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London in space and time: Peter Ackroyd and Will Self
Copyright @ 2013 the author. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.This paper explores the treatment of London by two authors who are profoundly influenced by the concept of the power of place and the nature of urban space. The works of Peter Ackroyd, whose writings embody, according to Onega (1997, p. 208) â[a] yearning for mythical closureâ where London is âa mystic centre of powerâ â spiritual, transhistorical and cultural â are considered alongside those of Will Self, who explores the cityâs psychogeography as primarily a political, economic and cultural artefact. The paper draws on original interviews undertaken by the author with Ackroyd and Self. Both authorsâ works are available for literary study during the 16-19 phase in the UK, and this paper explores how personal delineations of the urban environment are shaped by space and language. It goes on to consider how authorsâ and studentsâ personal understandings of space and place can be used as pedagogical and theoretical lenses to âreadâ the city in the 16-19 literature classroom
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Independent studies in higher education: Great expectations or hard times?
This chapter presents a case of quality enhancement (QE) focusing on the issue of the independent work students are expected to undertake during their studies in Higher Education. It draws on quantitative and qualitative data gathered as part of a large-scale research exercise involving 113 undergraduate and 128 sixth form students of English. It goes on to explore the changing nature and role of studentsâ subjective expectations by presenting data gathered through individual student interviews in which students reflect upon the factors shaping their independent learning experiences. Following the trajectory of expectations illustrated in Figure 1, it sets out a range of pedagogic interventions in this process, assessing outcomes via individual student interviews
Superstrings in AdS in light cone gauge
We discuss light-cone gauge description of type IIB Green-Schwarz superstring
in AdS_5 x S^5 with a hope to make progress towards understanding spectrum of
this theory. As in flat space, fixing light cone gauge consists of two steps:
(i) fixing kappa symmetry in such a way that the fermionic part of the action
does not depend on x^-; (ii) fixing 2-d reparametrizations by x^+ = tau and a
condition on 2-d metric. In curved AdS space the latter cannot be the standard
conformal gauge and breaks manifest 2-d Lorentz invariance. It is natural,
therefore, to work in phase-space framework, imposing the GGRT gauge conditions
x^+= tau, P^+ =const. We obtain the resulting light cone superstring
Hamiltonian. This is a review of hep-th/0007036 and hep-th/0009171.Comment: 10 pages, latex. Contribution to the Proceedings of Strings 2000, Ann
Arbo
The Price of Judicial Economy in the US
In the US, courts widely perceive that judicial scarcity is a common problem threatening the fair and timely resolution of disputes. Courts cite the attendant interest in judicial economy to justify interpreting the procedural and substantive law to reduce the judicial workload or accelerate the resolution of cases. But courtsâ assumption that there are too few judges to handle the current caseload is hard to substantiate. First, it may not be possible to infer from excessive judicial backlogs or other perceived judicial deficiencies that a shortfall of judges is to blame. Second, even when one confidently perceives that a judicial backlog or other deficiency in a particular US court is attributable to a dearth of judges, one cannot fairly generalize from that example to other US courts and jurisdictions. And third, judgments about judicial deficiencies popularly attributed to the inadequacy of judicial resources may turn on contestable assumptions about judges and adjudication. Given these challenges to measuring the adequacy of judicial resources, one might be skeptical whether judicial economies are worth the costs they impose
Lawyers as Nonlawyers in Child-Custody and Visitation Cases: Questions from the Legal Ethics Perspective Response
The Child Advocacy Clinic at Indiana University School of Law-Bloomington ( Indiana Clinic ) takes as a premise that, in custody and visitation disputes, children may be best served by lawyers as guardians ad litem, rather than by lawyers qua lawyers, on one hand, or by nonlawyer guardians ad litem, on the other. In contrast, participants in a national conference at Fordham Law School\u27 concluded two years ago that [a] lawyer appointed or retained to serve a child in a legal proceeding should serve as the child\u27s lawyer. That is, the lawyer should regard the child as a client, not a ward. Implicit in this recommendation was that, if the court appoints a guardian ad litem ( GAL ) to serve the child, it should assign a nonlawyer to that role. This disagreement raises intertwined questions about how best to serve children in the context of the existing adversary process for making custody and visitation decisions and the prevailing best interest standard by which these decisions are made First, if someone is appointed to represent the child what role should that person play? And, second, to whom should courts assign this role
Radio Images of 3C 58: Expansion and Motion of its Wisp
New 1.4 GHz VLA observations of the pulsar-powered supernova remnant 3C 58
have resulted in the highest-quality radio images of this object to date. The
images show filamentary structure over the body of the nebula. The present
observations were combined with earlier ones from 1984 and 1991 to investigate
the variability of the radio emission on a variety of time-scales. No
significant changes are seen over a 110 day interval. In particular, the upper
limit on the apparent projected velocity of the wisp is 0.05c. The expansion
rate of the radio nebula was determined between 1984 and 2004, and is
0.014+/-0.003%/year, corresponding to a velocity of 630+/-70 km/s along the
major axis. If 3C 58 is the remnant of SN 1181, it must have been strongly
decelerated, which is unlikely given the absence of emission from the supernova
shell. Alternatively, the low expansion speed and a number of other arguments
suggest that 3C 58 may be several thousand years old and not be the remnant of
SN 1181.Comment: 12 pages; accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
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