Academic literature on the topic 'Kurahashi'

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Journal articles on the topic "Kurahashi"

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Moophayak, Kittikhun, Tunwadee Klong-Klaew, Kom Sukontason, Hiromu Kurahashi, Jeffery K. Tomberlin, and Kabkaew L. Sukontason. "SPECIES COMPOSITION OF CARRION BLOW FLIES IN NORTHERN THAILAND: ALTITUDE APPRAISAL." Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo 56, no. 2 (April 2014): 179–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0036-46652014000200016.

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Distribution and occurrence of blow flies of forensic importance was performed during 2007 and 2008 in Chiang Mai and Lampang Provinces, northern Thailand. Surveys were conducted in forested areas for 30 minutes using a sweep net to collected flies attracted to a bait. A total of 2,115 blow flies belonging to six genera and 14 species were collected; Chrysomya megacephala (Fabricius) (44.7%), C. pinguis (Walker) (15.1%), C. chani Kurahashi (9.3%), C. thanomthini Kurahashi & Tumrasvin (0.3%); Achoetandrus rufifacies (Macquart) (10.5%), A. villeneuvi (Patton) (2.2%); Lucilia papuensis Macquart (2.2%), L. porphyrina (Walker) (12.4%), L. sinensis Aubertin (0.7%); Hemipyrellia ligurriens(Wiedemann) (1.3%), H. pulchra(Wiedemann) (0.1%); Hypopygiopsis infumata (Bigot) (0.6%), Hy. tumrasvini Kurahashi (0.2%) and Ceylonomyia nigripes Aubertin (0.4%). Among them, C. megacephala was the predominant species collected, particularly in the summer. The species likely to prevail in highland areas are C. pinguis, C. thanomthini, Hy. tumrasvini, L. papuensis and L. porphyrina.
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Iwasa, M., and S. Hasegawa. "A36 Immature stages of Steyskalomyza hasegawai Kurahashi." Medical Entomology and Zoology 53, Supplement (2002): 47. http://dx.doi.org/10.7601/mez.53.47_2.

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Bharti, Meenakshi. "New records of Chrysomya putoria and C. thanomthini (Diptera: Calliphoridae) from India, with a revised key to the known Indian species." Journal of Threatened Taxa 11, no. 1 (January 26, 2019): 13188–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.11609/jott.4470.11.1.13188-13190.

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Chrysomya putoria (Wiedemann, 1830) and C. thanomthini Kurahashi & Tumrasvin, 1977 were recorded for the first time from India. The species were collected from an altitude of 2,000m in the Himalaya. An updated key to the Indian species of the genus Chrysomya Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830 is provided herein.
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Pape, Thomas. "Redefinition of Agria Robineau-Desvoidy, Angiometopa Brauer & Bergenstamm and Toxonagria Shewell, with the description of a new species (Diptera: Sarcophagidae)." Insect Systematics & Evolution 23, no. 3 (1992): 307–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187631292x00137.

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AbstractThe genera Agria Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830, Angiometopa Brauer & Bergenstamm, 1889, and Toxonagria Shewell, 1987 are diagnosed and their monophyly discussed. Diagnostic character states for the three genera in their present definitions are: Agria: Phallic tube with a pair of lateral sclerotizations slanting antero-ventrally from the apex; acrophallus strongly tapering. Angiometopa: Gonostylus with membranous lobe at base; phallic tube with a pair of armlike processes encompassing base of acrophallus. Toxonagria: Male hind femur thickened and curved; male cercus straight; acrophallus with broad, membranous phallotreme; male gonocoxal lobe with an extra subapical tooth or hook. The name Omocera Lioy, 1864 (an objective senior synonym of Angiometopa) is preoccupied by Omocera Chevrolat, 1835 (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae). Angiometopa is proposed as a senior synonym of Sarcofahrtia Parker, 1916, syn.n. Agria hikosana (Kurahashi, 1975), comb.n., Agria shinonagai (Kurahashi, 1975), comb.n., and Agria mihalyii (Rohdendorf & Verves, 1978), comb.n. are transferred from their previous position in Angiometopa. Angiometopa bajkalensis Kolomyietz & Artamonov, 1981 is recorded from the Nearctic Region for the first time (Canada: Alberta, British Columbia, Yukon), and Toxonagria arnaudi sp.n. is described from Canada (British Columbia) and USA (California).
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KURAHASHI, HIROMU, and ASHLEY H. KIRK-SPRIGGS. "The Calliphoridae of Namibia (Diptera: Oestroidea)." Zootaxa 1322, no. 1 (September 28, 2006): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1322.1.1.

