1,356,593 research outputs found
Costume Lined by Words by Bronka Nowicka
A column by Bronka Nowicka, an interdisciplinary artist, a graduate of the Film School in Łódź and the Academy of Fine Arts in Kraków, and a winner of the Nike Literary Award. “What if people paraded in words. You would buy a bale of literary material of any genre, then go to order something really chic, to be worn on your naked body. You would throw a roll of text on your shoulders and, whistling, carry it to the studio with a sign: Linguistic Tailoring services, or Poetry Sewing Room - 24/7.
L'avanguardia poetica barocca
Traduzione del capitolo introduttivo a uno studio comparato sul barocco italiano e polacc
Między „szarym przebraniem” a „trudnym znojem”. O włoskich tłumaczeniach Italii Marii Konopnickiej
Maria Konopnicka’s poems inspired by her travels to Italy have been repeatedly
translated in Italian between 1916 and 1929 and published in literary magazines and
in book form. The team composed by the essayist and publisher Ettore Cozzani , the
historian and diplomat Maciej Lore t and his wife Władysława Zapolska produced
a version that reveals a signifi cant manipulation of the source text, often transforming
it by means of techniques such as amplifi cation, specifi cation, modulation, reduction,
rationalization. The translations made by the sisters Clotilde and Cristina Garosci tend
instead to reproduce word order, syntactic fi gures, and poetic imagery of the source
text, though raising its linguistic register through lexical ennoblement and archaization.
Though both teams translated poetry into prose and considered translation as ancillary
to the source text, a comparative analysis of their versions shows a different approach
to Konopnicka’s poems that ultimately depends on different views on language, work
methods, and attitude to the Italian poetic tradition. Their reception illustrates that
translation of poetry into prose was generally accepted by critics of that time, as it was
supposed to preserve the “soul” of the source text, though giving up its form
Po kładce nad urwiskiem, przymrużając oko. O tłumaczeniu poezji humorystycznej na przykładzie Rymowanek Szymborskiej
The article presents a practical-theoretical reflection on translating humoristic poetry on the basis of the Author’s experience as a translator of Wisława Szymborska’s Rymowanki dla dużych dzieci. Since humor is the dominant function of the text, and laugh is the expected reaction, functional equivalence - rather than semantic equivalence - is here to be pursued. The goal of any translator of humoristic texts is to produce an equivalent effect on the reader. In the case of Szymborska’s Rymowanki, the task is made more difficult by the poetic form, which plays a primary role in generating the comic effect. The Author notices that the three categories of joke – universal, cultural and linguistic - proposed by Debra Raphaelson-West do not take into account such highly formalized utterings as humoristic verses, in which the form is not a mere decoration aiming at potentiating the aesthetic effect, but definitely contributes to generate the humoristic effect. The article shows how the mechanisms of laugh/smile proper of these poetic texts were reproduced in translation following some simple principles, and ends with the proposal to add to Raphaelson-West’s classification a fourth category: the poetic joke
Identification of BRCA1 gene mutation variants in clinical samples without labeling step – comparison of functionality and sensitivity of SPR and SERS sensors
SERS (surface-enhanced Raman scattering) and SPR (surface plasmon resonance) sensors for the identification of six the most popular in Poland variants of BRCA1 gene mutation without labelling have been constructed and tested with clinical samples. Both sensors were based on the selective hybridization of target DNA with the capture DNA immobilized on plasmonic substrates. Moreover, in both sensors the same thiolated capture DNA was used. The mutation identification process using SPR detector relied on the shape of the SPR sensorgrams, whereas for the SERS sensors, the intensity of the Raman band at about 715-735 cm-1 (this band is due to the superimposition of mainly the band due to the v(C-S) vibration of the alkanethiol chain in the trans conformation and the band due to the breathing vibration of adenine) was used as an analytical signal. The demonstrated biosensors are characterized by the low detection limit at the level of pg·uL–1, wide analytical range and high selectivity. It was found that for different DNA sequences, a SPR or SERS sensor achieves greater detection sensitivity, which means that the selection of the optimal sensor type depends on the sequence of the target DNA.</p
Memories of meals in the Grandparents Study : A work in progress
