Book review: DAN MCINTYRE, Point of View in Plays: A Cognitive Stylistic Approach to Viewpoint in Drama and Other Text-types. Amsterdam/Philadelphia, PA: John Benjamins, 2006, xi + 203 pp

2007 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 716-717
Author(s):  
Aleksandar Čarapić
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Joachim Quack ◽  
Jannik Korte ◽  
Fabian Wespi ◽  
Claudia Maderna-Sieben

This chapter covers all aspects of Demotic palaeography. It deals with its research history and names its most important tools. Palaeographic methodology and issues of sign definition are discussed from a Demotic point of view. The problems of classifying Demotic scribal hands and assigning them to chronologically and topographically defined palaeographic stages are addressed. The chapter furthermore discusses the influence of text types, palaeographic “registers,” and scribal schools on sign shapes as well as the interactions between Demotic and other Egyptian scripts. It addresses the categorization of the Demotic signs and also orthography.


Author(s):  
E.J.G. Lips

AbstractThe genre of the Ars moriendi is by no means a homogeneous one. Indeed, the great textual diversity has more than once attracted the attention. This diversity, caused by various omissions and, more often, extensions in the original text-types, is often considered as the decay of an originally orthodox theological genre. In this essay, manuscripts and printed versions of the Ars moriendi in the Dutch language ( ± 1450-1530) are studied. Instead of considering the omissions and extensions meant above as a decline of the genre, the author attempts to regard them, as the medieval writers may have done, as means to make the texts find their way to the public more easily. Various methods used by the authors of these Artes to reach their public, are examined and their presumable succes is evaluated. It seems that, whereas particularly the older literature assumes an almost infinite public, recent research does not confirm this point of view. For, in spite of explicit remarks addressed to all christians, commerce dictated to the printers a more or less wealthy public. As for the manuscripts, these seem mainly to have had a public of clergy and (female) religious communities. However, considering the existence of a public of listeners, both manuscripts and printed versions had, in an indirect way, their impact on the masses of the christians.


2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-58
Author(s):  
Alessio M. Pacces ◽  
Laurent Germain ◽  
Áron Perényi

This review covers the book titled “CORPORATE GOVERNANCE: NEW CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES”, which was written by Alexander N. Kostyuk, Udo Braendle and Vincenzo Capizzi (Virtus Interpress, 2017, Hardcover, ISBN: 978-617-7309-00-9). The review shortly outlines the structure of the book, pays attention to it’s strong sides and issues that will be, by the reviewers’ point of view, most interesting for the reader.


1977 ◽  
Vol 55 (18) ◽  
pp. 3211-3217 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachel Massuda ◽  
C. Sandorfy

It has been shown previously that halofluorocarbons having anesthetic potency hinder the formation of hydrogen bonds (HB) of the [Formula: see text] types and it has been suggested that this is linked to a competitive mechanism involving another type of association. Since some of the most potent and widely used fluorocarbon anesthetics contain a mobile hydrogen atom the question arises if in such molecules the competitive mechanism involves the formation of HB's with the anesthetic as the proton donor instead of, or in addition to, association due to the electron acceptor properties of the higher halogens as seems to be the case for those fluorocarbon anesthetics which contain no hydrogen. Chloroform, halothane, methoxyflurane, enflurane, and 4,5-dichloro-2,2-difluoro-l,3-dioxolane have been studied from this point of view with the result that both mechanisms appear to operate.


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