Thé vert, thé noir, quels bénéfices pour la santé?

2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (62) ◽  
pp. 29-34
Author(s):  
Anne-Marie Roussel
Keyword(s):  
Law in Common ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 118-150
Author(s):  
Tom Johnson

This chapter argues that Forest legal culture revolved around the management of woodland resources, principally the ‘vert and venison’ that formed the central concern of Forest law. This emphasis on management was built into the very structures of the local court that used this law, which served more as mechanisms of financial accounting than as tribunals for the resolution of disputes or the enactment of justice; it was intensified by the concerns of the specialist local officers—such as foresters, woodwards, and verderers—who were often paid in kind with timber and venison, and who were obliged to account for the way in which they cultivated and used these resources. The inhabitants of Forests, then, though they possessed significant customary rights, were thus faced with a legal regime that offered relatively little scope for the kind of idealized community-building that characterized other areas of the late-medieval countryside. Forest legal culture was not built around associative relations between people, but rather, the allocation and usage of natural resources. This worked to make law revolve around claims about the most judicious methods of conserving the Forest, a plane of argument that was tilted against tenants.


Humanities ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 150
Author(s):  
Jacqueline Couti ◽  
Jason C. Grant

The question of homosexuality in Francophone Caribbean literature is often overlooked. However, the ways in which the Haitian René Depestre’s Le mât de cocagne (The Festival of the Greasy Pole, 1979) and “Blues pour une tasse de thé vert” (“Blues for a Cup of Green Tea”), a short story from the collection Eros dans un train chinois (Eros on a Chinese Train, 1990) portray homoeroticism and homosexuality begs further study. In these texts, the study of the violence that surrounds the representation of sexuality reveals the sociopolitical implications of erotic and racial images in a French transatlantic world. Hence, the proposed essay “Man up!” interrogates a (Black) hegemonic masculinity inherited from colonialism and the homophobia it generates. This masculinity prescribes normative traits that frequently appear toxic as it thrives on hypersexuality and brute force. When these two traits become associated with violence and homoeroticism, however, they threaten this very masculinity. Initially, Depestre valorizes “solar eroticism,” a French Caribbean expression of a Black sexuality, free and joyful, and “geolibertinage,” its transnational and global expression. Namely, his novel and short story sing a hegemonic and polyamorous heterosexuality, respectively, in a postcolonial milieu (Haiti) and a diasporic space (Paris). The misadventures of his male characters suggest that eroticism in transatlantic spaces has more to do with Thanatos (death) than Eros (sex). Though Depestre formally explores the construction of the other and the mechanisms of racism and oppression in essays, he also tackles these themes in his fictional work. Applying Caribbean feminist and gendered lenses to his fiction bring to light the intricate bonds between racism, sexism and homophobia. Such a framework reveals the many facets of patriarchy and its mechanism of control.


2012 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 71-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luciana Flaquer Martins ◽  
Julio Wilson Vigorito

INTRODUCTION: In orthodontics, determining the facial type is a key element in the prescription of a correct diagnosis. In the early days of our specialty, observation and measurement of craniofacial structures were done directly on the face, in photographs or plaster casts. With the development of radiographic methods, cephalometric analysis replaced the direct facial analysis. Seeking to validate the analysis of facial soft tissues, this work compares two different methods used to determining the facial types, the anthropometric and the cephalometric methods. METHODS: The sample consisted of sixty-four Brazilian individuals, adults, Caucasian, of both genders, who agreed to participate in this research. All individuals had lateral cephalograms and facial frontal photographs. The facial types were determined by the Vert Index (cephalometric) and the Facial Index (photographs). RESULTS: The agreement analysis (Kappa), made for both types of analysis, found an agreement of 76.5%. CONCLUSIONS: We concluded that the Facial Index can be used as an adjunct to orthodontic diagnosis, or as an alternative method for pre-selection of a sample, avoiding that research subjects have to undergo unnecessary tests.


2010 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. A79
Author(s):  
N. Auberval ◽  
S. Dal-Ros ◽  
V. Schini-Kerth ◽  
M. Pinget ◽  
S. Sigrist
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 239-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thiago O. Borges ◽  
Alexandre Moreira ◽  
Renato Bacchi ◽  
Ronaldo L. Finotti ◽  
Mayara Ramos ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Alberto Moretti ◽  
Daniele Spiga ◽  
Giorgia Sironi ◽  
Giovanni Pareschi ◽  
Stefano Basso ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Daniele Spiga ◽  
Alberto Moretti ◽  
Giovanni Pareschi ◽  
Giorgia Sironi ◽  
Gianpiero Tagliaferri ◽  
...  

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