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  1. Free Download Japanese Literature - Learn from Masters Published 10/2024 Created by Matt Kyoto MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 11 Lectures ( 2h 25m ) | Size: 2.56 GB 1000 Years of Japanese Literature What you'll learn Understand the history of Japanese literature Learn from some of the best Japanese writers Understand the Japanese psyche Learn about Japanese history and culture Requirements No prior knowledge needed. Description Japan has one of the richest literary cultures in the world. So in this course, I want to give you a brief history of one thousand years of Japanese literature.In the first segment, I will discuss the Tale of Genji, perhaps the most important work of Japanese literature, which is also considered the world's first ever true novel. It depicts male psychology from a female perspective. Then I will discuss the history of haiku, a literary movement that appreciates the beauty of nature and the simplicity of Japanese life which has become a global phenomenon. Then I will discuss the works of some of the greatest Japanese writers including Natsume Soseki, Ryunosuke Akutagawa, Yasunari Kawabata, Osamu Dazai, Kobo Abe, Yukio Mishima, and Haruki Murakami.But what makes Japanese literature so unique?First, no other literature captures the loneliness of the human condition. While we are all in big cities, crowded places and constantly bump into other people, we are ultimately lonely creatures, with our own thoughts, emotions, desires and dreams. So this loneliness is perhaps sharpest in Japanese literature that cuts like a German knife. I should say Japanese knife.Second, Japanese literature is unique because of its minimalism. While classic Russian authors wrote huge novels, the Japanese writers kept it short. Of course there are some exceptions, but most Japanese novels can be read in one or two sittings. Japanese people in general do not talk too much so the same applies to its literature. They keep it short and sweet.Third, Japanese literature is less plot-driven. This applies to the culture too. The process is as important as the outcome of something. So Japanese novels tend to rely less on intricate plots. This is why Japanese culture is considered a how-culture that appreciates the process while the west is more of a why-culture which is more outcome-driven. Who this course is for This course is for anyone interested in Japanese literature or Japan or literature in general. Homepage https://www.udemy.com/course/japanese-literature/ Screenshot Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/87f18ac451f3adb57a560cdc3bb2e525/wrjqz.Japanese.Literature.Learn.from.Masters.part3.rar.html https://rg.to/file/984ddbc081182452d8a1f9e94df978c9/wrjqz.Japanese.Literature.Learn.from.Masters.part2.rar.html https://rg.to/file/be416b492d363507b34f25bf46439f4f/wrjqz.Japanese.Literature.Learn.from.Masters.part1.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/6ybf6ej8Rb/wrjqz.Japanese.Literature.Learn.from.Masters.part2.rar.html https://fikper.com/FuwxllC8cC/wrjqz.Japanese.Literature.Learn.from.Masters.part3.rar.html https://fikper.com/HDM6ILU7Y5/wrjqz.Japanese.Literature.Learn.from.Masters.part1.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
  2. Free Download Women's Literature in English Published 9/2024 Created by Eve Williams MMus MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 46 Lectures ( 12h 31m ) | Size: 11.3 GB Meet the Women Who Gave Us Some of the World's Best Stories What you'll learn: Learn about the changing role of women writers in English from the medieval period to the present day Discover how the depcitions of women from major periods of literature reflected real life attitudes Learn to define and apply feminist literary criticsm Engage with the works of some of the most prolific female writers of their day - plus some lesser known influential female writers Requirements: Flunecy in English is necessary to underatke the course. Description: WOMEN IN LITERATUREDo you love to read? Maybe you have studied English Literature or need to deepen your knowledge for college entrance exams or citizen tests. Whatever your approach to reading literature, this course is aimed at developing your knowledge of women in literature both in terms of learning about prolific female writers but also in terms of using feminist and historicist criticism to evaluate the cultural messages about women contained in texts from the medieval times right up to the present day.I will be your guide on this exciting journey. I hold an Honours degree and a Master of Arts in Old English from the prestigious Queen's University of Belfast and lecture in Belfast's C.S. Lewis Festival as well as teaching the bestselling courses on English Literature and World Literature on Udemy.Writers covered in this course include:· Julian of Norwich· Margery Kempe· Elizabeth I· Aphra Behn· Jane Austen· Mary Shelley· The Brontë Sisters· George Eliot· Louisa May Alcott· L.M. Montgomery· Agatha Christie· Virginia Woolf· Maya Angelou· Sylvia Plath· Toni Morrison· J.K Rowling· Madeline Miller· Fran Walsh and Phillipa Boyens· Sofia CoppolaAnd many more.You can enrol today in the confidence that Udemy offers a 30 day money back guarantee.I'm looking forward to joining you on the course. Who this course is for: Literature lovers, writers and students Homepage