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The Namibian Calliphoridae fauna is reviewed. Seventy-five nominate species are recorded from the country, based on 7100 specimens housed in the Namibian National Insect Collection. Identification keys to all taxa are provided, together with notes on biology and new biological observations. An annotated checklist of Namibian species is presented, detailing previously published and other known Namibian records, and distributions elsewhere in Africa. Provisional distribution maps are plotted and discussed. Seasonal data, based on specimen label information, are presented in tabular form. The known immature stages of species are reviewed, together with notes on the forensic significance of relevant species. Two new species of the genus Hemigymnochaeta Corti and one new species of Isomyia Walker are described and illustrated, namely: Hemigymnochaeta maraisi Kurahashi and Kirk-Spriggs, sp. nov., Hemigymnochaeta trichaeta Kurahashi and Kirk-Spriggs, sp. nov., and Isomyia hauwangai Kurahashi and Kirk-Spriggs, sp. nov. Rhyncomya zumpti Peris, 1952 stat. rev., formerly synonymised with R. tristis Séguy, 1933, is here reinstated as a valid species. Thirty-four species are new to the Namibian list, namely: Bengalia spinifemorata Villeneuve, Chrysomya ?laxifrons Villeneuve, C. putoria (Wiedemann), Cosmina fuscipennis Robineau-Desvoidy, C. undulata Malloch, Fainia albitarsis (Macquart), Hemigymnochaeta bequaerti Curran, H. laticeps Zumpt, Isomyia darwini (Curran), I. deserti (Karsch), I. natalensis (Villeneuve), I. tristis (Bigot), Neocordylobia roubaudi Villeneuve, Perisiella anchora (Wiedemann), Phumosia nanoides Zumpt, Pseudorhyncomyia braunsi (Villeneuve), Rhyncomya bicolor (Macquart), R. cassotis (Walker), R. discrepans Villeneuve, R. hessei Zumpt, R. messoria Villeneuve, R. minutalis Villeneuve, R. io Peris, R. peraequa Villeneuve, R. soyauxi Karsch, R. trispina Villeneuve, R. tristis Séguy, R. zumpti Peris, Stegosoma vinculatum Loew, Stomorhina chapini Curran, S. rugosa (Bigot), Tricyclea claripennis Séguy, T. flavida (Malloch), and T. martini (Zumpt). Records of species from other southern African countries, based on 190 specimens housed in the Namibian National Insect Collection, are provided as an Appendix. Cosmina gracilis Curran and Rhyncomya dasyops Bezzi are new to Angola; Auchmeromyia bequaerti Roubaud and Bengalia cuthbertsoni Zumpt are new to Botswana; B. floccosa (van der Wulp), B. peuhi (Brauer and Bergenstamm) and Hemigymnochaeta unicolor (Bigot) are new to Zambia; and Cosmina gracilis Curran and Tricyclea martini (Zumpt) are new to Zimbabwe.
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Letizia GUARINI. "Walking through Texts: The Father-Daughter Plot in Kurahashi Yumiko’s Fiction." Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies 16, no. 1 (April 2016): 53–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.21866/esjeas.2016.16.1.003.

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Wachkoo, Aijaz Ahmad, Hiromu Kurahashi, Naziya Khurshid, and Shahid Ali Akbar. "First record of Dryomyza pakistana Kurahashi, 1989 (Diptera, Dryomyzidae) from India." Oriental Insects 52, no. 1 (September 20, 2017): 96–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00305316.2017.1377644.

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Moophayak, Kittikhun, Sa-ngob Sa-nit, Kom Sukontason, Roy C. Vogtsberger, and Kabkaew L. Sukontason. "Morphological descriptions for the identification of Hypopygiopsis tumrasvini Kurahashi (Diptera: Calliphoridae)." Parasitology Research 109, no. 5 (May 3, 2011): 1323–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00436-011-2424-2.

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Luciana Cardi. "“A Fool Will Never Be Happy”: Kurahashi Yumiko's Retelling of “Snow White”." Marvels & Tales 27, no. 2 (2013): 194. http://dx.doi.org/10.13110/marvelstales.27.2.0194.

