7,483 research outputs found

    Vrsanskysajda Jiang, Xing & Li, 2023, nom. nov.

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    Genus Vrsanskysajda nom. nov. Sajda Vršanský, 2021: 27 (Blattaria: Corydiidae: Holocompsinae). Preoccupied by Sajda Dworakowska, 1981: 244 (Homoptera: Cicadellidae: Typhlocybinae). Type species: Vrsanskysajda equatorialis (Vršanský in Vršanský et al. 2021) comb. nov. Etymology. The replacement name for the genus is derived from the name of Peter Vršanský, the author of the genus Sajda. Gender: feminine. Distribution. Brezina, Algeria.Published as part of Jiang, Lina, Xing, Jichun & Li, Yujian, 2023, New replacement name for the genus Sajda Vršanský, 2021 (Blattaria: Corydiidae: Holocompsinae), pp. 343-344 in Zootaxa 5270 (2) on page 343, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5270.2.10, http://zenodo.org/record/784970

    Inventing A Wolfish China - On Jiang Rong'S Wolf Totem

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    The Wolf Totem by Jiang Rong has won great success both in and out of China. Jiang Rong criticizes Han Chinese and embraces the culture of the northern ethnic minority group, the Mongols, because of its stronger sense of competition and domination. In the epilogue of this novel, Jiang argues that the wolf totem was the most ancient totem for all Chinese people and retells Chinese history using this framework. This paper explores the background of the novel and its author, as well as supporting materials the author uses in his proposal concerning the wolf totem, and suggests that the wolf totem is a purely ideological invention of Jiang Rong. This invention reflects Jiang's own philosophy and caters to the cultural needs of modern Chinese people. In inventing the wolf totem, the author uses historical documents, archeological findings, as well as a far-fetched bodily metaphor. However, none of this evidence is validated by scholarly research

    Collecting and Acquiring in Earnest (The 14th Annual Health Sciences Lively Lunch)

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    In this year\u27s sponsored but no holds barred lunch, host Wendy Bahnsen (substituting for colleague Nicole Gallo) offered a brief greeting, and Ramune Kubilius provided the traditional “year in review” synopsis of developments since the last Charleston Conference. Panelists then shared insights and led discussion on earnest attempts to meet users’ information needs and satisfy administrations’ budget and other expectations. No matter how information has become repackaged, two formats remain important in health sciences communication: books and journals (articles). Speakers focused on library experiments with these formats. Is PDA a solution? Bahnsen contributed highlights and findings from a survey by Rittenhouse on health sciences customers’ experience with the R2 PDA program. Yumin Jiang shared some impressions on the experience of her institution with a few e‐book PDA/DDA (patron‐driven or demand‐driven acquisition) packages. Suggestions were made about best practices in e‐book collection building with PDA programs. What conclusions can be reached from experimentation with and implementation of on‐demand article acquisitions? Emma O\u27Hagan shared insights and experience with journal article “on demand” and “pay per view” services at two institutions. Andrea Twiss‐Brooks fielded questions and moderated discussion with session participants about the services and programs described by panelists, ranging from discussion about specific programs and models to broader collection and service implications

    Interviews with Yang Jiang

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    Yang Jiang was born, under her real name of Yang Jikang, in 1911. She is the author of a novel, several plays, and a large number of sanwen. Her first writing dates back to 1933, and her latest work, Women sa (We Three), in which she recalls family memories, appeared in July 2003, and has been highly successful, with 180,000 copies sold within two months. However, for thirty years, from 1949 to 1981, for obvious reasons, Yang Jiang preferred to devote herself entirely to teaching, research—she is also an expert on Chinese and foreign literature—, and translation: she is the translator, most notably, of the Chinese version of Don Quixote. She is now devoting herself to the publication of the work of her husband, the scholar Qian Zhongshu (1910-1998). In France she is best known for her narratives of the Cultural Revolution, published by Christian Bourgois.The two interviews that follow were carried out in 2005. Yang Jiang gave written answers to the questions I had sent her, which explains the slightly abrupt nature of our exchanges, given that it was not possible for me, by the nature of the interviews, to respond spontaneously to her words. If we seem to jump from one subject to another, it is because I had asked her to clarify certain details that I planned to use in my research into her work (« La Figure de l’intellectuel chez Yang Jiang » [“The Intellectual in The Work of Yang Jiang”], which became my doctoral thesis in Chinese Studies, under the direction of Isabelle Rabut, Inalco, Paris, December 2005, 404 pp.). Yet, to me, these words of Yang Jiang are of interest just as they are, since she uses words so sparingly and generally refuses to do interviews. In any case, and I am grateful to her for this, she only allowed these words to be published precisely because she had written them herself

    Jiang Rong, Le Totem du loup, (Wolf Totem) translated by Yan Hansheng and Lisa Carducci

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    Published in China in 2004 by Changjiang wenyi chubanshe, Jiang Rong’s novel Lang tuteng (Wolf Totem) was immediately a phenomenal success. I myself witnessed this success while in China, where bookshops displayed multiple stacks of the book. Its author, Jiang Rong, the pseudonym of Lu Jiamin, was an activist in the Tiananmen Square movement in 1989; now a researcher in social sciences and the husband of Zhang Kangkang, a well-known writer, Jiang Rong maintained a mystery surrounding his iden..