The Grandparent Study, an interview-based qualitative study in Eugene, Oregon, was launched in 2011 with the aim of exploring parents’ and grandparents’ roles in the food habits and physical activity of children in socioeconomically disadvantaged families. The data are collected through semi-structured interviews from 16 families which all centred around one child in the family (3-5 years of age). The sample consists of 49 participants: 22 parents (14 women) and 27 grandparents (21 women). Since the study’s initiation, several works have been published related to subjects such as perceptions about the children’s body weight (Eli, Howell, Fisher, & Nowicka, 2014a), the gendered and generational division of domestic food responsibilities (Neuman, Eli, & Nowicka, 2019) and the participants’ own memories of becoming aware of their bodies (Eli, Howell, Fisher, & Nowicka, 2014b). The latter publication connects to the present study, which is a work in progress about the participants’ meal memories. Drawing on research on commensality – the activity of sharing a meal – we explore how eating in the family is recounted in a variety of ways, positively and negatively, thus problematizing a priori assumptions about the family meal as a social knit. As argued by other scholars before us (e.g. Andersen, Holm, & Baarts, 2015; Grignon, 2001; Julier, 2013), commensality may facilitate social communion and is both desired and idealized among some, but it may also bring with it social exclusion, stigma or other undesirable social consequences. ReferencesAndersen, S. S., Holm, L., & Baarts, C. (2015). School meal sociality or lunch pack individualism? Using an intervention study to compare the social impacts of school meals and packed lunches from home. Social Science Information, 54(3), 394–416Eli, K., Howell, K., Fisher, P. A., & Nowicka, P. (2014a). “A little on the heavy side”: a qualitative analysis of parents' and grandparents' perceptions of preschoolers' body weights. BMJ Open, 4(12). doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2014-006609Eli, K., Howell, K., Fisher, P. A., & Nowicka, P. (2014b). “Those comments last forever”: Parents and grandparents of preschoolers recount how they became aware of their own body weights as children. PloS one, 9(11), e111974. Grignon, C. (2001). Commensality and social morphology : an essay of typology. In P. Scholliers (Ed.), Food, drink and identity : cooking, eating and drinking in Europe since the Middle Ages (pp. 23-33). Oxford: Berg.Julier, A. P. (2013). Eating together : food, friendship, and inequality. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.Neuman, N., Eli, K., & Nowicka, P. (2019). Feeding the extended family: Gender, generation, and socioeconomic disadvantage in food provision to children. Food, Culture & Society, 22(1), 45-62. </p
Thin films of solvatomagnetic CN-bridged coordination polymers: from micro to nanoscale - research data
Dataset containing SEM images of film samples and magnetometric data for a series of film and bulk samples of microporous coordination networks [Ni(cyclam)]3[M(CN)6]2*nH2O, M=Cr, Fe, cyclam=1,4,7,11-tetraazacyclotetradecan
New insight into teratogenic effects of (S)-thalidomide in zebrafish embryos growing inside the chorion and subjected to electric pulses
Studies of (S)-thalidomide were conducted on zebrafish embryos subjected to electroporation processes using a square wave pulse generator. The results showed that the electroporation increases the absorption of (S)-thalidomide through the chorion into the growing embryos, which was confirmed by increased thalidomide levels in the embryo bodies at different hours post-treatments using differential pulse voltammetry and controlled-growth mercury drop electrode techniques. (S)-thalidomide administered by electroporation produced structural body deformations in zebrafish embryos as showed by scanning electron microscopy studies. Detailed transmission electron microscopy analysis evidenced multiple deposits of the outer layer and translucencies in the chorion structure, which was also pronounced on the mitochondrial membranes. The results confirmed the spontaneous conversion of the (S)-thalidomide enantiomer to the (R)-enantiomer in embryos exposed to the (S)-thalidomide only and subjected to electroporation pulses. The electroporation was found as a promising method to increase the uptake of (S)-thalidomide in the developmental studies on early zebrafish embryos growing in the chorion.</p
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
Low-intensity family therapy intervention is useful in a clinical setting to treat obese and extremely obese children
Aims. To study the influence of low-intensity solution-focused family therapy with obese and extremely obese pediatric subjects on body mass index (BMI) z-scores and self-esteem. Materials and Methods. Fifty-four obese children, aged 6-17 years, were referred to an outpatient obesity clinic. The families received solution-focused family therapy provided by a multidisciplinary team. Height and weight were recorded; BMI and BMI z-scores were derived. Self-esteem was assessed with a validated questionnaire, "I Think I Am." Parents completed "The Family Climate Scale" assessing family dynamics. Results. Eighty-one percent of the children (n=44, mean age 11.9 years, mean BMI z-score 3.67, range 2.46-5.48) and their parents participated in the follow-up. Eleven children were treated for 6-12 months, and 33 for more than 12 months. On average, the families received 3.8 family therapy sessions. Intervention resulted in a mean decrease in BMI z-score of 0.12 (p=0.0001). Self-esteem on the global scale improved after intervention (p=0.002), and also on sub-scales, depicting physical characteristics (p<0.001), psychological well-being (p=0.026), and relations with others (p=0.046). The Family Climate Scale showed improvement in the sub-scales for Expressiveness (p=0.002) and Chaos (p=0.002). Conclusions. Solution-focused family therapy provided by a multidisciplinary team to obese and extremely obese children may prove useful in the clinical setting, with a positive impact on obesity and self-esteem
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