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Keywords: Lear
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Journal Article
Mary Wong and others
American Journal of Clinical Pathology, Volume 155, Issue 5, May 2021, Pages 698–710, https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcp/aqaa184
Published: 01 December 2020
... the majority of “clear cell” HCCs. The subtypes are significantly correlated with a few variables, suggesting valid differences of the subtypes, although additional study is warranted, particularly to standardize the definition of SH-HCC. Hepatocellular carcinoma lear cell iver teatohepatitis teatosis...
Journal Article
Cesar Rodriguez-Saona and others
Arthropod Management Tests, Volume 44, Issue 1, 2019, tsz009, https://doi.org/10.1093/amt/tsz009
Published: 03 February 2019
...) at 10 fl oz/acre (+ Dynamic 0.5% v:v), Lorsban 4E (chlorpyrifos) at 3 pt/acre, Sevin XLR (carbaryl) at 3 liters/acre, and an untreated control. The experiment was conducted in a cranberry bog, cv. ‘Ben Lear’, located at the Rutgers P.E. Marucci Center in Chatsworth, New Jersey. Plots were 91 × 91 cm...
Journal Article
Richard Ashby
Adaptation, Volume 10, Issue 2, August 2017, Pages 210–229, https://doi.org/10.1093/adaptation/apx006
Published: 29 April 2017
..., the 1970 Russian film version of King Lear (Korol Lir) directed by Grigori Kozintsev represents the pinnacle of Shakespeare on film. Yet the film infamously cuts perhaps the most famous scene of the play—the scene at Dover cliff, in which Edgar leads the blinded Gloucester to an imaginary...
Journal Article
Farr A. Curlin and Keith G. Meador
Christian bioethics: Non-Ecumenical Studies in Medical Morality, Volume 22, Issue 1, April 2016, Pages 1–4, https://doi.org/10.1093/cb/cbv028
Published: 17 February 2016
... alternative, for the authors, with Jonathan Lear (2000) , are persuaded that Aristotle’s account of happiness amounts to a deadly seduction. By locating happiness in a state of contemplation that is beyond the ordinary conditions of human life, Aristotle, like Bacon, makes happiness dependent on escaping...
Journal Article
Farr A. Curlin
Christian bioethics: Non-Ecumenical Studies in Medical Morality, Volume 22, Issue 1, April 2016, Pages 62–79, https://doi.org/10.1093/cb/cbv029
Published: 17 February 2016
...Farr A. Curlin *Address correspondence to: Farr A. Curlin, MD, Trent Center for Bioethics, Humanities & History of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Box 3040, Durham, NC 27710, USA. E-mail: [email protected] . In what follows, I describe Lear’s account of irony and indicate...
Journal Article
Janice Wardle
Adaptation, Volume 7, Issue 2, August 2014, Pages 134–153, https://doi.org/10.1093/adaptation/apu017
Published: 14 July 2014
... a staple of adaptation criticism. Outside broadcast theatre cinema Richard II King Lear liveness . This paper will explore the ‘outside broadcasting’ of theatrical productions during the early twenty-first century. In considering this fairly recent...
Journal Article
Philip Parry
Forum for Modern Language Studies, Volume 46, Issue 2, April 2010, Pages 166–188, https://doi.org/10.1093/fmls/cqq001
Published: 18 March 2010
...Philip Parry LEAR And my poore foole is hangd, no, no life, why should a | dog, a horse, a rat of life and thou no breath at all, O thou wilt | come no more, neuer, neuer, neuer, pray you vndo this button, | thanke you sir, O, o, o, o. EDGAR He faints my Lord, my Lord. LEAR Breake hart, I...
Journal Article
Yvonne Griggs
Adaptation, Volume 1, Issue 2, September 2008, Pages 121–139, https://doi.org/10.1093/adaptation/apn021
Published: 01 September 2008
...Yvonne Griggs In certain critical circles, King Lear has been deemed, similarly, a morality play showing us a redemptive path strewn with promises of regeneration (Mack 117), its message being much more positive than that of the early gangster films of the 1930s with their explicit...
