Search Results - "eponym"

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  1. 1

    Functional Outcome Of Monteggia Fracures Treated Primarily With Plate Fixation A Rectrospective Study Of The Outcome by Wong Teik, Pooi

    Published 2001
    “…Fractures of the foreann with dislocation of the radial head are known as Monteggia fractures-dislocation. This eponym is among the most widely recognized by orthopaedic surgeons, largely because of the notoriously poor results associated with the treatment of these injuries, particularly in adults. …”
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  2. 2

    Paris, Japan, and modernity: a vexed ratio by Chang, Ting

    Published 2015
    “…By examining the illustrated travel narratives of two Frenchmen in Japan, Émile Guimet, founder of the eponymous museum of Asian art in Paris, and the artist Félix Régamey, who accompanied him on his tour in 1876, I argue that travel and transport provide a vehicle through which to challenge the centrality of Paris, and by extension, the West in the nineteenth century. …”
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  3. 3

    'Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da' Paul McCartney, Diaspora and the Politics of Identity by Stratton, Jon

    Published 2013
    “…A slice of happy-go-lucky pop-ska, it was recorded in June 1968 during the sessions for the eponymously titled double album, usually known as the White Album, released in November of that same year. …”
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  4. 4

    The decolonial killjoy: the British Raj as a space of political utopia by Ahmed, Ibtisam

    Published 2022
    “…Utopianism and colonialism have an intrinsically linked history. Thomas More’s eponymous Utopia (1516) was a settler colony after all, and the global spread of colonialism carried an ideological justification that had an implicit utopian explanation. …”
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  5. 5

    Interactions of thought and action in Old English poetry by Ponirakis, Eleni

    Published 2017
    “…This analysis has offered new insights into longstanding cruces such as the significance of ofermod in Maldon, the mysterious sylf-cunnige in Seafarer 35, and the absence of emotion for the eponymous heroine of Juliana. Furthermore, the presence of these patterns across the corpus brings into question the current division of Old English prose and poetry into ‘classical’ and ‘vernacular’ traditions.…”
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  6. 6

    Analysis of the genetic basis of variation in cell sizes of natural isolates of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe by KARARI, Kazhal

    Published 2017
    “…Wee1 is an inhibitory regulator of the kinase Cdc2 that regulates the onset of mitosis and correspondingly the wee1 gene was originally identified by experimentally induced loss of function mutations which generated the eponymous phenotype. Here we use natural isolates of S. pombe to analyse the genetic architecture underlying variation in cell cycle control. …”
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