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IWASA, Mitsuhiro. "The immature stages of Steyskalomyza hasegawai Kurahashi, 1982 (Diptera; Dryomyzidae) from Japan." Medical Entomology and Zoology 53, Supplement2 (2002): 133–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.7601/mez.53.133.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Kurahashi"

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Sakaki, Atsuko. "The intertextual novel and the interrelational self : Kurahashi Yumiko, a Japanese postmodernist." Thesis, 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3161.

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This thesis explores narrational, textual and thematic aspects of novels by Kurahashi Yumiko (1 935- ), applying poststructuralist critical approaches developed by Judith Butler, Barbara Herrnstein Smith, Roland Barthes, Julia Kristeva, and Michel Foucault, focusing upon the notion of the performativity in selfhood and textuality. My discussion begins with an overview of the context within which Kurahashi emerges as a writer, her debate with pro-Romantic or -realist Japanese critics regarding her main compositional methodology— pastiche—and the challenges to sexual norms made in her fictional practice. Kurahashi’s views on selfhood, narratives, text, and authorship, I show, parallel in many ways the concerns of poststructural 1st critics. The main body of my thesis consists of six chapters, each of which deals with either an individual novel, or two related novellas. Blue lourney (1961) is a second-person narrative written in a collage form, which demonstrates performative femininity. Divine Maiden (1 965) presents the themes of incest and amnesia, inevitably questioning issues of self and other. The novel’s characters do not possess constative identity but rather demonstrate performative selfhood, and are thus not described as individuals but rather associated with others, constituting “indices.” The self-reflexive, embedding, and dialogic narrative foregrounds the acts of writing and reading in which characters engages, and thus demonstrates the notion of narrative as a verbal act, while delineating paradoxical inversions of subjectivity between narrator and narratee, and narrator and narrated. The Adventures of Sumivakist Q (1 969), a third-person narrative with an intrusive and yet elusive extradiegetic narrator, develops “indices” as the method of structuring the text, incessantly making and unmaking parallels and contrasts between subjects. The theme of selfhood is again questioned in the systems of cognitive, sexual, and digestive familiarization with others in the novel. The fourth chapter of my thesis deals with two novellas, “Virginia” and “The Long Passage of Dreams” (1968) which frame subversions of the novel and the self with characters who subscribe to the established norms of language and society. Subversive sexual acts and paradoxes still exist, but only within the rigid framework of a logic which objectivizes them. Kurahashi’s “Japanization” of themes and methods begins with the latter novella, which refers to noh plays and uses their double-layered structure of dream and reality. This process becomes more apparent in Symnosium (1 985), which pastiches Divine Maiden through its theme of incest, its inversion of subject and object, and its embedded narrative, but also refers to the traditional Japanese models and employs the narrative strategies of monogatari. In so doing, the novel suggests the parallel between traditional Japanese poetics and poststructuralist criticism, particularly in terms of its stress upon the contingency of ‘truth’ and ‘selfhood’. Popoi (1 987), the novel which is the topic of Chapter Six, refines the technique of pastiche, exploring a plurality of fragmentations of self and text. Having examined the individual texts, I conclude that a parallel can be drawn between Kurahashi’s work and that of Western postmodern artists, while remaining aware of the precarious nature of such labelling due to the different cultural context.
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Levine, Emily F. "From the Antiworld to the "Other World:" A Translation and Critical Analysis of Kurahashi Yumiko's "The Passage of Dreams"." 2020. https://scholarworks.umass.edu/masters_theses_2/233.

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This thesis represents a complete translation of the sixth volume of the “Keiko-san Series,” Yume no kayoiji, translated here as The Passage of Dreams. Published in 1989 by Kurahashi Yumiko, The Passage of Dreams is composed of twenty-one short stories, each of which details a bizarre, often sexual incident. The “Keiko-san Series,” written after Kurahashi’s ten year lapse in activity, has been largely dismissed and neglected by Japanese literary scholars. Through a comparative analysis of this work and Kurahashi’s earliest stories “Partei” and “The End of Summer,” this thesis delineates a clear rupture in structure and theme between the two parts of the author’s career and asserts that both are of significance to Japanese literature. However, the portrayal of female focused sexuality in The Passage of Dreams makes it especially deserving of the attention it has yet to receive. The translation portion of this thesis has undergone significant revisions since its submission.
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Books on the topic "Kurahashi"

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1974-, Kawashima Midori, ed. Kurahashi Yumiko. Tōkyō: Nichigai Asoshiētsu, 2008.

