Appointed in 1931, he began research for an extensive clinical and genetic study of 1280 residents who had various forms of mental and physical disability. In many ways, this extended canonical ...19th-century anatomy, notably surgeon Charles Bell's book The Hand. Any physician now would appreciate Saunders’ instruction for a routine examination of the hand, the fingers, and the nails, their shape and proportion, the hand's moisture, dryness, colour, and texture. Penrose thought it curious that palmists typically speak of a mound attached to each finger—the mounts of Jupiter, Saturn, Apollo, and Mercury—since this was plainly erroneous.
Concern about the size of the world's population did not begin with the "population bomb" in 1968. It arose in the aftermath of World War I and was understood as an issue with far-reaching ...ecological, agricultural, economic, and geopolitical consequences. The world population problem concerned the fertility of soil as much as the fertility of women, always involving both "earth" and "life."
Global Populationtraces the idea of a world population problem as it evolved from the 1920s through the 1960s. The growth and distribution of the human population over the planet's surface came deeply to shape the characterization of "civilizations" with different standards of living. It forged the very ideas of development, demographically defined three worlds, and, for some, an aspirational "one world."
Drawing on international conference transcripts and personal and organizational archives, this book reconstructs the twentieth-century population problem in terms of migration, colonial expansion, globalization, and world food plans. Population was a problem in which international relations and intimate relations were one. Global Population ultimately shows how a geopolitical problem about sovereignty over land morphed into a biopolitical solution, entailing sovereignty over one's person.
Ex vivo lung perfusion (EVLP) is a novel approach for extended evaluation and/or reconditioning of donor lungs not meeting standard International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation criteria ...for transplantation.
We retrospectively evaluated 13 consecutive EVLP runs between January 2009 and December 2010. Lungs rejected for routine transplantation were implanted to the EVLP circuit and reperfused using acellular supplemented Steen Solution (Vitrolife, Göteborg, Sweden) up to a target flow rate of 40% of the donor's calculated flow at a cardiac index of 3.0 liters/min/m(2); target left atrial pressure < 5 mm Hg; and pulmonary artery pressure < 15 mm Hg. Mechanical ventilation was introduced after rewarming to 32°C: tidal volume, 6 to 8 ml/kg; respiratory rate, 7 to 8 breaths/min; duration of inspiration/expiration (I/E) ratio, 1:2; and positive end-expiratory pressure, 5 to 10 cm H(2)O. Hemodynamic and respiratory data monitoring with hourly clinical assessment were performed. Donor data, conversion rate to transplantation, and recipient outcome were analyzed.
Donor data (n = 13) were: age, 44.23 ± 8.33 years; female/male, 8:5; cause of death: intracranial hemorrhage, 11 (85%), stroke, 1 (7.5%), hypoxic brain injury, 1 (7.5%); smoking history, 9 (69%), 17.44 ± 8.92 pack-years; mechanical ventilation, 102.6 ± 91.92 hours; chest x-ray imaging: abnormal, 12 (92.5%); normal, 1 (7.5%). EVLP: mean 141 ± 28.83 minutes. Arterial partial pressure of oxygen/fraction of inspired oxygen 100% before termination of the circuit vs pre-retrieval value: 57.32 ± 9.1 vs 42.36 ± 14.13 kPa (p < 0.05). Six (46%) pairs of donor lungs were transplanted. Median follow-up was 297.5 days (range, 100-390 days), with 100% survival at 3 months.
EVLP may facilitate assessment and/or reconditioning of borderline lungs, with a conversion rate of 46 % and good short-term survival.
From the 1880s, states and self-governing colonies in North and South America, across Australasia, and in southern Africa began introducing laws to regulate the entry of newly defined “undesirable ...immigrants.” This was a trend that intensified exclusionary powers originally passed in the 1850s to regulate Chinese migration, initially in the context of the gold rushes in California and the self-governing colony of Victoria in Australia. The entry and movement of other populations also began to be regulated toward the end of the century, in particular the increasing number of certain Europeans migrating to the United States. It is perhaps unsurprising, then, that Britain followed this legal trend with the introduction of the 1905 Aliens Act, although it was a latecomer when situated in the global context, and certainly within the context of its own Empire. The Aliens Act was passed in response to the persecution of Eastern European Jews and their forced migration, mainly from the Russian Empire into Britain. It defined for the first time in British law the notion of the “undesirable immigrant,” criteria to exclude would-be immigrants, and exemptions from those exclusions. The Aliens Act has been analyzed by historians and legal scholars as an aspect of the history of British immigration law on the one hand, and of British Jewry and British anti-Semitism on the other. Exclusion based on ethnic and religious grounds has dominated both analyses. Thus, the Act has been framed as the major antecedent to Britain's more substantial and enduring legislative moves in the 1960s to restrict entry, regulate borders, and nominate and identify “undesirable” entrants effectively (if not explicitly) on racial grounds.
