Academic literature on the topic 'Triple Trouble in Hollywood'

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Journal articles on the topic "Triple Trouble in Hollywood"

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Geller, Janet A., Jacqueline Miller, and Patricia Churchill. "Triple Trouble." Journal of Emotional Abuse 6, no. 2-3 (2006): 77–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j135v06n02_06.

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Kaplan, Steven Jon. "Triple trouble." Mind & Society 19, no. 1 (2020): 11–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11299-020-00233-5.

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Zhang, Tina W., and Nancy Read. "Triple-Negative Trouble." International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics 101, no. 2 (2018): 263–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrobp.2018.02.173.

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Mrazova, L., Z. Jurikova, P. Danhofer, et al. "Triple trouble – DMD, autism, epilepsy." Neuromuscular Disorders 25 (October 2015): S243. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nmd.2015.06.212.

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Massoumi, Hatef, Manoj Pulicottil, Ajit Kokkat, Mario Ricci, Nejat Kiyici, and Hilary Hertan. "TRIPLE TROUBLE AFTER LAPAROSCOPIC CHOLECYSTECTOMY." American Journal of Gastroenterology 99 (October 2004): S196. http://dx.doi.org/10.14309/00000434-200410001-00601.

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Breitenstein, Alexander, Patric Biaggi, and Matthias Greutmann. "Triple trouble in the heart." European Heart Journal 34, no. 33 (2013): 2599. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/eht202.

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Schoser, B. "Self-diagnosis of a triple trouble." Neuromuscular Disorders 28, no. 10 (2018): 825–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nmd.2018.07.014.

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Turaga, Naga Sai Shravan, Danish Abbasi, Tanya Sharma, and Barry Uretsky. "DOUBLE TROUBLE MANAGED WITH TRIPLE ANTITHROMBOTIC THERAPY." Journal of the American College of Cardiology 77, no. 18 (2021): 2420. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0735-1097(21)03775-x.

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Li, Li, and Jo Ann Ford. "Triple trouble: Alcohol abuse by women with disabilities." Applied Behavioral Science Review 4, no. 1 (1996): 99–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1068-8595(96)80019-5.

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Riessland, Markus, Benjamin Kolisnyk, and Paul Greengard. "Reactive Dopamine Leads to Triple Trouble in Nigral Neurons." Biochemistry 56, no. 49 (2017): 6409–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.7b01057.

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Books on the topic "Triple Trouble in Hollywood"

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Pellowski, Michael. Triple Trouble: In Hollywood. Pages Publishing Group / Willowisp Press, 1989.

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1967-, Roy Jennifer Rozines, ed. Triple trouble. Aladdin, 2013.

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Dyer, Lois Faye. Triple Trouble. Silhouette, 2009.

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Triple trouble. Silhouette, 2009.

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Judy, Duarte, ed. Triple trouble. M&B, 2010.

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Thesman, Jean. Triple trouble. Avon Books, 1992.

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Dyer, Lois Faye. Triple trouble. M&B, 2010.

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Lee, Hickman Estella, ed. Triple trouble. Willowisp, 1988.

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Thesman, Jean. Triple trouble. Avon Books, 1992.

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Pellowski, Michael. Triple trouble. Willowisp Press, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Triple Trouble in Hollywood"

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Rhodes, Carl, Hermine Scheeres, and Rick Iedema. "Triple Trouble: Undecidability, Identity and Organizational Change." In Identity Trouble. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230593329_12.

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Morton, Jennie. "Voice and Dance Technique Integration: Triple Threat or Double Trouble?" In Perspectives in Performing Arts Medicine Practice. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-37480-8_18.

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Kagan, Richard. "Triple trouble." In The Hero’s Mask. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003035558-18.

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Pór, Katalin. "Trouble in Paradise." In De Budapest à Hollywood. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.42163.

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"Trouble in Paradise (1932)." In The Hollywood Romantic Comedy. Wiley-Blackwell, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781444395969.ch4.

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Su, Wendy. "Artistic and Critical Cinema under a Triple Threat." In China's Encounter with Global Hollywood. University Press of Kentucky, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813167060.003.0005.

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Llewellyn-Jones, Lloyd. "Trouble in the Tehran Multiplex: Xerxes, 300, and 300: Rise of an Empire in Iran." In Epic Heroes on Screen. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474424516.003.0013.

