A small circle with wide horizons

Keyword(s):  
1995 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 817-840 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroko Willcock

Inspired by Japanese influences among others the late Qing period saw a great surge in the writing of fiction after 1900. The rate of growth was unprecedented in the history of Chinese literature. The great surge coincided with rapid socio-political changes that China underwent in the last fifteen years of the Qing Dynasty. At the psychological level, the humiliating defeat by Japan in 1895 gave rise to a feeling of urgency for reform among some progressively minded Chinese intellectuals. Those reformers came to view fiction as a powerful medium to further their reform causes and to arouse among the people the awareness of the changes they believed China most urgently required. Fiction was no longer considered as constituting insignificant and trivial writings. It was no longer the idle pastime of retired literati composed to entertain a small circle of their friends, or written by a discontented recluse to vent a personal grudge through a brush. The role of fiction came to be defined in relation to its utility as an influence on politics and society and its artistic quality was subordinated to such a definition.


2006 ◽  
Vol 524-525 ◽  
pp. 633-638
Author(s):  
Christian Scheffzük ◽  
Kurt Walther ◽  
Alexander Frischbutter ◽  
Rudolf Naumann

An anhydrite-dolomite rock was investigated in order to find correlations between intracrystalline strain and texture. The sample represents a composite rock, called Zuckerdolomit, occurring for instance in the central Alps. Zuckerdolomit may occasionally respond to mechanical impulses with a complete break down of its structure. Residual strain was scanned at the strain/stress diffractometer EPSILON-MDS and the crystallographic texture was obtained by neutron time-of-flight diffraction at the texture diffractometer SKAT at the pulsed neutron source IBR-2 in Dubna, Russia. Texture was additionally determined by the U-stage microscopy. The texture of the rock could be derived from the main constituents: anhydrite and dolomite. The anhydrite texture appears to be characterised by an orthorhombic symmetry. One plane of the symmetry trends parallel to the rock’s foliation plane, with basal planes subparallel to and a small circle distribution within the foliation plane. There is a subordinated small circle orientation pattern relating in 45° to the rock’s foliation plane. On the other hand, the subordinated regulation pattern of anhydrite is fixed to the orientation of the foliation plane. The determined residual strain data for anhydrite and dolomite reflect a generally opposed directed state, regarding both, compression and dilatation. Moreover, taking into account the elastic constants for both minerals, which differ approximately by the factor two, the special geomechanical behaviour of the studied Zuckerdolomit appears to be considerably determined by interactions between its residual strain and textural properties. This may be of particular importance for underground activities (mining, tunnelling etc.). The dangerous geomechanical behaviour of the rock seems to be determined by its residual straintexture relations more than so far believed (anhydrite hydration).


1935 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-27
Author(s):  
I. P. Vasiliev ◽  
N. S. Podolsky

The acquired lesions of the pulmonary artery and its branches are rarely found on the section table, which can partly be explained by the special anatomophysiological relations in the small circle of blood circulation, and of course, also by the fact that changes in this system are not always visible at autopsies and in some cases go unnoticed. In recent years, however, the issue of changes in the pulmonary artery has become the focus of attention for both clinicians and pathologists. Therefore, any observation relating to small circle vessels that does not fit within the framework of normal changes is worthy of attention.


1985 ◽  
Vol 66 (4) ◽  
pp. 318-318
Author(s):  
N. I. Guseva ◽  
T. A. Larina

A comprehensive study of central and regional (in the system of the pulmonary circulation) hemodynamics by the polyreographic method was carried out in 84 healthy individuals.


Author(s):  
Shaul Stampfer

This chapter details the development of the image of the Vilna Gaon, one of the best-known east European Jews. The Gaon left few disciples and a very problematic literary heritage. He wrote enigmatic notes rather than clear and readable comments on the Talmud, so that reconstructing his interpretation of a talmudic text is a difficult and arduous task. For this, and probably other reasons as well, he was not often cited. One consequence of this was that later generations could not even learn of his ideas secondhand. If the Gaon's works were not widely studied, how then was his memory preserved? In his lifetime, the Gaon had a very strong impact on a small circle of individuals close to him and a leading role in the Vilna community and region. Therefore, biographies seem to have had an important role in the maintenance of his memory. However, while they preserved his memory, they also helped shape it. Interestingly, one of the elements that seems to have been underemphasized in these biographies was the Gaon's opposition to hasidism.


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