Abstract We might expect chiromancy in the modern period to be analysed best within the well-known late nineteenth-century occult revival. The specific practice of palmistry, as it happens, is ...minimally examined in that historiographical context. Yet the purpose here is not to reinstate palmistry into our already extensive understanding of an Anglo-American modern occult, but to show how other readers of hands, including those trained in biomedical sciences, exceeded occultism altogether, and often enough repudiated it. This article considers modern palmistry in the first instance through an intellectual and social historiography of mind–body knowledges and practices. It shows not only how various ‘psychic’ practices turned into ‘psy’ practices, but also how reading signs of the hand morphed into clinical diagnostics, into primatology, comparative anatomy and eventually into early medical genetics, especially through the so-called ‘simian line’ correlated with Down syndrome. Through analysis of a suite of London-based hand experts, this twentieth-century history of palm-reading argues for a plain ‘disenchantment’ of chiromancy, qualifying historians’ common commitment to theses of re-enchantment. One strand of palm-reading’s recent past turns out to be part of the history of scientific naturalism, not super-naturalism at all.
This book examines the coercive and legally sanctioned strategies of exclusion and segregation undertaken over the last two centuries in a wide range of contexts. The political and cultural history ...of this period raises a number of questions about coercive exclusion. The essays in this collection examine why isolation has been such a persistent strategy in liberal and non-liberal nations, in colonial and post-colonial states and why practices of exclusion proliferated over the modern period, precisely when legal and political concepts of 'freedom' were invented. In addition to offering new perspectives on the continuum of medico-penal sites of isolation from the asylum to the penitentiary, Isolation looks at less well-known sites, from leper villages to refugee camps to Native reserves.
World History and the Tasman Sea Bashford, Alison
The American historical review,
09/2021, Letnik:
126, Številka:
3
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Abstract
Tracking and analyzing connection and mobility are now conventional in oceanic and world historiography and in many Indigenous historiographies. This article offers a counterargument and ...counterinstance. On both sides of the Tasman Sea lie human histories of almost incommensurably different temporal orders, separate for several centuries and suddenly connected in 1770, when Polynesians and Aboriginal people met. The Tasman Sea turns out to be one of the more fascinating fault lines for world historians who seek to fold ancient and modern, so-called prehistory and history, together into new periodizations of deep time and shallow time. It suggests the need seriously to consider a Tasman Divide as much as a connected Tasman World. This article recasts James Cook’s crossing of the Tasman Sea in 1770 less as a significant first contact between Englishmen and Indigenous Australians on that coast and more as a meeting of three peoples who occupied radically different temporalities: (1) the Polynesian Tupaia, (2) the Englishman James Cook, and (3) Aboriginal people whose names we do not know.
In her Inaugural Lecture, Alison Bashford, Vere Harmsworth Professor of Imperial and Naval History, introduces the concept of ‘terraqueous histories’. Maritime historians often stake large claims on ...world history, and it is indeed the case that the connections and distinctions between land and sea are everywhere in the many traditions of world history-writing. Collapsing the land/sea couplet is useful and ‘terraqueous’ history serves world historians well. The term returns the ‘globe’ to global history, it signals sea as well as land as claimable territory, and in its compound construction foregrounds the history and historiography of meeting places. If the Vere Harmsworth Chair of Imperial and Naval History has recently turned from ‘imperial’ into ‘world’ history, so might its ‘naval’ element become terraqueous history in the twenty-first century.
A variety of reconsolidation boundary conditions exist for the destabilization of memory, including memory strength, prediction error, trace dominance, and memory age. The vast majority of studies ...examining boundary conditions have employed aversive tasks. The current study expands the literature on reconsolidation boundary conditions by employing an appetitive odor discrimination task and a delay that exceeds those used in past studies (i.e., 72 days). Rats were trained to dig in cups of scented sand to retrieve a sweet cereal reward. One day (Recent) or 72 days (Remote) following acquisition, rats received a single reactivation trial that included a prediction error (in the form of a non-reinforced trial), followed by intraperitoneal administration of the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (CHX; 1 mg/kg) or a saline control (SAL). One week later, rats completed a single non-reinforced test trial. Results showed that rats in the Remote condition took longer to dig than those in the Recent condition; additionally, CHX disrupted memory for digging behavior at significant levels in both the Recent and Remote conditions. Results are consistent with a small number of studies using non-aversive tasks, as well as a large number of studies using aversive tasks, demonstrating that recent and remote memories are vulnerable to the effects of an amnesic agent after sufficient reactivation.