National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Separation of biological agents by divergent-flow isoelectric focusing as a tool for their rapid identification by MALDI-TOF MS
Duša, Filip ; Šalplachta, Jiří ; Horká, Marie ; Lunerová, K. ; Rosenbergová, K. ; Kubíček, O.
We presented DF-IEF chip which proved as an efficient method for separation of biological agents, and it enabled sensitive identification of inactivated microorganisms with MALDI-TOF MS compared to unseparated samples.
Modern Dystopia and Contemporary Western Society
Macháček, Jiří ; Mlejnek, Josef (advisor) ; Franěk, Jakub (referee)
The main purpose of this thesis is to analyze how the contemporary western society is reflected in the modern dystopian works' perspective. Key problems and aspects defining today's western society, e.g. consumerism and the role of science and technology, are specified in the introductory part of the thesis. The next part concerns with dystopian creation. Firstly there is focus on dystopian genre characteristics and its roots and typology. Secondly there is introduced a triad of classical dystopian works' representatives: Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, 1984 by George Orwell and Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury. Every work is shortly introduced with its synopsis in the beginning and key features of described visions of society follow afterwards. Then the thesis speaks about chosen modern dystopian works' representatives in detail: The Matrix by the Wachowskis, Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins and Divergent by Veronica Roth. After the synopsis summary of each there is an analysis of key features, a comparison with classical dystopias and a search for parallels in the contemporary western society. Questions how modern dystopias reflect modern society and how they correlate with classical dystopias and expert literature concerning contemporary social phenomena are answered in the conclusion of the thesis.
Rebellious Female Protagonists in Young Adult Dystopian Novels
Drkošová, Sylvie ; Machek, Jakub (advisor) ; Činátlová, Blanka (referee)
The thesis is mainly concerned with popular dystopian book series Hunger Games and Divergent. The aim of the present diploma thesis is to summarize representative characteristics of a young adult dystopian novels featuring rebellious female heroes and to closely examine the social context of the aforementioned novels. The first part of the thesis is based on the analysis of young adult dystopian novels and the attitude of young female readers to the representation of strong female protagonists in literature. The second part od this thesis presents a qualitative research realized by interviews with young female readers and it attempts to answer the research questions about the attitude of readers to examined dystopian novels and the contemporary social role of women. Keywords: dystopian novel, Hunger Games, Divergent, female protagonists, gender

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