https://anonymz.com/https://www.udemy.com/course/womens-literature-in-english/ Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/02ade77160158a6a576f120fa773dd7e/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part01.rar.html https://rg.to/file/d3d8c5e862358147e665ea0311ed4a63/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part02.rar.html https://rg.to/file/49f452771ce8c7d1ce6ae724b5a212b6/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part03.rar.html https://rg.to/file/f131873c0dbe19366f7fe4b2d8acf6d2/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part04.rar.html https://rg.to/file/9e396eff9ddd1e21eeaa9385d0140527/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part05.rar.html https://rg.to/file/14ef560c52a58170a0cbaefe379caea1/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part06.rar.html https://rg.to/file/842199094408038c243338a8639849e6/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part07.rar.html https://rg.to/file/d7109f6d7a8275221be8e4cfbb12a449/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part08.rar.html https://rg.to/file/1db26954f6884581f2ac19e80eb00f7c/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part09.rar.html https://rg.to/file/1310013c724bbae6d0bc15a143531690/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part10.rar.html https://rg.to/file/b4e0e8b583d0aeedbef91865e1b5be73/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part11.rar.html https://rg.to/file/293cd58ef8e92d3074b82c3d559534e3/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part12.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/iV6lABarZk/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part01.rar.html https://fikper.com/ZOvNLD6zfl/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part02.rar.html https://fikper.com/sHryNgTapZ/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part03.rar.html https://fikper.com/72XOeIep2R/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part04.rar.html https://fikper.com/CNTPl7B7ZH/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part05.rar.html https://fikper.com/978SIzYKvP/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part06.rar.html https://fikper.com/ZQrS2EE6h5/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part07.rar.html https://fikper.com/lzI9uR7pEh/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part08.rar.html https://fikper.com/FRdJNx4Zr8/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part09.rar.html https://fikper.com/Cpo5CoDWTL/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part10.rar.html https://fikper.com/H3VcefvCNV/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part11.rar.html https://fikper.com/GLTcdeGk6Y/layar.Womens.Literature.in.English.part12.rar.html No Password - Links are Interchangeable
  3. Free Download Writing Literature Reviews: A Guide for Students of the Social and Behavioral Sciences by Jose L. Galvan, Melisa C. Galvan, Scott R. Pollak English | July 24, 2024 | ISBN: B0D9KXC1QB | 6 hours and 9 minutes | MP3 64 Kbps | 169 Mb This useful guide educates students in the preparation of literature reviews for term projects, theses, and dissertations. The authors provide numerous examples from published reviews that illustrate the guidelines discussed throughout the book. New to the seventh edition Each chapter breaks down the larger holistic review of literature exercise into a series of smaller, manageable steps Practical instructions for navigating today's digital libraries Comprehensive discussions about digital tools, including bibliographic and plagiarism-detection software Chapter activities that reflect the book's updated content New model literature reviews Online resources designed to help instructors plan and teach their courses. Written by Professor Emeritus Jose L. Galvan, PhD (California State University) and Assistant Professor Melisa C. Galvan, PhD (California State University), who are accomplished educators as well as authors. It's no surprise that Writing Literature Reviews is a widely beloved and utilized resource for students and educators. Produced and published by Echo Point Books & Media, an independent bookseller in Brattleboro, Vermont. Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/c92528d6bb6e18d000b73e0b010d6bb0/bifvx.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/nX45w2wuqQ/bifvx.rar.html Links are Interchangeable - No Password - Single Extraction
  4. Literature, Larceny and Litterboxes: A Paranormal Cozy Mystery (Library Cat Magical Mysteries Book 2) m4b | 204.49 MB | English | Isbn:‎ B0B6XSD75P | Author: Skye Sullivan | Year: 2022 Category:Cozy Culinary Mystery, Witch & Wizard Mysteries, Cozy Animal Mystery Description: Download Link: https://rapidgator.net/file/eef84fe64f2cdc54d65d0c0a35f782c3/Skye.Sullivan.-.Library.Cat.02.-.Literature.Larceny.and.Litterboxes.rar https://filerice.com/esif8zmhmp1o/Skye.Sullivan.-.Library.Cat.02.-.Literature.Larceny.and.Litterboxes.rar
