2,398 research outputs found

    Raymond Queneau’s Œuvres complètes de Sally Mara

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    This chapter follows the development of Raymond Queneau’s works published under the pseudonym (or auteur supposé) of Sally Mara, including her journal intime, at a time when diary-writing and the writing subject itself were out of favour with the literary avant-garde. A novel published in 1947 attributed to Sally Mara, followed by her Journal intime (1950) and her Œuvres complètes (1962), draw on Gide’s experiments with diary-writing, but comically expose the formal processes by which an author-figure and literary œuvre are constructed. This is often done by creating conflict between the several authorial figures involved (Queneau, Mara, and the fictional editor Michel Presle), and by processes of metalepsis (the transgresssion of boundaries in a narrative framework). Yet the works do not reduce the author-figure to an entirely textual, discursive phenomenon, disconnected from reality, and they tend to endorse a reader’s curiosity about the ‘real’ author.</p

    The role of cholinergic neurotransmission in the functioning of the SCN / by Sally Anne Ferguson.

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    Errata is tipped in between leaf 9 & 10.Bibliography: leaves 209-235.235 leaves : ill. ; 30 cm.Focusses specifically on the role of acetylcholine in the circadian timing system of mammals, using the rat as an animal model.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 199

    Ferguson-Smith, Malcolm: transcript of a video interview (06-Jun-2015)

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    Interview with Professor Malcolm Ferguson-Smith, conducted by Ms Emma M. Jones, for the History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group, 06 June 2015, in Glasgow. Transcribed by Mrs Debra Gee, and edited by Professor Tilli Tansey and Mr Alan Yabsley. The project management was undertaken by Mr Adam Wilkinson. Professor Malcolm Ferguson-Smith (b. 1931) is Emeritus Professor of Pathology, University of Cambridge. He graduated in medicine at Glasgow University in 1955 and, while undertaking postgraduate training there in pathology, was introduced to research on sex chromatin under Bernard Lennox. An interest in Klinefelter’s syndrome in 1957 to 1958 led to his appointment as Fellow in Medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, in 1959, where he established the first chromosome diagnostic service in the USA, and undertook cytogenetic research into Turner syndrome. Research interests include molecular cytogenetics, karyotype evolution, vertebrate sex determination and comparative genomics. He is joint author of 'Essential Medical Genetics'.The History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group is funded by the Wellcome Trust, which is a registered charity (no. 210183). The current interview has been funded by the Wellcome Trust Strategic Award entitled “Makers of modern biomedicine: testimonies and legacy” (2012-2017; awarded to Professor Tilli Tansey)

    Comment on 'Melatonin as a hypnotic: Pro'

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    Copyright © 2004 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved.Cameron J. van den Heuvel, Sally A. Ferguson, M. Mila Macchi and Drew Dawsonhttp://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/623074/description#descriptio

    Reply to the comment on 'Melatonin as a hypnotic: Con'

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    Cameron J. van den Heuvel, Sally A. Ferguson, M. Mila Macchi and Drew Dawsonhttp://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/623074/description#descriptio

    Ferguson School District No. 4573

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    Photograph - A view of Ferguson School building near Athabasca, Alberta. ATS 24-66-21-W

    Fantasy Novel Writing Workshop and Retreat (Summer 2025)

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    Jacob Ferguson, Associate Director of Development for Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College in UM Development / Honors College, spent the week working on my fantasy novel, which is set in a fictionalized Scotland and centers on themes of forbidden magic, ostracism, hidden history, and found family.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/staff_res/1048/thumbnail.jp

    Letter to the editor

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    Saul S. Gilbert, Cameron J. van den Heuvel, Sally A. Ferguson and Drew Dawsonhttp://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/623074/description#descriptio

    Ferguson School District No. 4573 - 02

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    Photograph - A group of pupils with baseball equipment from Ferguson School. ATS 24-66-21-W

    The Iowa Homemaker vol.15, no.5

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    She’s Been a Campus Personality By Prof. Blair Converse No Race Prejudice in Barbados By Rosemae Johnson Ideas Centuries Old By Sally Tragedy in One Act By Isabella Palmer Journalists Like Their Fun By Virginia Berry Watch the Cyclone Ends By Winn Heyer “We Thought it Would be That Easy” By Bess Ferguson Lastest Fashions for a Fall Breakfast by Katherine Hoffman</p
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