scholarly journals Introduction

2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 1-2
Author(s):  
Graham Holderness

In this issue of Critical Survey, the journal continues to publish cutting-edge research on Shakespeare and Renaissance literature, together with innovative work in modern literature and theatre studies.

Author(s):  
Mounika Punati ◽  
R. Yuvaraj

Another age of high-recurrence coordinated circuits is displayed, which is called substrate incorporated circuits (SICS). Current cutting edge of circuit plan and implementation stages dependent on this new idea are assessed and dis-cussed in delail. Various potential outcomes and various favorable circumstances of the SICS are appeared for microwave, millimeter-wave and opto hardware applications. Down to earth models are delineated with hypothetical and trial results for substrate coordinated waveguide (SIW), substrate incorporated chunk waveguide (SISW) and substrate incorporated non-transmitting dielectric (SI") direct circuits. Future innovative work patterns are likewise dis-cussed regarding ease imaginative plan of millimeter-wave and optoelectronic coordinated circuits.


2022 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. v-vi

This general issue of Critical Survey ranges from mediaeval to modern literature and drama.


Author(s):  
Natasa Andjelkovic

The goal of this work is to use a genre-poetical and literary-historical base to analyze a possibility of establishing a specific sub-genre core in Druga knjiga Seoba, which is created through a multi-centuries tradition of menippean satire and the carnivalization of literature on the one hand, and modernism on the other. The result of examining the genre tradition, or rather carnivalization and menippea, and literary-historical context, or rather modernism in this novel should be to detect the differences between traditional carnivalization in medieval and renaissance literature and one in the modern literature and to notice the innovations within the carnival as a motive and thematic base


2020 ◽  
Vol 69 (265) ◽  
pp. 124-144
Author(s):  
Harvey Wiltshire

Abstract In her 2008 monograph Unto the Breach: Martial Formations, Historical Trauma, and the Early Modern Stage, Patricia A. Cahill argues that critics of Renaissance literature have thus far failed to ‘reckon with the fact that early modern traumatic experience is defined not only by its subject matter … but also by what can be described as its “belated” and “latent” temporal structure’. Which is to say that the hallmark of trauma – both early modern and modern – is the delayed manifestation of the signs and symptoms that evince the originary experience having taken place; as such, trauma is defined by the period of latency that follows the instigating event, known only by the belated arrival of symptoms attesting to it. Since then, scholars have begun to interrogate the ways in which early modern literature appears to anticipate later cultural and theoretical configurations of trauma. By examining the significance of trauma and intertextuality in Shakespeare’s The Rape of Lucrece (1594), this essay builds on the insights of a strong and diverse body of research that continues to attend to the complex role of trauma in early modern literature. By reading The Rape of Lucrece in the context of and also through Shakespeare’s Ovidian source material, this essay suggests that the very act of returning to Ovid formally encodes the distinctive and disturbing structure of trauma into Shakespeare’s depiction of responses to extreme experience.


Author(s):  
J. Temple Black

The output of the ultramicrotomy process with its high strain levels is dependent upon the input, ie., the nature of the material being machined. Apart from the geometrical constraints offered by the rake and clearance faces of the tool, each material is free to deform in whatever manner necessary to satisfy its material structure and interatomic constraints. Noncrystalline materials appear to survive the process undamaged when observed in the TEM. As has been demonstrated however microtomed plastics do in fact suffer damage to the top and bottom surfaces of the section regardless of the sharpness of the cutting edge or the tool material. The energy required to seperate the section from the block is not easily propogated through the section because the material is amorphous in nature and has no preferred crystalline planes upon which defects can move large distances to relieve the applied stress. Thus, the cutting stresses are supported elastically in the internal or bulk and plastically in the surfaces. The elastic strain can be recovered while the plastic strain is not reversible and will remain in the section after cutting is complete.


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