Showing 5041 - 5050 of 5701 Items

Report of the President, Bowdoin College 1916-1917

Date: 1917-01-01

Access: Open access



Report of the President, Bowdoin College 1917-1918

Date: 1918-01-01

Access: Open access



The Future Regained: Toward a Modernist Ethics of Time

Date: 2020-01-01

Creator: Jack Rodgers

Access: Open access

This project explores the convergence of futurity and ethics through an examination of key figures in modernist literature. It studies works by Virginia Woolf, Marcel Proust, and James Joyce in order to conceptualize an encounter with the future which goes beyond a traditionally linear and teleological model of time, setting out to reimagine the role of both temporality and ethics in novels including Orlando, Mrs. Dalloway, In Search of Lost Time, and Ulysses. Key facets of this exploration, which is metaphorized and guided by the image of a window, include temporal otherness, transgression and fracturing of the self (primarily understood through the paradoxical experience of dying), and the arrival of the future into the present. Major theoretical influences include queer theory, poststructuralism, and anti-dialectics. Ultimately, the project makes the case that it is possible to construct a modernist ethics which embraces the messianic potential of absences, blanks, and blind spots, a proposition made possible by our encounter with an incomprehensible yet imminent fragment of the future out of place in the present. At the close, it suggests an ethical imperative towards “affirmative negation”—a messianic, annunciatory, affirmation of that which is missing or omitted.



Forces generated during stretch in the heart of the lobster Homarus americanus are anisotropic and are altered by neuromodulators

Date: 2016-01-01

Creator: E. S. Dickinson, A. S. Johnson, O. Ellers, P. S. Dickinson

Access: Open access

Mechanical and neurophysiological anisotropies mediate three-dimensional responses of the heart of Homarus americanus. Although hearts in vivo are loaded multi-axially by pressure, studies of invertebrate cardiac function typically use uniaxial tests. To generate whole-heart length-tension curves, stretch pyramids at constant lengthening and shortening rates were imposed uniaxially and biaxially along longitudinal and transverse axes of the beating whole heart. To determine whether neuropeptides that are known to modulate cardiac activity in H. americanus affect the active or passive components of these length-tension curves, we also performed these tests in the presence of SGRNFLRFamide (SGRN) and GYSNRNYLRFamide (GYS). In uniaxial and biaxial tests, both passive and active forces increased with stretch along both measurement axes. The increase in passive forces was anisotropic, with greater increases along the longitudinal axis. Passive forces showed hysteresis and active forces were higher during lengthening than shortening phases of the stretch pyramid. Active forces at a given length were increased by both neuropeptides. To exert these effects, neuropeptides might have acted indirectly on the muscle via their effects on the cardiac ganglion, directly on the neuromuscular junction, or directly on the muscles. Because increases in response to stretch were also seen in stimulated motor nerve-muscle preparations, at least some of the effects of the peptides are likely peripheral. Taken together, these findings suggest that flexibility in rhythmic cardiac contractions results from the amplified effects of neuropeptides interacting with the length-tension characteristics of the heart.


Bowdoin College Catalogue (1890-1891)

Date: 1891-01-01

Access: Open access




Wilson line approach to gravity in the high energy limit

Date: 2014-01-14

Creator: S. Melville, S. G. Naculich, H. J. Schnitzer, C. D. White

Access: Open access

We examine the high energy (Regge) limit of gravitational scattering using a Wilson line approach previously used in the context of non-Abelian gauge theories. Our aim is to clarify the nature of the Reggeization of the graviton and the interplay between this Reggeization and the so-called eikonal phase which determines the spectrum of gravitational bound states. Furthermore, we discuss finite corrections to this picture. Our results are of relevance to various supergravity theories, and also help to clarify the relationship between gauge and gravity theories. © 2014 American Physical Society.


Ecotourism Reconsidered: Chinese and Western Participation in the Thai Elephant Industry

Date: 2019-05-01

Creator: Miao (Jasmine) Long

Access: Open access



Miniature of Differential gene expression during compensatory plasticity in the prothoracic ganglion of the cricket, <i>Gryllus bimaculatus</i>
Differential gene expression during compensatory plasticity in the prothoracic ganglion of the cricket, Gryllus bimaculatus
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      Date: 2020-01-01

      Creator: Felicia F. Wang

      Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community