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This chapter studies how audiences in a particular location received the movie 300. The author examines how antiheroic constructions of the Persian King Xerxes in 300 and its sequel Rise of an Empire elicited strong negative reactions in Iran. Hollywood reinvented Xerxes as a force of evil, creating a corrupt representation of an Iranian national hero. The chapter shows how Iranian audiences received this plundered and corrupted version of their ancestral past.
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Donnar, Glen. "Conclusion." In Troubling Masculinities. University Press of Mississippi, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496828576.003.0006.

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This concluding chapter interrogates the presumed eradication of deep-seated anxieties identified throughout the book about the failings of males in “protective” roles in recent Hollywood film. The chapter focuses on the jingoistic 12 Strong (2018), which recounts the story of the first Special Forces team deployed into Afghanistan following 9/11. The film restages both America’s initial military response to the originary terror attacks and of reassuring “male action” subgenres—from the cavalry western to the WWII combat film—to erase the gendered sense of failure of 9/11 and the irresolution of the “war on terror.” The film’s coda showcases the supposedly triumphant return of soldier-father heroes, paragons of idealized American masculinity, to the home. However, the chapter finds that gendered anxieties about “protective” failings persist through multiple genre and narrative incoherences, which invert the “hero’s homecoming” and reiterate just how pervasive and enduring “gender trouble” remains in American film post-9/11.
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Ehrenfeld, David. "Writing." In Swimming Lessons. Oxford University Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195148527.003.0018.

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The semester is over, my grade rosters have been handed to the registrar, and I am home, writing sporadically and glancing through a book by P. G. Wodehouse, whose incomparable prose, as elegant as it is funny, is always very soothing. The thirty students in Conservation Ecology were very good this year. Most of them were informed, outdoors-loving, committed, hard working people who cared for each other and seemed to enjoy the class. With a few exceptions, however, they can’t write English, and I am still recovering from the effects of reading the term papers upon which their grades were largely based. For twenty-five years, I have been assigning a major term paper in lieu (“in loo,” as one student wrote) of an exam. I used to get eighteen- to forty-page papers, acceptably or even nicely written; now the students struggle to reach fourteen pages with the help of triple spacing, margins you could drive a bus along, and type sizes usually reserved for the visually disabled. And the writing! The first mistake the students are making is to use the “spell-checkers” of their computer software as a substitute for proofreading. The results are papers in which all the words are spelled correctly, even if they are not the right words. Reading these spell-checked papers can be like trying to translate from Spanish to English based on the assumption that words that are spelled the same in the two languages have the same meaning. (This can lead to some confusion if, for example, the Spanish words are sin, cabal, or saber.) In one of the papers, I had to erase a long, marginal comment I had written when I realized that illicit was meant to be elicit. In another, I had trouble with the philosophical implications of the word modal, used throughout the text, until I turned it into model, which made more sense. Then there were words such as begum (“a Muslim lady of high rank,” my dictionary told me), which didn’t seem to fit easily into the context of a paper on the genetics of coyotes, and which didn’t have an obvious substitute.
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Roberts, Patrick. "‘Ruins’ of the Forest Social Complexity and Tropical Cities." In Tropical Forests in Prehistory, History, and Modernity. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198818496.003.0010.

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The above quote from a recent Hollywood film presentation of Colonel Percival Fawcett’s obsessive early twentieth-century search for the remains of the Lost City of Z (Gray, 2016) highlights the effort that it has taken to convince the academic world and the public alike that large urban forms can be developed in tropical forest settings. While the film, and the book by David Grann (2009) upon which it was based, grossly overplay the exploration credentials, respect for Indigenous peoples, and scientific abilities of Colonel Fawcett (Hemming, 2017), this quote encapsulates the difficult working conditions and environmental determinism in western thought that have led to perceptions of ‘impossibility’ of extensive settlements and social complexity in tropical forests. Beyond searches for debated ‘lost’ cities, even where the clear ruins of ancient urban sites have been found in tropical forests, as with the Classic Maya in North and Central America and the Khmer Empire in Southeast Asia, their collapse has been seen as almost inevitable given necessary forest clearance, soil erosion, and population pressure on these delicate environments (Webster, 2002; Diamond, 2005; Chen et al., 2014; Lentz et al., 2014). In particular, the intensive agriculture seen as necessary to fuel the ‘urban revolution’ (Childe, 1950) and the development of cities and elite structures familiar to most archaeological definitions of cities (Adams, 1981; Postgate, 1992), has been considered impossible on the fragile, low nutrient soils of tropical forest habitats (Meggers, 1954, 1971, 1977, 1987). Other, less-discussed threats include natural disasters, such as mudslides and mass-flooding, that continue to trouble tropical regions prone to high annual or seasonal rainfall (Larsen, 2017). Nevertheless, new methodologies and theoretical shifts are highlighting the clear emergence of social complexity and extensive human populations prior to the arrival of European settlers in many of the world’s tropical forest settings. Here, I review the growing dataset of past ‘urban’ forms in tropical forests. As with ‘the origins of agriculture’ in Chapter 5, tropical forests have been crucial in demonstrating that traditional ideas of ‘urbanism’ in archaeology–namely ‘compact’, bounded, and dense populations documented in early Mesopotamia and the Mediterranean, and that dominate European thought—do not capture the whole wealth of ‘urban’ diversity and settlement networks that began to develop from the Middle Holocene.
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Conference papers on the topic "Triple Trouble in Hollywood"

