Academic literature on the topic 'Testicule feminisant'

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Journal articles on the topic "Testicule feminisant"

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M M, Vijay Kumar, Prema Prabhudev, and Kalyani C. "TESTICULAR FEMINISING SYNDRO ME." Journal of Evolution of Medical and Dental Sciences 3, no. 13 (March 25, 2014): 3306–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.14260/jemds/2014/2285.

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Hewavisenthi, Suhashini, and C. John Parmenter. "Thermosensitive period for sexual differentiation of the gonads of the flatback turtle (Natator depressus Garman)." Australian Journal of Zoology 50, no. 5 (2002): 521. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/zo02014.

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Temperature-dependent sex determination has previously been reported for the flatback turtle (Natator depressus). The present study investigates the thermosensitive embryonic developmental stages for the sexual differentiation of this species. Groups of eggs incubated initially at constant temperatures of 26, 29 and 32�C were shifted once during incubation from either a constant masculinising temperature (26 or 29�C) to a constant feminising temperature (32�C) or vice versa. Findings from this study support the hypothesis that the effect of temperature and the timing of the thermosensitive period are dependent upon the specific temperature utilised during incubation. The thermosensitive developmental stages at masculinising temperatures were different to those of feminising temperatures. For the 26 to 32�C temperature shift, the thermosensitive period was confined to a single developmental stage (Stage 24). Ovarian development was determined at a later developmental stage than testicular development.
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Sinha, Rahul Janak, Ved Bhaskar, Seema Mehrotra, and Vishwajeet Singh. "Sigmoid vaginoplasty in testicular feminising syndrome: surgical technique, outcome and review of the literature." BMJ Case Reports, February 12, 2016, bcr2015213705. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2015-213705.

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Masterson, John M., Chau Bui, Yi Zhang, Xiaopen Yuan, Carissa Huynh, Harneet Jawanda, Wohaib Hasan, Warren Tourtellotte, Daniel Luthringer, and Maurice M. Garcia. "Feminising hormone therapy reduces testicular ACE‐2 receptor expression: Implications for treatment or prevention of COVID‐19 infection in men." Andrologia, September 13, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/and.14186.

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Stovel, Nora Foster. "Written in “Women’s Ink”: French Translation and Female Power in Carol Shields’s Unless." Canada and Beyond: A Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultural Studies 3, no. 1-2 (December 19, 2013). http://dx.doi.org/10.33776/candb.v3i1-2.3043.

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Carol Shields’s last novel, Unless (2002), was a finalist for the Canada Reads contest for the best Canadian novel of the first decade of the 20th century. It would have been an ideal winner, not only because it is a brilliant novel, but also because it is distinctively Canadian in combining English and French. Protagonist-narrator Reta Winters, née Summers, daughter of a Francophone mother and Anglophone father, combines Canada’s official languages. Reta, like Shields, is bilingue and a translator and fiction writer. The opening segment of Unless focuses on the politics and poetics of her translations from French to English. She makes particular use of French: whenever Reta, or Shields, wants to emphasize a point, such as women’s powerlessness, she employs French translation.Shields employs three levels of translation in Unless. First, Reta’s literal translations of the texts of Danielle Westerman, French “feminist pioneer,” introduce the narrative. Second, Shields translates her breast cancer narrative into a novel about her daughter’s disappearance: Norah sits on a street corner with a sign reading “GOODNESS.” To discover her daughter, Reta embarks on an ethical quest. Third, Reta transfers her realization about women’s powerlessness, which she suspects instigated Norah’s disappearance, to her theory of fiction in this metafictional text. Finally, Reta's reflection on fiction is transformed into a feminist manifesto. Her awakening inspires a new understanding of the moral responsibility of fiction to reflect reality, especially the relationship between gender and power in this millennial novel. Reta practices “bean-counting,” noting the all-male lists of the world’s greatest thinkers and writers—“testicular hit-list[s] of literary big cats.” Reta writes six letters of protest, but doesn’t send them. If Reta is afraid to publish her views on inequality, Shields is not: she believes in “blurt[ing] bravely.”“Unless” is the pivotal concept of the novel, offering alternative narratives. Reta emphasizes the concept by noting, “Ironically, unless, the lever that finally shifts reality into a new perspective, cannot be expressed in French.”Unless women’s voices, including the silent voice of “a Muslim woman” who self-immolated on the street corner where Norah appeals for goodness, our society cannot become ethical.This essay explores Shields’s use of French language and translation to challenge the inextricable connection between gender and power in our society generally and literary culture particularly, to examine the ethics of egalitarianism regarding women and cultural “others,” and to explore the interrelationships between existence and fiction.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Testicule feminisant"

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VILLARET, LAURENCE. "Le testicule feminisant : a propos de 2 cas." Aix-Marseille 2, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988AIX20364.

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Biallet, Brigitte. "Actualite sur le syndrome de morris : interet de la gonadectomie par coelioscopie ; a propos de deux cas." Nancy 1, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1993NAN11139.

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André, Thierry. "Association d'un syndrome de feminisation testiculaire complete et d'une dystrophie du tissu elastique chez un enfant consanguin." Lyon 1, 1990. http://www.theses.fr/1990LYO1M078.

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