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Primitive divisors of Lucas and Lehmer sequences
Stewart reduced the problem of determining all Lucas and Lehmer sequences
whose -th element does not have a primitive divisor to solving certain Thue
equations. Using the method of Tzanakis and de Weger for solving Thue
equations, we determine such sequences for . Further computations
lead us to conjecture that, for , the -th element of such sequences
always has a primitive divisor
Review of \u3cem\u3eCollege Football Awards: All National and Conference Winners through 2010\u3c/em\u3e by Dave Blevins
Commodified Desire: Negotiating Asian American Heteronormativity
This essay examines H.T. Tsiangs proletariat novel And China Has Hands and positions it within the diasporic network that it emerged from and suggest that, by satisfying the needs of capital by providing a constant source of labor, segregated Chinese spaces became, in Rodrick Fergusons words, the locations for possible critiques of state and capital..[because it did] not rely on normative prescriptions to assemble labor. Thus, if industrial imperialism helped create the terms by which heteronormative patriarchy became the norm, it also helped produce social formations that necessarily deviated from heteronormative familial relationships. Elaborating, I suggest that the novels basic logic relies on a strict adherence to a Marxist understanding of the reification of the commodity fetish in intimacy. I claim that, due to its rigidly Marxist reading, the novels logic problematically inscribes heteronormativity as a normative network of intimacy, even as it attempts to critique the heteropatriarchal nature of capitalist intimacy. Following Kevin Floyds recent attempt to rethink the categories of totality and reification, I also argue that, by shifting the focus away from the reification of the commodity fetish, And China Has Hands resolves itself by pointing to the impossibility of heteronormativity for Asian American men
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