dm. Calypter with mixture of long black and white setae. Halter elongate with light stem and dark brown knob. Legs: Coxae of front, mid and hind legs dull black with even gray pollinosity and covered sparsely with long white hairs (Fig. 4A). Front leg: Femur dark brown, bare, with long setae on the underside near trochanter. Tibia brown with sparse setae and spines becoming more dense apically. Tarsi dark brown and with dense black bristles. Mid leg: Femur dark brown, bare with very few long setae near trochanter. Tibia lighter brown with evenly distributed black bristles. Apex of tibia with prominent spurs. Tarsi dark brown and densely packed with black bristles. Hind leg: Hind legs notably longer than front and mid legs (similar to other members of genus Thevenetimyia). Femur dark brown with sparse black bristles and setae. Tibia lighter brown with evenly distributed black bristles. Apex of tibia with prominent spurs. Tarsi dark brown and densely packed with black bristles. All pulvilli well developed, slightly more than half the length of claws, white and with dense hairs. Claws simple (Fig. 6). Abdomen: About twice the length of thorax. Ground color of tergites dark brown with gray pollinosity on the lateral portion. Tergite I with predominantly long white hair. Tergite II with long dark brown hair. Amount of hair decreases drastically on lateral portion posteriorly to tergite IV. No other remarkable hairs on tergites V–VII. Sternites brown with white hair of varying lengths, predominantly short, found evenly throughout all sternites. Long black bristle-like setae present on epandrium and sternite VII. Black bristles do not continue onto cerci, although cerci have shorter hairs. Dissection of male genitalia was not conducted due to only one specimen being known (Fig. 6). Etymology. The name is a noun in apposition based on a combination of spinosus (Latin = “thorny”) and avus (Latin = “grandfather”), referring to the spines present on the scutum and scutellum, and the fly’s “elderly” appearance (many white hairs found on the body and grey pollinosity).Published as part of Maass, Natalia, Larmore, Zachary, Bertone, Matthew A. & Trautwein, Michelle, 2016, Description of a new species of Thevenetimyia (Diptera: Bombyliidae) from Madagascar, with a revised checklist of Madagascan bee fly fauna, pp. 57-66 in Zootaxa 4175 (1) on pages 59-65, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4175.1.5, http://zenodo.org/record/16029
Suffering As the Path to Acceptance: Parents of Gay and Lesbian Young People Negotiating Catholicism in Italy
This article investigates the experiences of parents of gay men and
lesbians (GL) as they negotiate the influential Catholic discourse on
homosexuality in Italy, and their Catholic belonging and practice.
The analysis is based upon in-depth interviews with 46 parents of
gay and lesbian people. We explore how parents who are heavily
involved in the religious community negotiate their role within it,
but also how, more generally, parents frame their notions of what it
means to be lesbian or gay in relation to Catholic discourse. Parents
draw upon different, and often seemingly contradictory, cultural
repertoires in order to combine, negotiate, or integrate what public
discourse constructs as irreconcilable positions: acceptance of gay
and lesbian lives and identities and Catholic belonging. The notion
of the homosexual as being destined to undergo suffering provides
room for acceptance of their child’s sexual identity whilst preserving
heteronormative assumptions. This frame constitutes an alternative
to rejection, which is at odds with parents’ ideas of the family as
being based on unconditional love. It also provides a bridge with
therapeutic culture and narratives of liberation from suffering that
inform, especially, middle-class family relations and the cultural
resources available to the
Commento agli articoli 2333-2336 c.c.
Commento alla disciplina della costituzione della societa' per azioni, con particolare riferimento alla costituzione per pubblica sottoscrizione e ai rapporti tra costituzione e disciplina della sollecitazione
Reduction in pollutant emissions in an "Off-Road" DI Diesel engine by means of exhaust gas recirculation
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