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(Japan), Kurahashi-chō. Kurahashi chōshi: Shiryō hen. [Hiroshima-ken Aki-gun Kurahashi-chō]: Kurahashi-chō, 1991.

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(Japan), Kurahashi-chō. Kurahashi chōshi: Tsūshi hen. [Hiroshima-ken Aki-gun Kurahashi-chō]: Kurahashi-chō, 2001.

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(Japan), Kurahashi-chō. Kurahashi no hōnōgaku to sekizōbutsu. [Kurahashi-chō]: Hiroshima-ken Aki-gun Kurahashi-chō, 1990.

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Chōsadan, Marukoyama Jōseki. Kurahashi Tagaya-shi to Marukoyamajō ato. [Kurahashi-chō]: Hiroshima-ken Aki-gun Kurahashi-chō, 1986.

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(Japan), Kurahashi-chō. Kurahashi chōshi: Umi to hitobito no kurashi. [Hiroshima-ken Aki-gun Kurahashi-chō]: Kurahashi-chō, 2000.

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Kleeman, Faye Yuan. The uses of myth in modern Japanese literature: Nakagami Kenji, Öe Kenzabur^o, and Kurahashi Yumiko. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms, 1998.

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(Japan), Kurahashi-chō, ed. Kurahashi no kenchiku. [Kurahashi-chō]: Hiroshima-ken Aki-gun Kurahashi-chō, 1989.

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Yumiko, Kurahashi. Kurahashi Yumiko no kaikisho hen. Ushio Shuppansha, 1985.

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Suwa, Yoshihide. Nihon no yoji kyoiku shiso to Kurahashi Sozo. Shin Dokushosha, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Kurahashi"

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Klopfenstein, Eduard. "Kurahashi Yumiko." In Kindlers Literatur Lexikon (KLL), 1. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05728-0_2251-1.

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Klopfenstein, Eduard. "Kurahashi Yumiko: Amanon koku ōkanki." In Kindlers Literatur Lexikon (KLL), 1–2. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05728-0_2252-1.

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Hirano, Yoshihiko. "Die Kafka-Rezeption in Japan um 1960. Partei von Kurahashi Yumiko und Die Frau in den Dünen von Abe Kobo." In Franz Kafka, 397–414. Köln: Böhlau Verlag, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.7788/boehlau.9783412217402.397.

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Nishi, Ryutaro. "Transition From the Perspectives of Kurahashi and Tsumori." In Handbook of Research on Innovative Approaches to Early Childhood Development and School Readiness, 142–64. IGI Global, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-8649-5.ch007.

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Transition has been seen primarily as movement between institutions and daily changes. However, it is also a process of transformation of the inner world for the child. In the field of transition research, the perspective of the inner world is yet to be studied, but the Japanese ECCE philosophers Sozo Kurahashi and Makoto Tsumori have developed theories and practices that emphasize the inner world. Based on the ideas of Kurahashi and Tsumori, this chapter clarifies the perspective of how the internal process of transition can be understood. Their developmental and pedagogical theories are summarized as 1) nurturing the inner driving force of development, 2) respecting all forms of development beyond preconceptions, 3) trusting relationships based on sensitivity to subtle interactions, and 4) mutual growth through reflection of practitioners. Accordingly, this chapter examined how transition and school readiness can be perceived. Detailed case studies will enhance building the mutually trusting relationships that will support children throughout elementary school and life beyond.
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"Chapter 11. Kurahashi Yumiko’s Negotiations with the Fathers." In The Father-Daughter Plot, 292–326. University of Hawaii Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780824864712-014.

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Muraishi, Asako. "Les contes cruels pour adultes sous la plume de Yumiko Kurahashi." In Le conte dans tous ses états, 125–36. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.179032.

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Taber, Douglass F. "Diels–Alder Cycloaddition: Fawcettimine (Zhai), Sculponeatin N (Zhai), Elansolid B1 (Kirschning), Frondosin A (Wright), Kingianin H (Parker), Rufescenolide (Snyder)." In Organic Synthesis. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190646165.003.0078.