  5. TTC Video - Great Utopian and Dystopian Works of Literature Course No. 2341 | .MP4, AVC, 700 kbps, 856x480 | English, AAC, 128 kbps, 2 Ch | 24x30 mins | + PDF Guidebook | 4.28 GB Lecturer: Pamela Bedore, Ph.D. Can literature change our real world society? At its foundation, utopian and dystopian fiction asks a few seemingly simple questions aimed at doing just that. Who are we as a society? Who do we want to be? Who are we afraid we might become? When these questions are framed in the speculative versions of Heaven and Hell on earth, you won't find easy answers, but you will find tremendously insightful and often entertaining perspectives. Utopian and dystopian writing sits at the crossroads of literature and other important academic dis[beeep]lines such as philosophy, history, psychology, politics, and sociology It serves as a useful tool to discuss our present condition and future prospects-to imagine a better tomorrow and warn of dangerous possibilities. To examine the future of mankind through detailed and fascinating stories that highlight and exploit our anxieties in adventurous, thought-provoking, and engaging ways. From Thomas More's foundational text Utopia published in 1516to the 21st-century phenomenon of The Hunger Games, dive into stories that seek to find the best-and the worst-in humanity, with the hope of better understanding ourselves and the world. Great Utopian and Dystopian Works of Literature delivers 24 illuminating lectures, led by Pamela Bedore, Associate Professor of English at the University of Connecticut, which plunge you into the history and development of utopian ideas and their dystopian counterparts. You'll encounter some of the most powerful and influential texts in this genre as you travel centuries into the past and thousands of years into the future, through worlds that are beautiful, laughable, terrifying, and always thought-provoking. Professor Bedore brings an acute understanding of literature's ability to both reflect and shape society, as well as an immense enthusiasm for great storytelling, introducing you to fresh perspectives on deep-rooted themes you thought you knew. She will take you on an expedition through a variety of idealized utopian and flawed dystopian worlds, embarking across a broad survey of the differing perspectives and historical backdrops that shaped the genre, from the influence of scientific optimism in the 17th century and satire in the 18th to deeply political and sociological approaches in the 19th and 20th centuries and beyond. Even if you are familiar with these writers, this course provides so many deep insight and alternative perspectives, it will be as if you are reading them for the first time. Uncover the darkness behind seeming utopias and discover the hope that lives beneath the terror of dystopias as you deep dive into classics, blockbusters, and little known gems by: Jonathan Swift Louisa May Alcott Samuel Butler Ursula K. Le Guin Edward Bellamy H.G. Wells Samuel Delany George Orwell Octavia Butler Anthony Burgess Margaret Atwood And many more With Professor Bedore, you'll follow these authors and more as they explore the limits of how humans live together, build societies, and view our own humanity. The Heavenly Places of Utopia Professor Bedore begins her study of utopian and dystopian storytelling with a look at utopia, the earlier of the two genres to be widely recognized. Utopia, both as a word and a concept, is a paradox. As she notes, the word "utopia" means "no place," but it is also a homonym for eutopia-a good or perfect place. This contradiction is the foundation on which the genre is built and why it provides such rich opportunities for exploration. Can we invent a perfect place if it is also no place? Starting with the book most often credited as the beginning of the utopian genre, Thomas More's Concerning the Highest State of the Republic and the New Island Utopia, Professor Bedore moves chronologically through history. She examines how humor was introduced into utopian literature with Jonathan Swift, reveals how utopian concepts were used to market the idea of the American Dream, and explores the intersection between utopian stories and science fiction. Lastly, Professor Bedore looks at alternative and selective approaches to creating utopias, such as that of Charlotte Perkins Gilman, who tells the story of a world populated only by women. As you travel through time and across various lands, you'll discover classic and contemporary authors, novels, and short stories that have critiqued, educated, and ultimately contributed to impacting the world as we know it. The Hellish Nightmares of Dystopia The Hunger Games. Divergent. The Giver. The Maze Runner. The City of Ember. In recent years, much has been made of the terms "dystopian literature," specifically in relation to Young Adult literature. The modern generation misleads itself by assuming that the dystopian novels which are popping up left and right were created simply for them. At the same time, the older generations does this fascinating classification of books a disservice if they believe the young adult selection chronicles the entire genre. First used in public by John Stuart Mill in a speech in 1868, the term "dystopia" has often been understood to be the opposite of utopia. If one is an idealized version of society, wouldn't the other be its the nightmare alternative? Professor Bedore demonstrates how the truth-that utopia and dystopia are both based on the same impulses through different means-is less counterintuitive than it first appears. The turn of the 20th century saw the beginning of the transition in thought from utopian visions to dystopian. Was this merely a reflection of modern cynicism, or are there deeper reasons that we turn to darker visions of the future? Professor Bedore dives deep into our fascination with worst case scenario stories, exploring many of the political and social forces that