http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
Bomi Woo Ewha Institute of English and American Studies 2017 Journal of English and American studies Vol.15 No.2
The rise of English nationalism developed in the eighteenth century. Fueled by antipathy towards Catholic France and the French-dominated cosmopolitan culture of the English aristocracy, Protestantism established itself as one of the key factors in the formation of an English national identity. As opposed to an effete aristocracy, the middle class also came to represent itself as the true repository of true Englishness. It is within the context of the intersection between religion and nationalism in early modern England that this paper attempts to read Ann Radcliffe, a female writer whose religious views served as an important avenue for creative expression as well as the articulation of Englishness. Radcliffe’s The Italian depicts several religious institutions as important sites determining the action of the novel. Some Catholic institutions such as the Santa della Pieta convent is presented as cruel and tyrannical like the Inquisition, which represents the corrupted Roman Catholic faith. In contrast, there are enlightened religious institutions that seem to represent a modern Englishness. In particular, the contrast between the two convents of the San Stefano and Santa della Pieta allows Radcliffe to show what an enlightened feminine domesticity might look like as opposed to the cruelty and irrationality of an aristocratic and Catholic past. The Convent of Santa della Pieta where Ellena meets her mother depicts a utopian sororal community based on mutual trust and love. The Santa della Pieta convent can be read as Radcliffe’s radical and subversive perspective on women’s role in the family and nation. Radcliffe shows that the idea, or ideal, of the feminocentric domestic community best represents English middle-class ideology throughout nation and empire.
The Male Body and Sensibility: A Study on Frederick Wentworth in Jane Austen’s Persuasion
( Bomi Woo ) 한국근대영미소설학회 2018 근대 영미소설 Vol.25 No.3
Jane Austen, in her last completed novel, Persuasion, rehabilitates the role of sensibility as the concept which sustains social communities and produces sincere Englishness at the beginning of the nineteenth century. With her subtle change in attitude to sensibility in this novel, Austen concentrates its operation on strong relationships based on compassion and consideration which are, in turn, evoked by the ability to feel sympathy to others. Indeed, the emotions and sensibility of the naval men make them quite different characters in comparison to those in Austen’s previous works. Captain Frederick Wentworth, in particular, a promising naval officer who is endowed with those qualities, discloses his sensibility with his body, the latter constituting the representative site of expressing delicate and exquisite feelings. He further represents proper manliness and Englishness with his brother-officers. Austen deprives the landed classes of their influence and moral authority and transfers this power to Anne, Wentworth, and further, naval men, all of whom are endowed with the sensibility which is the basis of moral sense and even a moral “English” heritage. In doing so, the novel suggests a quality requisite to people encountering rapid social change during the period which might perhaps be understood as the legacy that Austen bequeaths to her readers with Persuasion.
Determination of six iodotrihalomethanes in drinking water in Korea
Woo, Bomi,Park, Ju-Hyun,Kim, Seungki,Lee, Jeongae,Choi, Jong-Ho,Pyo, Heesoo Elsevier 2018 Science of the Total Environment Vol.640 No.-
<P><B>Abstract</B></P> <P>Trihalomethanes (THMs) are chemicals regulated by Environmental Protection Agency's first drinking water regulation issued after the passage of the Safe Drinking Water Act. Among THMs, iodotrihalomethanes (I-THMs) are produced by treating water containing iodides ion with chlorine or ozone. I-THMs are more carcinogenic and biotoxic than chlorinated or brominated THMs. The purpose of this study was to analyze of I-THMs in drinking water using the liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) method with various extraction solvents. The calibration curves ranged from 0.01 to 20 ng/mL and the correlation coefficient showed a good linearity of 0.99 or more. The method detection limit ranged from 0.01 to 0.10 ng/mL. The accuracy of the LLE method ranged from 99.43 to 112.40%, and its precision ranged from 1.10 to 10.36%. Good recoveries (71.35–118.60%) were obtained for spiked drinking water samples, demonstrating that the LLE method is suitable for the analysis of drinking water samples. Dichloroiodomethane, bromochloroiodomethane, and dibromoiodomethane were identified in drinking water collected from 70 places of water purification plants in Korea. The samples were classified by disinfection systems, regions, seasons, and water sources. The concentration of I-THMs in pre-/postchlorination facilities owing to excess chlorine usage was higher than in ozonization/postchlorination facilities. Moreover, the concentrations of I-THMs were high in the coastal region, because of the large amount of halide ions from the sea. There was no seasonal difference; however, the concentration of I-THMs in pre-/postchlorination facilities increased in spring and summer. The concentration of I-THMs in water sources was high in samples from the Geum River and the Yeongsan and Sumjin River. The concentration and detection frequency of I-THMs in Han River and Nakdong River were high in the coastal region, because of numerous pre-/postchlorination facilities and the abundance of halide ions from the ocean.</P> <P><B>Highlights</B></P> <P> <UL> <LI> We established an LLE-GC–MS method for analysis of I-THMs in drinking water. </LI> <LI> The MDL of I-THMs was 0.01–0.10 ng/mL and showed a precision of <11%. </LI> <LI> We analyzed six kinds of I-THMs in drinking water from water purification plants in Korea. </LI> <LI> The samples were classified by disinfection systems, regions, seasons and water sources. </LI> </UL> </P> <P><B>Graphical abstract</B></P> <P>Scheme. The extraction scheme of I-THMs in drinking water.</P> <P>[DISPLAY OMISSION]</P>
The Prognosis and Recovery of Aphasia Related to Stroke Lesion
Bomi Sul,김준성,홍보영,Kyoung Bo Lee,Woo Seop Hwang,Young Kook Kim,임성훈 대한재활의학회 2016 Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine Vol.40 No.5
Objective To investigate the effects of specific brain lesions on prognosis and recovery of post-stroke aphasia, and to assess the characteristic pattern of recovery.Methods Total of 15 subjects with first-ever, left hemisphere stroke, who were right handed, and who completed language assessment using the Korean version of the Western Aphasia Battery (K-WAB) at least twice during the subacute and chronic stages of stroke, were included. The brain lesions of the participants were evaluated using MRIcron, SPM8, and Talairach Daemon software.Results Subtraction of the lesion overlap map of the participants who showed more than 30% improvement in the aphasia quotient (AQ) by the time of their chronic stage (n=9) from the lesion overlap map of those who did not show more than 30% improvement in the AQ (n=6) revealed a strong relationship with Broca’s area, inferior prefrontal gyrus, premotor cortex, and a less strong relationship with Wernicke’s area and superior and middle temporal gyri. The culprit lesion related to poor prognosis, after grouping the subjects according to their AQ score in the chronic stage (a cut score of 50), revealed a strong relationship with Broca’s area, superior temporal gyrus, and a less strong relationship with Wernicke’s area, prefrontal cortex, and inferior frontal gyrus.Conclusion Brain lesions in the Broca’s area, inferior prefrontal gyrus, and premotor cortex may be related to slow recovery of aphasia in patients with left hemisphere stroke. Furthermore, involvement of Broca’s area and superior temporal gyrus may be associated with poor prognosis of post-stroke aphasia.