    Dang dai Zhongguo jiao yu kuo zhang zhong de gao deng jiao yu ji hui bu ping deng

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    Jiang, Jin.Thesis Ph.D. Chinese University of Hong Kong 2015.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 127-138).Abstracts also in Chinese; appendix A includes Chinese.Title from PDF title page (viewed on 09, November, 2016).Jiang, Jin

    Liu wang qu: ge, ge ju.

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    江陵詞 ; 雪厂曲 ; 集體編劇雪厂, 葉瓊, 江凌.Music in number notation.Jiang Ling ci ; Xuechang qu ; ji ti bian ju Xuechang, Ye Qiong, Jiang Ling

    Jiang Jieshi : from fascination to disappointment of the bolshevik revolution

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    This article is dedicated to Jiang Jieshi's - one of the greatest leaders of 20th century China - attitude to the Bolshevik Revolution. After introduction the author outlines the May Fourth Movement, where it explains the reasons of rejection of the traditional culture by the Chinese intellectuals and their interest in the Russian Revolution. The main part of the article focuses on the reasons of Jiang Jieshi's fascination of the revolution's phenomenon, and on the explanation of his disappointment of the Bolshevik Revolution and the Soviet Russia for which his mission to Moscow in 1923 had played a crucial role

    Tychius zhangi Jiang & Caldara 2020, n. sp.

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    30. Tychius zhangi Jiang & Caldara n. sp. Zoobank.org/ urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 0E8C0D6B-E580-43DE-990F-5DC4A26695DC (Figures 97–100, 219–222, 295–296, 333, 346, 358, 389, 425, 453, 480) Material examined. Holotype, male, CHINA: Xinjiang: Tulufan, (20–140 m), 24-VI-1958, leg Guang Wang (IOZCAS). Paratypes, same data as holotype (2 IOZCAS); Jiashi (1160 m), 20-VI-1959, leg Afu Tian (1 IOZCAS); Hejing, 26-VII-1958, leg Changqing Li (1 IOZCAS). Diagnostic description. Length 1.90–2.50 mm (Fig. 97–100). Vestiture on dorsum grayish unicolorous. Rostrum (Fig. 219–222) moderately long, poorly sexually dimorphic, slightly longer in female than in male (Rl/Rw 5.30–5.50 in male, 7.00– 7.50 in female; Rl/Pl 0.88–0.92 in male, 0.93–0.94 in female), thin, in lateral view curved at base, then almost straight to apex. Pronotum (Pw/Pl 1.10–1.17) with slightly rounded sides from base to apex, slightly wider than long. Elytra suboval (Ew/Pw 1.26–1.36; El/Ew 1.50–1.69), with slightly rounded sides in basal half. Femora (Fig. 295–296) unarmed, tibiae (Fig. 333) without sexual characters. Third tarsomere moderately wider than second tarsomere (Fig. 346). Claws (Fig. 358) with small medial teeth as long as 1/3 of claw, separated from claw from base. Male genitalia: body of penis (Fig. 389) in dorsal view moderately large, parallel-sided near to apex, with acutely pointed apex (Fig. 425), in lateral view strongly curved and very subtle, nearly as long as apodeme. Female genitalia: spermatheca see Fig. 453; spiculum ventrale (Fig. 480) with thin arms spaced in basal third but distinctly narrowing to middle, then completely joined to apex. Remarks and comparative notes. This species is closely related to T. tachengicus and T. sulphureus. Tychius zhangi differs by the rostrum of both sexes being longer and that of the female in lateral view of the same width from the antennal insertion to the apex and not distinctly narrowed. The medial teeth of the claw are distinctly smaller and shorter than in the other two species. Finally, the body of the penis in dorsal view is moderately large, parallelsided near to apex, with acutely pointed apex, in lateral view strongly curved and very subtle, nearly as long as an apodeme. Etymology. The name of this species is the family name of our corresponding author Prof. Runzhi Zhang. We would like to thank him for supporting our work in weevil taxonomy. Biology. No data are available. Distribution. China (XIN)Published as part of Jiang, Chunyan, Caldara, Roberto & Zhang, Runzhi, 2020, The genus Tychius Germar (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Curculioninae) in China, with description of three new species, pp. 1-62 in Zootaxa 4856 (1) on pages 32-33, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4856.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/441131

    The evolution of surfaces and their measurement

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    Surfaces and their interactions are at the heart of living systems and all moving objects. They have fascinated man from the ancient Egyptians, through Leonardo Da Vinci in the Renaissance period, to nanotechnologists of today. This paper elucidates the science of surfaces and their interactions, covering the importance of surfaces and how they influence us all in terms of energy, environment and quality of life. It attempts to uncover the story of mankind‟s deepening understanding of surfaces and their measurement, and to provide an overview of surface measurement and shows how current thinking has evolved from a complicated historical background
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