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En route to fawcettimine 4, Hongbin Zhai of Lanzhou University found (Org. Lett. 2014, 16, 196) that microwave irradiation improved the efficiency of the cyclo­addition of the enone 1 with butadiene 2 to give 3. Takuya Kurahashi and Seijiro Matsubara of Kyoto University developed (Org. Lett. 2014, 16, 2594) a Ru complex that promoted the cycloaddition of butadiene with cyclic enones. In the course of a synthesis of sculponeatin N 7, Professor Zhai employed (Org. Lett. 2014, 16, 216) the silyl diene 5. After intramolecular cycloaddition, protonation of the resulting allyl silane with concomitant alkene migration led to the adduct 6. On the way to elansolid B1 10, Andreas Kirschning of Leibnitz Universität Hannover oxidized (Org. Lett. 2014, 16, 568) the alcohol 8 to the enone, that cyclized to 9. Under the influence of MgBr2, the cyclization proceeded with remarkable diastereocontrol. Dennis L. Wright of the University of Connecticut began (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2014, 136, 4309) the synthesis of frondosin A 13 by preparing the secondary ether 11 in high ee. Diels–Alder cycloaddition of tetrabromocyclopropene gave, after exposure of the initial adduct to water, the dibromoenone 12. Kathlyn A. Parker of Stony Brook University explored (J. Org. Chem. 2014, 79, 919) the amine radical cation-promoted intermolecular Diels–Alder cycloaddition of the bicyclooctadiene 14. Three readily-separated diastereomeric dimers were observed. The diol 15, the precursor to kingianin H 16, was the major product. Scott A. Synder of Scripps/Florida described (J. Org. Chem. 2014, 79, 88) the interesting oxidative coupling of 17 with 18. The product 19 was readily carried on to rufescenolide 20.
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"Retelling Medea in Postwar Japan: The Function of Ancient Greece in Two Literary Adaptations by Mishima Yukio and Kurahashi Yumiko 154." In Receptions of Greek and Roman Antiquity in East Asia, 154–72. BRILL, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004370715_009.

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Taber, Douglass F. "Carbon-Carbon Bond Formation." In Organic Synthesis. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199965724.003.0025.

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Akiya Ogawa of Osaka Prefecture University found (Tetrahedron Lett. 2010, 51, 6580) that the Sm-mediated reductive coupling of a halide 1 with CO2 to give the carboxylic acid 2 was strongly promoted by visible light. Gregory C. Fu of MIT designed (Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2010, 49, 6676) a Ni catalyst for the coupling of a primary borane 4 with a secondary alkyl halide 3. James P. Morken of Boston College devised (Org. Lett. 2010, 12, 3760) conditions for the carbonylative conjugate addition of a dialkyl zinc to an enone 6 to give the 1,4-dicarbonyl product 7. Louis Fensterbank of the Institut Parisien de Chimie Moléculaire developed (Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2010, 49, 8721; not illustrated) a protocol for the conjugate addition of alkyl boranes to enones. Hyunik Shin of LG Life Science, Daejeon, and Sang-gi Lee of Ewha Womans University showed (Tetrahedron Lett. 2010, 51, 6893) that the intermediate from Blaise homologation of a nitrile 8 was a powerful nucleophile, smoothly opening an epoxide 10 to deliver 11. Sébastien Reymond and Janine Cossy of ESPCI ParisTech found (J. Org. Chem. 2010, 75, 5151) that FeCl3 smoothly catalyzed the coupling of an alkenyl Grignard 13 with the primary iodide 12. The Ti-mediated coupling of an alkyne 16 with an allylic alkoxide 15 (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2010, 132, 9576) developed by Glenn C. Micalizio of Scripps/Florida was the key step in the total synthesis (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2010, 132, 11422) of lehualide B. Huanfeng Jiang of the South China University of Technology observed (Chem. Commun. 2010, 46, 8049) that KI added to a bromoalkyne 18 to give the dihalide 19 with high geometric control. Haruhiko Fuwa of Tohoku University improved (Org. Lett. 2010, 12, 5354) the selective hydroiodination of a methyl alkyne 20 to 21. Takuya Kurahashi and Seijiro Matsubara of Kyoto University devised (Chem. Commun. 2010, 46, 8055) the Ni-catalyzed three-component coupling of an alkyne 22, methyl acrylate 23, and phenyl isocyanate to give the doubly homologated lactam 24. Patrick H. Toy of the University of Hong Kong showed (Synlett 2010, 1997; Org. Lett. 2010, 12, 4996 for a polymer with covalently attached base) that resin-bound triphenylphosphine participated efficiently in the Wittig coupling of 26 with an aldehyde 25.
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