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Maruyama, Reo, Liying Yang, and Kohei Kumegawa. "Abstract A08: Epigenetic heterogeneity in triple-negative breast cancer." In Abstracts: AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; October 7-10, 2017; Hollywood, CA. American Association for Cancer Research, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1557-3125.advbc17-a08.

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Koemans, Nina M., Carolien L. Van Der Borden, Miki Mori, et al. "Abstract A38: Comprehensive kinome activity mapping of triple-negative breast cancer." In Abstracts: AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; October 7-10, 2017; Hollywood, CA. American Association for Cancer Research, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1557-3125.advbc17-a38.

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Zurlo, Giada, Jeremy Simon, Cheng Fan, et al. "Abstract B18: ADSL controls pyrimidine metabolism and triple-negative breast tumorigenesis." In Abstracts: AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; October 7-10, 2017; Hollywood, CA. American Association for Cancer Research, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1557-3125.advbc17-b18.

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Loo, Ser Yue, Liping Toh, Elina Pathak, et al. "Abstract B22: Inducing cell state transitions in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC)." In Abstracts: AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; October 7-10, 2017; Hollywood, CA. American Association for Cancer Research, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1557-3125.advbc17-b22.

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Haga, Yuya, Kazuma Higashisaka, Lili Yang, Naoki Sekine, Kazuya Nagano, and Yasuo Tsutsumi. "Abstract A04: Dasatinib shows different cytotoxicity in triple-negative breast cancer cell lines." In Abstracts: AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; October 7-10, 2017; Hollywood, CA. American Association for Cancer Research, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1557-3125.advbc17-a04.

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Geldermalsen, Michelle van, Lake-Ee Quek, Nigel Turner, et al. "Abstract B20: Glutamine metabolic vulnerabilities define triple-negative from luminal A breast cancer subsets." In Abstracts: AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; October 7-10, 2017; Hollywood, CA. American Association for Cancer Research, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1557-3125.advbc17-b20.

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Saenz, Francisco R., Anton Wellstein, and Anna T. Riegel. "Abstract A35: Characterizing the role of the nuclear coactivator AIB1 in triple-negative breast cancer." In Abstracts: AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; October 7-10, 2017; Hollywood, CA. American Association for Cancer Research, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1557-3125.advbc17-a35.

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Yamamoto, Mizuki, and Jun-ichiro Inoue. "Abstract B02: Intratumoral bidirectional transitions between epithelial and mesenchymal cells in triple-negative breast cancer." In Abstracts: AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; October 7-10, 2017; Hollywood, CA. American Association for Cancer Research, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1557-3125.advbc17-b02.

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Bevill, Samantha M., Noah Sciaky, Brian T. Golitz, Naim U. Rashid, Jon S. Zawistowski, and Gary L. Johnson. "Abstract B34: Novel synergistic combination therapies with BET bromodomain inhibitors in triple-negative breast cancer." In Abstracts: AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; October 7-10, 2017; Hollywood, CA. American Association for Cancer Research, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1557-3125.advbc17-b34.

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Tarullo, Sarah Elizabeth, Alan Elder, Ryan Hill, Kirk Hansen, and Traci Lyons. "Abstract B55: Investigating the role of semaphorin 7a in triple-negative breast cancer cell invasion." In Abstracts: AACR Special Conference: Advances in Breast Cancer Research; October 7-10, 2017; Hollywood, CA. American Association for Cancer Research, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1557-3125.advbc17-b55.

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