315,087 research outputs found

    Saratov’s plot in Yu. N. Chumakov’s letters

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    The article discusses the place of Saratov-based plot in Yu. N. Chumakov’s letters addressed to the author of the article. The subject of discussion in the correspondence is the defense of Yu. N. Chumakov’s dissertation at Saratov University in 1970 and its role in his scientifi c biography. The defense of the dissertation with Yu. M. Lotman as the fi rst opponent became the key event of the Saratov plot and its climax. Having singled out fragments from the correspondence related to the plot of Saratov, the author seeks to explain the direction of the ensuing epistolary dialogue, why the defense of the dissertation was perceived by Yu. N. Chumakov as a more than signifi cant event for him, especially in the context of his dramatic biography. The author proves that the defense was an explosion of the linear sequence of the text of life, which dramatically changed the fate of the scientist. The desire to talk in detail about the defense, to fi nd out what impression it made, and to look at what was happening on that memorable day for him through the eyes of the addressee of the letter, betrayed the desire to read and interpret his fate again and again. Particular attention is paid in the correspondence to the personalities of such outstanding philologists, professors of Saratov University as A. P. Skaftymov and E. I. Pokusaev. Yu. N. Chumakov was not A. P. Skaftymov’s student and was not familiar with him, but specifi cally noted the acquisition and subsequent development of the principles of a scientifi c approach to the work, set out in his theoretical article in 1923. About the personality of E. I. Pokusaev, his supervisor, and the history of the relationship with him, Yu. N. Chumakov wrote in great detail. Having told about the role of E. I. Pokusaev, who supported the dissertation at the defense, and having outlined his complex, large and humanly attractive personality, Yu.N. Chumakov completes the plot of Saratov, which was very meaningful for him, primarily for self-understanding of his scientifi c path

    Paul N. Yu, M.D.

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    A formal portrait of Paul N. Yu, M.D. photographed in 1968. At the time, Yu was professor of medicine (cardiology) at the University of Rochester Medical Center

    Paul N. Yu, M.D.

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    A photograph taken in July 1960 of Paul N. Yu, M.D. with a patient. At the time, Yu was associate professor of medicine (cardiology) at the University of Rochester Medical Center

    Paul N. Yu, M.D.

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    A photograph taken in the spring of 1970 of Paul N. Yu, M.D. and Betty Deffenbaugh in the coronary and pulmonary intensive care unit at Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, N.Y. Yu was professor of cardiology at the University of Rochester Medical Center. Deffenbaugh was acting director of nursing service

    Yu. N. Chumakov: Memories of Meeting Yu. M. Lotman

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    The article features an excerpt from Chumakov’s memoirs, describing how, in the late 1960s, he got acquainted with Lotman’s book Lectures on Structural Poetics and then met the author of the lectures at the Pushkin Conference in Pskov. According to the memoirist, Lotman’s Lectures on Structural Poetics gave literary studies in the 1970s a new language, which may then have been modified within some other schools of literary studies, but it laid the foundation for the scientific description of the fiction text. Investigation of the fiction text has been characterized since the late 1960s by the structuralist approach. The memoirs also mention Chumakov’s defending his candidate dissertation, in which Lotman acted as an opponent (the dissertation was entitled “Problems of Pushkin’s Poetics: (Lyrics, The Stone Guest, Eugene Onegin)” and was defended in Saratov, in 1970. One part of Chumakov’s candidate dissertation, as well as his report at the Pushkin conference in Pskov, was devoted to the role of the notes and “Passages from Onegin’s Journey” in Pushkin’s novel “Eugene Onegin”. Independently of each other, Chumakov and Lotman came to the conclusion that the notes are not a supplement, but real independent parts within the novel in verse, along with its eight chapters

    Il romanzo cinese e la Cina "liquida" di Yu Hua

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    This article is focused on the artistic development in the novels written by the Chinese writer Yu Hua during the last decades. Following the recent turbulent evolution of Chinese society and culture, Yu Hua's fiction has gone through different phases from the avantgarde, the postmodern experimental fiction of the 1980's, to the so-called neorealistic phase in the late 20th century, up to the recent hyperrealistic works, which perfectly reflect and embody Z. Bauman's theory of liquid modernity

    « Crépuscule pour un petit garçon », de Yu Hua

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    Naour Françoise, Hua Yu. « Crépuscule pour un petit garçon », de Yu Hua. In: Perspectives chinoises, n°45, 1998. pp. 50-53

    REDESCRIPTION AND SYSTEMATIC STATUS OF NEOCAPILLARIA PHOXINI YU ET WANG, 1994 (NEMATODA: CAPILLARIIDAE)

