1,103 research outputs found

    What Climate Denialism Can Teach Us About The Trustworthiness of Science

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    What Climate Denialism Can Teach Us About The Trustworthiness of Science Jenna Lange (Pomona College)Comments by Jules Obbard (Puget Sound)Chair: Aidan Bicknel

    Around the world in eighty gays : retranslating Jules Verne from a queer perspective

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    Studies of multiple causation of literary translation outcomes (e.g. Brownlie 2003, 2006) have found that individual translators may have a significant idiosyncratic input into the form of the translated text, in tandem with other causal influences, including the source text itself, translation norms and skopoi. The nature of translatorial selfinscription and creativity may include an original deconstruction of a source text, indeed, a radical reinterpretation of same. The translator Butcher has reinterpreted Around the World in Eighty Days (1873/1995) in the context of its author Jules Verne’s life history, original manuscripts of the French novel in question, prior to subsequent expurgation by their publisher Hetzel, and textual clues themselves. Butcher's Queer Studies readings have had an important influence on his translation decisions. Examples of his translation solutions throughout this Verne novel are discussed, and are seen to purposively accentuate perceived sexual and sometimes specifically gay subtexts. This article also investigates, linguistically, the plausibility of some of Butcher's controversial reinterpretations of the Verne imaginary

    The Influence of Jules Verne in Sweden Around 1900

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    The article presents the impact of Jules Verne among Swedish readers around 1900 by investigating a juvenile magazine, Kamraten, published between 1892 and 1911. Two newly discovered Martian Epics in Kamraten by the Swedish author of adventure and crime stories, Julius Regis (1889―1925), “En bröllopsresa i blå etern” (1906―07; “A Honeymoon in Space”) and “Dokumentet från Mars” (1910; “The Document from Mars”), give vivid testimony to Verne’s popularity. These stories ― in which Verne is mentioned ― are about Swedes travelling in space and are clearly influenced by Verne’s novels

    Jules Verne, “marginal sécant” de la littérature française

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    Nous proposons dans cet article d’analyser l’œuvre de Jules Verne au travers de différents concepts et théories susceptibles d’expliquer pourquoi l’auteur des Voyages extraordinaires n’a jamais été reconnu en son temps par ses pairs. Le concept de « marginal sécant » (Crozier & Friedberg), la théorie des « champs littéraires » (Bourdieu) et la théorie de « la complexité » (Morin) éclairent ainsi autrement le positionnement historique, sociologique et littéraire de cet auteur majeur de la littérature française.We analyze Jules Verne’s work through different concepts and theories, explaining why the author of The Extraordinary Voyages was never recognized in his time by his peers. The "marginal secant" concept (Crozier & Friedberg), the "literary fields" theory (Bourdieu), and the "complexity" theory (Morin) thus enlighten — each differently — the historical, sociological, and literary placement of this major author of French literature

    Reply to the criticisms of James D. Dana : including Dana's two articles with a letter of Louis Agassiz

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    by Jules MarcouHandschriftliches Geschenkexlibris: "Prof. A. Mousson from the author" Exemplar der ETH-BI

    Political cartoonist Jules Feiffer

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    Poster for a slide lecture by the cartoonist, playwright and author, Jules Feiffer.https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/archives-posters/1082/thumbnail.jp

    Jules Verne - a new polishing technique related to FJP

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    A variation on the fluid jet polishing (FJP) technique, arbitrarily named Jules Verne (JV), will be described in this article. Jules Verne is a glass processing technique that removes material due to the fact that the tool and the surface are in close contact, and a slurry moves in between the tool and the surface. This approach has both advantages and disadvantages with respect to the original FJP modus: it enables a feed-controlled machining process, but deeper lying areas are harder to reach. A simulation model will be presented that predicts the flow of the slurry in the Jules Verne setup, which is followed by the computation of the trajectories of the particles in the flow. Furthermore, experimental data will be reported demonstrating the feasibility of the JV idea. A model will also be presented simulating the interaction between the surface and the impinging abrasives at a microscopic level, enabling the prediction of the final surface roughness.Optics Research GroepApplied Science
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