Journal Article
H. Schöllnberger and others
Carcinogenesis, Volume 27, Issue 7, July 2006, Pages 1432–1444, https://doi.org/10.1093/carcin/bgi345
Published: 12 January 2006
... Prevention Study EPIC, European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition ERR, excess relative risk LEAR, lifetime excess absolute risk LERR, lifetime excess relative risk TSCE, two-step clonal expansion model The earliest approaches to mathematically investigate cancer began in the early...
Journal Article
Herbert S. Donow
The Gerontologist, Volume 34, Issue 1, February 1994, Pages 73–78, https://doi.org/10.1093/geront/34.1.73
Published: 01 February 1994
... of old age suggest unresolved conflict between youth and age, there often appear young characters in these works who mediate between these polar extremes, thus becoming instruments of generational continuity. King Lear Old Goriot Generational continuity Generational equity Exploitative elders Ageism...
Chapter
Published: 04 July 2002
... that the Kantian project cannot fully answer the challenge of scepticism. Stroud further argues that Jonathan Lear's Kantian reading of the later Wittgenstein, alluring the latter into the realm of idealism, does not succeed to the extent desired by Lear. Frege G idealism Lear J Kant I knowledge Hume D...
Chapter
Published: 20 June 2013
...This chapter re-examines Shakespeare's use of Samuel Harsnett's Declaration of Egregious Popish Impostures (1603) in King Lear: Harsnett's polemical satire functions as a piece of genre criticism that redefines Catholic exorcisms as sometimes ironically tragic...
Chapter
Published: 05 April 2018
..., like Job’s, was divinely authorized for a finite period of time. A wave of theological and literary writings affirm the remarkable impact of the Joban trajectory of suffering in early modern culture. Shakespeare’s King Lear is no exception. Yet, instead of upholding the Joban paradigm...
Chapter
Published: 25 August 2011
...This chapter discusses two charges to the effect that Davidson’s argument against the possibility of radically different conceptual schemes would establish some form of idealism if it was sound. The charges are due to Thomas Nagel and Jonathan Lear. The chapter argues against Nagel’s charge...
Chapter
Published: 24 October 1996
...As You Like It, written and performed sometime between 1598 and 1600, is a genial comedy with an uncanny similarity to King Lear in structure and themes. The resemblance is based on the depiction by both plays of the division of families and the disruption...
Chapter
Published: 29 March 2001
... a common essence. Elizabethan tragedy differs from Greek, but Shakespearean tragedy differs from Marlovian, King Lear is utterly distinct from Othello, and the Quarto and Folio texts of King Lear actually furnish the readers with two plays, not one...
Chapter
Published: 16 January 2003
...Shakespeare, it has been claimed, was the first to translate into English words the laws of vanishing-point perspective. So, according to art historians, Edgar's projection in King Lear of the view of the Channel from ‘the extreme verge’ of Dover Cliff was unprecedented in its...
Chapter
Published: 15 October 2018
... and Adonis he explores the traumatic severing of eye and mind’s eye; in King Lear he dismantles the age-old poetic association of blindness and wisdom. eye s fancy located in faculty psychology allusions to in Macbeth imagination aesthetic utility of light metaphor of in Romeo...
Chapter
Published: 04 September 2014
...This section introduces Edgar/Tom’s role as one that epitomizes Shakespeare’s radical testing of theatrical, political, experiential, and metaphysical possibility. It also explains how the book will be a sustained reading of King Lear. The Edgar-part witnesses, suffers, or refracts...
Chapter
Published: 04 September 2014
...Chapter abstract 3–5 sentences, or around 120 words and no more than 200 words This section looks at the closing scene in both the Quarto and Folio, as Edgar recounts the death of Gloucester, and the return of Kent, and Lear enters with the apparently-dead body of Cordelia...