brought dystopian anxieties to the surface of literature. She reviews the impact of historical milestones such as: Globalization and political strife: the wars of the 20th century have been particularly impactful thanks to global scale and the technologies of modern warfare Rapid industrialization: the loss of traditional and agricultural jobs and increasing urbanization have led to rapid change and precarious quality of life for many Increasing reliance on technology: the increasing automation of modern life has displaced workers and led to speculation about the increasing influence of "intelligent" machines Democratization of literature: dime novels, penny dreadfuls, and other popular entertainments have often focused on the sensational and the lurid-elements much more familiar to dystopia than utopia Professor Bedore will introduce you to the "Big Three Dystopias" of the 20th century-Yevgeny Zamyatin's We (1921), Aldous Huxley's Brave New World (1932) and George Orwelll's Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949) in a whole new light. She will dissect how each one reflects the tensions and anxieties of the modern world and trace their influence through later writers like Ursula K. LeGuin, Octavia Butler, Margaret Atwood, Samuel R. Delaney, and many more. Two Sides of the Same Coin? Utopian and dystopian novels transport us to other worlds, but as this course will point out, those utopias and dystopias are often the same speculative world. Many of the portrayals of the future being depicted in current films and books including The Hunger Games, Elysium, and 3% present a push-me, pull-me worldview, with an elite set of haves and a distinct set of have-nots. As Professor Bedore explores, one of the key elements of dystopia-and by extension, utopia-is the balance of different social and cultural needs; utopias are an attempt to create harmony between the needs and desires of people and dystopias are often the result of drastic imbalances. However, it's not the only balancing act that utopian and dystopian novels tackle. The most powerful and enduring works covered in this course are often the result of examining particular tensions and contrasts like: Freedom vs. security- what is the ideal balance between being safe and being free? Chaos vs. conformity- how much structure is necessary for a "good" society? Kinetic vs. static- do people crave change and rapid growth or comfortable predictability? Intellectual vs. visceral- are the greater joys in life the ones of the mind or of the body? In a world with limited resources, these equilibria are not easy to maintain in perfection, which means a utopia for some often results in dystopia for others. Visions of the Past and Future Utopian and dystopian literature is considered "speculative fiction," which also includes the genres of science fiction and fantasy. Likewise, utopia and dystopia are also broad categories themselves that contain many subgenres with differing ideologies and techniques: feminist utopia, cyberpunk dystopia, heterotopia, apocalyptic lit and many more. Among the various subcategories presented by Professor Bedore is a particularly useful one known as "euchronia," a utopia that is set in a different time rather than a different place. Euchronias are usually set in the "real world" but also in a different time, anywhere from a few generations to several hundreds of thousands of years forward or backward. Euchronias are often a more direct way for authors to critique their own society-seeking to transport readers to extreme, alternative realities. Euchronias are exemplified by works like H.G. Well's The Time Machine, set over 700,000 years in the future, Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward, which occurs just a little over 100 years into the future (from its original date of 1887), or Ursula K. LeGuin'sHainish Cycle novels set in an alternate history and future throughout the series. These stories are fascinating not just in their speculation about the future or the past, but also in their ambivalent view of progress. They present complicated worlds that are both utopic and dystopic depending on the perspective-an important thread that runs throughout the utopian and dystopian traditions. Whether you'd rather escape to an idealized world or explore the depths of the human condition, you'll get the best of both worlds through this fascinating scope. Under the brilliant command of Professor Bedore, you'll understand the motivations of these subversive worlds, the basis for these memorable characters, and how the body of literature has fueled lasting change. Open your imagination, suspend your disbelief, and take a provocative adventure through the great works of utopian and dystopian literature. 