scholarly journals The Banquet as a Feast of Reconciliation.

Author(s):  
Xavier Escribano

Using the guise of a simple supper of commemoration of the hundredth anniversary of the birth of a charismatic Protestant pastor, who had gathered around him a community of devoted disciples in a small village in Norway, Babette’s Feast by Isak Dinesen shows us a banquet in which, through the food prepared with the eye of an artist, the senses are awakened for the first time to a kind of experience where what is corporal and what is spiritual cease to be at odds with each other. Thus, a reconciliation of a lost unity between the body and the soul, matter and spirit, is celebrated and achieved. From this first step, with which the fundamental internal fragmentation is overcome, the other levels of unity (unity with others, with the cosmos, and with God) occur in a chain sequence, so to speak. As in all religious situations, there occurs here the coming together of two orders that seem unreconciliable: the temporal and the eternal, the limited and the infinite, the profane and the sacred. The mediator between both orders is Babette, who takes on a genuine sacerdotal function. However, there is an unexpected inversion, and paradoxically what is profane and mundane comes to the rescue of what is spiritual and sacred.

Author(s):  
Abou-eisha A ◽  
Adel E El-din

Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate, for the first time, the possible in vivo genotoxic and carcinogenic activity associated with exposure to norgestrel (NGT) drug through employing the very recently established and adjusted genotoxic and tumorigenic methods in Drosophila melanogaster.Methods: Two in vivo genotoxic test systems were used; one detects the somatic mutation and recombination effects (somatic mutation and recombination test [SMART] wing-spot test) and the other detects the primary DNA damage (the comet test) in the body cells of D. melanogaster. On the other hand, the warts (wts)-based SMART assay is a vital genetic examination in Drosophila used to identify and characterize cancer potential of compounds.Results: Four experimental doses of NGT were used (ranging from 0.24 μM to 16 μM). NGT was found to be non-genotoxic at all tested concentrations even at the highest dose level 16 μM and failed to increase the frequency of tumors in the somatic cells of D. melanogaster.Conclusion: Our results strengthen the hypothesis that steroidal drugs might act through a non-genotoxic carcinogen mechanism where the carcinogenic properties occur by direct stimulation of cellular proliferation through a steroid receptor-mediated mechanism. In addition, the results obtained in this research work may contribute to highlighting the importance of NGT as a potent neuroprotective antioxidant drug.


1959 ◽  
Vol 197 (2) ◽  
pp. 292-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
John S. Krebs

Chromatographic analysis of BSP (sodium phenoltetrabromphthalein disulfonate) excreted into the bile of the rat showed that the BSP had undergone transformation into similarly colored but chemically different compounds. Injection of purified samples of these derived compounds into the rat showed that the compounds were less effectively removed from plasma than BSP but were excreted into bile at almost the same rate as when pure BSP was injected. Chromatographic analysis of bile following injection of the isolated bile-type derivatives of BSP showed that the derivatives were formed, one from the other, in a chain sequence, starting with BSP. Chromatographic analysis of the blood following injection of BSP showed that bile-type derivatives of BSP appeared in the blood and became progressively more predominant with increasing time after injection of the BSP.


Viatica ◽  
2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gilles LOUŸS ◽  

In The Japanese Chronicles, Nicolas Bouvier presents a full experience of being in the world, where all the senses are engaged, smell and taste in particular. Bouvier recalibrates the question of the body in travel narratives and shows how the senses can inform knowledge about the other, as organs of intercultural mediation. The sensorial notes of the text become tools for anthropological knowledge, calling on the body.


1998 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 217-231
Author(s):  
Timothy Pratt

While the Community Treaties provided the institutional framework for the European Community, much of what now makes up the constitution of the European Union was not provided for in those Treaties, but evolved within that framework. This is certainly true of the role of national parliaments. There is nothing about the role of national parliaments in any of the Treaties concluded prior to the Maastricht Treaty, and even then the references appear not in the body of the Treaty, but only in two Declarations annexed to it, one on the role of national parliaments in the European Union and the other on the Conference of the Parliaments. While the former states that it is important to encourage greater involvement of national parliaments in the activities of the European Union, it gives no indication of what that involvement should be. The Treaty of Amsterdam goes a step further. It includes a protocol on the role of national parliaments. This is important in that, for the first time, it gives substantive treaty recognition to their involvement in European Union activities. But, while it is markedly more supportive than the Maastricht Declarations, it does not confer any specific powers on national parliaments, nor does it attempt to define their functions.


1968 ◽  
Vol 46 (5) ◽  
pp. 1059-1070 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth L. Brown ◽  
William Threlfall

Five genera of cestode parasites were found in the short-finned squid. Representatives of three of these, Pelichnibothrium speciosum, Monticelli, Scolex polymorphus Rudolphi, and Nybelinia sp. are new host records. The other two genera are Phyllobothrium and Dinobothrium, both of which have previously been described from Illex illecebrosus illecebrosus. The specimens of Dinobothrium collected were identified to the species level, Dinobothrium plicitum Linton, for the first time. Contrary to conclusions drawn by other workers, the plerocercoids of Phyllobothrium sp. do not wander freely about the body of the squid in nature, but are restricted to the caecum. The wandering of plerocercoids referred to above is probably a function of rising temperature over the period between time of capture of the squid and time of examination.