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    Re-examination of the syntypes of the capillariid nematode Neocapillaria phoxini Yu et Wang, 1994, the type species of Neocapillaria Yu et Wang, 1994, described from the intestine of the freshwater fish Phoxinus lagowskii variegatus Gunther (Cyprinidae) from China, confirmed its morphological similarity with species of Freitascapillaria Moravec, 1987, to which it is transferred as Freitascapillaria phoxini (Yu et Wang, 1994) comb. n. Consequently, Neocapillaria Yu et Wang, 1994 (a homonym to Neocapillaria Moravec, 1987) and Sinocapillaria Moravec et Spratt, 1998 become junior synonyms of Freitascapillaria. Skrjabinocapillaria gigantea is transferred to Freitascapillaria as F. gigantea (Wang, 1984) comb. n.Re-examination of the syntypes of the capillariid nematode Neocapillaria phoxini Yu et Wang, 1994, the type species of Neocapillaria Yu et Wang, 1994, described from the intestine of the freshwater fish Phoxinus lagowskii variegatus Gunther (Cyprinidae) from China, confirmed its morphological similarity with species of Freitascapillaria Moravec, 1987, to which it is transferred as Freitascapillaria phoxini (Yu et Wang, 1994) comb. n. Consequently, Neocapillaria Yu et Wang, 1994 (a homonym to Neocapillaria Moravec, 1987) and Sinocapillaria Moravec et Spratt, 1998 become junior synonyms of Freitascapillaria. Skrjabinocapillaria gigantea is transferred to Freitascapillaria as F. gigantea (Wang, 1984) comb. n

    Meganola wulongensis Hu & Yu & Wang 2019, sp. n.

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    Meganola wulongensis sp. n. (Figs 15–17) Type material. Holotype: male, Wulong, Chongqing, 9–10.vii.2018, Leg. Yong Yu & Yanqing Hu. Two paratypes: 1 male, Fangjia, Nanbu county, Sichuan Prov., 7–8.vii.2018, Leg. Yong Yu & Yanqing Hu; 1 male, Rongjiang county, Guizhou Prov., 16–18.vii.2018, Leg. Yong Yu & Yanqing Hu. Diagnosis. In the male genitalia, the new species resembles Meganola zegzugminta László, Ronkay & Ronkay, 2014 (Figs 19 & 20), but these two species of wing pattern are completely different (Figs 15 & 18). In the new species, the antemedial and medial lines are poorly visible and fused with medial fascia, the postmedial line is zigzag, the subterminal line is striped, while in M. zegzugminta the antemedial and medial lines are fine and distinct without medial fascia, the postmedial line is wavy, the subterminal is feeble and represented with a row of short lines. In the male genitalia, the new species has a broad uncus, a narrow tegumen, a curved harpe with dentations, a short saccus and aedeagus, while M. zegzugminta has a slender uncus, a relatively broad tegumen, a relatively straight harpe without the obvious dentation, a long saccus and aedeagus. Description. Adult (Fig. 15). Wingspan 12–15 mm. Head greyish brown; antenna brown, bipectinate in male; labial palpus brown. Thorax darker brown. Collar greyish brown. Abdomen brown. Forewing ground color pale greyish brown, costal margin area darker brown from wing base to the subterminal line, the medial fascia blackish brown; basal line darker brown; antemedial and medial lines poorly discernible; postmedial line blackish brown, excurved to vein R 4, incurved and arched to vein M 3, then incurved to inner margin; subterminal line darker brown, arched. Hindwing more or less greyish brown. Male genitalia. (Figs 16 & 17). Uncus broad, tapering, sharped apically; tegumen thin, broad basally, medium long; valva slender, narrow medially; costal margin sclerotized; sacculus small; harpe upcurved distally, pointed apically, with dentations at costal margin; saccus relatively shorter than uncus, V-shaped. Aedeagus cylindrical; vesica without cornuti. Female. Unknown. Distribution. China (Chongqing, Sichuan, Guizhou). Etymology. The specific name is derived from the type-locality.Published as part of Hu, Yan-Qing, Yu, Yong & Wang, Min, 2019, Taxonomic study of the genus Meganola (Lepidoptera, Nolidae, Nolinae), with three new species and a new record from China, pp. 289-294 in Zootaxa 4586 (2) on pages 292-293, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4586.2.5, http://zenodo.org/record/264449

    Marine algal flora of Pengchia Yu and its special place in the marine phytogeography of Taiwan

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    A total of 52 taxa of marine benthic algae is reported from Pengchia Yu, a remote islet located off northeastern Taiwan. Two taxa represent new records for the marine flora of Taiwan, three taxa show their range extension. This islet acts as a tropical refugium in a region that is widely known to have cold water floristic affinities. The effects of the sea surface-water temperature and current on the distribution of algae are also discussed.TR: CS9510874Source type: Electronic(1
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