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  6. The History of World Literature With Grant L. Voth English | July 8, 2013 | ASIN: B00DTO6FWG, ISBN: 159803359X | MP3@64 kbps | 24 hrs 37 mins | 1015 MB Lecturer: Professor Grant L. Voth Whether around the campfire, between the covers of a great book, or in the theater, the desire to tell stories has been a common human impulse for thousands of years. These 48 lectures take you on a journey through time and around the world- from the enormous auditoriums of ancient Greece to a quiet study in the home of a 19th-century New England spinster- to introduce the history of world literature. In this course, you'll sample some of the greatest literary expressions the world has known and experience storytelling in its many forms, including poetry, drama, and narrative. You'll explore: the ancient world, where tribal bards created national myths and founded religious texts out of legends, history, philosophy, and local lore; the countryside and aristocratic courts of India and the Middle East, collecting stories and folklore of magical men, terrifying beasts, alluring women, and conniving tricksters that live on in today's fairy tales and bedtime stories; the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and the Enlightenment to trace the evolution of storytelling from the poetic masterpiece of Dante's Inferno to the great drama pioneered by Shakespeare to sophisticated narratives such as Wu Ch'eng-en's Monkey and Voltaire's Candide; and the rise of Realism in the works of Flaubert, Dostoevsky, and Chekhov and the development of experimental modes by Brecht, Beckett, and Borges. Offering concise summaries and thought-provoking interpretations of some of the world's greatest literary masterpieces, this course gives you the tools you need to appreciate these great literary works and understand how authors, playwrights, and poets throughout the centuries have practiced their craft. Download From NitroFlare http://www.nitroflare.com/view/70E27AC9B0ADE85/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part01.rar http://www.nitroflare.com/view/E5148D8FAB3189F/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part02.rar http://www.nitroflare.com/view/4CE869AAA782DBB/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part03.rar http://www.nitroflare.com/view/6F281BA89B288B2/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part04.rar http://www.nitroflare.com/view/012B677D34F14DD/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part05.rar http://www.nitroflare.com/view/8081B4A26737254/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part06.rar http://www.nitroflare.com/view/996557485B429FD/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part07.rar http://www.nitroflare.com/view/C4A5B8A83E41BCC/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part08.rar http://www.nitroflare.com/view/CCBFA42D45D534A/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part09.rar http://www.nitroflare.com/view/1D595E172259A9C/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part10.rar Download From Rapidgator http://rapidgator.net/file/94f204335b9f178c6618cfb8dcd6c8d7/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part01.rar.html http://rapidgator.net/file/9d888cb73717a9b1704f91d7eb6baeef/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part02.rar.html http://rapidgator.net/file/152d6e4d28b86b1d7147d73b892fbb31/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part03.rar.html http://rapidgator.net/file/1ad08d72b2a230bdfad1b99449bfcce4/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part04.rar.html http://rapidgator.net/file/fb6a9433540e2bbe2dee4933c017e2ae/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part05.rar.html http://rapidgator.net/file/611432ac0acf62e3da4ab87b41a1e537/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part06.rar.html http://rapidgator.net/file/8ce85c6d5030de2a2b1e67c1cd7c7cd0/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part07.rar.html http://rapidgator.net/file/f9a60b1c035d825c20a55767772d58c1/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part08.rar.html http://rapidgator.net/file/dd170d56afc4e4820016a1260d0a3570/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part09.rar.html http://rapidgator.net/file/ebb7b50a3acb550d96dfce6da4803231/Grant_L_Voth_-_The_Great_Courses_-_The_History_of_World_Literature.part10.rar.html
  7. Mining the Biomedical Literature English | 2012 | 152 pages | ISBN: 0262017695 | PDF | 3 Mb The introduction of high-throughput methods has transformed biology into a data-rich science. Knowledge about biological entities and processes has traditionally been acquired by thousands of scientists through decades of experimentation and analysis. The current abundance of biomedical data is accompanied by the creation and quick dissemination of new information. Much of this information and knowledge, however, is represented only in text form--in the biomedical literature, lab notebooks, Web pages, and other sources. Researchers' need to find relevant information in the vast amounts of text has created a surge of interest in automated text-analysis. In this book, Hagit Shatkay and Mark Craven offer a concise and accessible introduction to key ideas in biomedical text mining. The chapters cover such topics as the relevant sources of biomedical text; text-analysis methods in natural language processing; the tasks of information extraction, information retrieval, and text categorization; and methods for empirically assessing text-mining systems. Finally, the authors describe several applications that recognize entities in text and link them to other entities and data resources, support the curation of structured databases, and make use of text to enable further prediction and discovery. DOWNLOAD http://rapidgator.net/file/64d8b154a364e9eafe31291571019854/Mining_the.rar.html http://uploaded.net/file/zkpjs2h2/Mining_the.rar http://www.uploadable.ch/file/7uNuhPmYsxpr/Mining_the.rar http://www.hitfile.net/4LNG/Mining_the.rar.html
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