1960 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 181 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Robb

The internal anatomy of Typhlops shows a number of interesting features which support the hypothesis that the typhlopids are wrongly classified among the Ophidia, and that they should either be given subordinal rank, equivalent to the Sauria and the Serpentes, or be made an infra-order of the Sauria. The alimentary, vascular, respiratory, and reproductive systems are described in detail for the first time. The most striking peculiarities occur in the respiratory and reproductive systems. Unlike most snakes, Typhlops has two functional lungs, one occupying most of the anterior third of the body cavity, and the other smaller one lying immediately behind it. All the pulmonary blood vessels are well developed. The male reproductive organs are solid, grooved, protrusible structures, each of which is contained within a connective tissue sheath in the postanal region. These organs are unlike the hemipenes of any snake or lizard of which a description can be found. Both male and female animals possess a large cloaca1 gland in the postanal region. There are also several uncommon features in the alimentary and vascular systems.


2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 271-289
Author(s):  
Ian Stronach ◽  
Elizabeth Smears
Keyword(s):  
The Body ◽  

This article sets out in two different directions. Its spine is a post-structuralist examination of ‘touch’ as a cultural, historical entity and as a contemporary taboo in audit cultures. It ends up in a Deleuzian notion of touch as a ‘survol’ (survey) of the senses, both reflexive and transformative — claiming the articulations of a double ontology. The second register or ‘rib’ of the article sets out to act as a disruption of that narrative, claiming that the ‘survol’ disguises an evacuation of the body from the text, a flight from engendered, embodied selves whose performances are flattened out in textual rationalisation. The overall intention is not to privilege one account over the other but to set them in a relation of critical adjacency, where the reading has to be ‘with’ rather than ‘against’ the other. Such an indetermination aims to recruit an active reading. So don't just read: join in!


1876 ◽  
Vol 166 ◽  
pp. 269-313 ◽  

1. Structure of the Medusæ . -Although it is not my intention in this preliminary notice to enter into the literature of my subject, it is nevertheless desirable to quote the well-known statements of Prof. L. Agassiz regarding the nature and distribution of the nervous system which he describes as occurring in the Medusae. He says:-“There is unquestionably a nervous system in the Medusæ, but this nervous system does not form large central masses to which all the activity of the body is referred, or from which it emanates....In Medusæ the nervous system consists of a simple cord, of a string of ovate cells, forming a ring round the lower margin of the animal, extending from one eye-speck to the other, following the circular chymiferous tube, and also its vertical branches, round the upper portion of which they form another circle. The substance of this nervous system, however, is throughout cellular, and strictly so, and the cells are ovate. There is no appearance in any of its parts of true fibres. “I do not wonder, therefore, that the very existence of a nervous system in the Medusae should have been denied, and should not be at all surprised if it were even now further questioned. I would only urge those interested in this question to look carefully along the inner margin of the chymiferous tubes, and to search there for a cord of cells of a peculiar ovate form, arranged in six or seven rows, forming a sort of string, or rather similar to a chain of ovate beads placed side by side and point to point, but in such a manner that the individual cells would overlap each other for one half, one third, or a quarter of their length, being from five to seven side by side at any given point upon a transverse section of the row ; and would ask those who do not recognize at once such a string as the nervous system to trace it for its whole extent, especially to the base of the eye-speck, where these cells accumulate in a larger heap, with intervening coloured pigment forming a sort of ganglion; then, further, to follow it up along the inner side of the radiating chymiferous tubes which extend from the summit of the vault of the body, and to ascertain that here, again, it forms another circle round the central digestive cavity, from which other threads, or rather isolated series of elongated cells, run to the proboscis; they will then be satisfied that this apparatus, in all its complication, is really a nervous system of a peculiar structure and adaptation, with peculiar relations to the other systems of organs.......... and such a nervous system I have already traced in all its details, as here described, in the genera Hippocrene ( Bougainvillia ), Tiaropsis , and Staurophora ”.


1998 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 217-231
Author(s):  
Timothy Pratt

While the Community Treaties provided the institutional framework for the European Community, much of what now makes up the constitution of the European Union was not provided for in those Treaties, but evolved within that framework. This is certainly true of the role of national parliaments. There is nothing about the role of national parliaments in any of the Treaties concluded prior to the Maastricht Treaty, and even then the references appear not in the body of the Treaty, but only in two Declarations annexed to it, one on the role of national parliaments in the European Union and the other on the Conference of the Parliaments. While the former states that it is important to encourage greater involvement of national parliaments in the activities of the European Union, it gives no indication of what that involvement should be. The Treaty of Amsterdam goes a step further. It includes a protocol on the role of national parliaments. This is important in that, for the first time, it gives substantive treaty recognition to their involvement in European Union activities. But, while it is markedly more supportive than the Maastricht Declarations, it does not confer any specific powers on national parliaments, nor does it attempt to define their functions.


2012 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
pp. 583-585 ◽  
Author(s):  
MAA. Coimbra ◽  
CS. Mascarenhas ◽  
G. Müller ◽  
JGW. Brum

Thirty-two specimens of Columbina picui (picui ground-dove) were examined, and a collection of arthropods was made by washing the external surface of the body and the nasal cavity. The species in the order Phthiraptera found and their respective prevalences, mean abundance and mean intensity were: Columbicola passerinae (84.4%; 10.3; 12.2), Hohorstiella passerinae (21.9%; 0.7; 3.1) and Physconelloides eurysema (3.1%; 0.1; 2). The gamasid mites found in the birds and their respective prevalences, mean abundance and mean intensity were: Pellonyssus marui (31.3%; 1.2; 3.9), Ornithonyssus bursa (15.6%; 0.2. ;1.2) and Mesonyssus sp. (6.3%; 0.1; 1). Columbicola passerinae, H. passerinae, P. eurysema, O. bursa, P. marui and Mesonyssus sp. were recorded for the first time infecting C. picui in Brazil. Except for O. bursa, the other species are reported for the first time in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.


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