5,987 research outputs found
Performing Relevance/ Relevant Performances: Shakespeare, Jonson, Hitchcock
Engages with questions of historicism and presentism in the modern performance of early modern drama, and compares Ben Jonson with Alfred Hitchcock
Reading Shakespeare's Stage Directions
Suggests that we should consider the stage directions in Shakespeare's early texts, particularly the 1623 Folio, as snippets of narrative or free indirect discourse, rather than as clues to or for performance
Book review: Behind the veil of vice: the business andculture of sex in the Middle East
In Behind the Veil of Vice, Middle East expert John R. Bradley sets out to uncover the truth about the place of sex in countries including Egypt, Syria, Morocco and Yemen. Bradley reports on how “temporary” Islamic marriages allow for illicit sex in the theocracies of Iran and Saudi Arabia; “child brides” that are sold off to older Arab men according to ancient tribal traditions; and the hypocrisy that undermines publicized crackdowns on the thriving sex industry in the Persian Gulf. Emma Smith recommends the book for its accessibility, wealth of detailed content, and its potential appeal for scholars working in the fields of sex work and Middle East studies
Was Shylock Jewish?
Discusses the invention of Shylock's Jewishness as a reaction to Sir Henry Irving's popular Victorian productio
Richard II's Yorkist Editors
Discusses Shakespeare's Richard II and questions of censorship and editorial contro
Internet Radio: A New Engine for Content Diversity?
While traditional radio stations are subject to extensive government
regulations, Internet radio stations remain largely unregulated. As Internet
radio usage has increased certain stakeholders have begun to argue that these
Internet radio broadcasters are providing significant and diverse programming
to American audiences and that government regulation of spectrum-using radio
station ownership may be further relaxed.
One of the primary justifications for regulation of ownership has been to
protect diversity in broadcasting. This study hypothesizes that Internet radio
broadcasting does add diversity to the radio broadcasting industry and that it
should be considered as relevant by regulators.
This study evaluates the role of Internet radio broadcasters according to
five criteria intended to gauge the level of diversity being delivered to
listeners online. By measuring the levels of format, channel, ownership,
location and language diversity among Internet radio stations, it is possible
to draw benchmark lessons about the new medium's ability to provide Americans
with diverse broadcasting options.
The study finds that Internet radio broadcasters are in fact adding
measurable diversity to the radio broadcasting industry. Internet broadcasters
are providing audiences with access to an increasing number of stations,
owners, formats, and language choices, and it is likely that technologies
aiding in the mobility of access as well as broadband evolution will reinforce
these findings.Comment: 29th TPRC Conference, 200
(Mis)understanding underachievement: a response to Connolly
In British Journal of Sociology of Education Volume 29 number 3, 2008, Connolly presented what he termed a 'critical review' of some of our previous work on the relative attainment of male and female students in UK schools. He proposed three general areas for criticism - our use of attainment gaps, our consideration of outcomes other than at specific thresholds, and our querying of the idea of student 'underachievement'. These problems, he claimed, have 'given rise to a number of misleading conclusions that have questionable implications for practice'. However, those of his 'criticisms' with any merit are actually the same as our own conclusions, transmuted by Connolly from our papers that he cites, while his remaining 'criticisms' are based on faulty elementary logic. In case readers have not read our work and were somehow misled by Connolly, we give here a brief reply to each criticism in turn. This matters, because a greater understanding of patterns of attainment and of the nature of underachievement is a precursor to the design of successful initiatives to overcome inequalities in educational opportunity and reward. This is both a practical and an ethical issue
The Column Density Distribution Function at z=0 from HI Selected Galaxies
We have measured the column density distribution function, f(N), at z=0 using
21-cm HI emission from galaxies selected from a blind HI survey. f(N) is found
to be smaller and flatter at z=0 than indicated by high-redshift measurements
of Damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) systems, consistent with the predictions of
hierarchical galaxy formation. The derived DLA number density per unit
redshift, dn/dz =0.058, is in moderate agreement with values calculated from
low-redshift QSO absorption line studies. We use two different methods to
determine the types of galaxies which contribute most to the DLA cross-section:
comparing the power law slope of f(N) to theoretical predictions and analysing
contributions to dn/dz. We find that comparison of the power law slope cannot
rule out spiral discs as the dominant galaxy type responsible for DLA systems.
Analysis of dn/dz however, is much more discriminating. We find that galaxies
with log M_HI < 9.0 make up 34% of dn/dz; Irregular and Magellanic types
contribute 25%; galaxies with surface brightness > 24 mag arcsec^{-2} account
for 22% and sub-L* galaxies contribute 45% to dn/dz. We conclude that a large
range of galaxy types give rise to DLA systems, not just large spiral galaxies
as previously speculated.Comment: 13 pages, low resolution figures in the appendix, MNRAS accepte
Local Column Density Distribution Function from HI selected galaxies
The cross-section of sky occupied by a particular neutral hydrogen column
density provides insight into the nature of Lyman-alpha absorption systems. We
have measured this column density distribution at z=0 using 21-cm HI emission
from a blind survey. A subsample of HI Parkes All Sky Survey (HIPASS) galaxies
have been imaged with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA). The
contribution of low HI mass galaxies 10^7.5 to 10^8 M_solar is compared to that
of M_star (10^10 to 10^10.5 M_solar) galaxies. We find that the column density
distribution function is dominated by low HI mass galaxies with column
densities in the range 3x10^18 to 2x10^20 cm^-2. This result is not intuitively
obvious. M_star galaxies may contain the bulk of the HI gas, but the
cross-section presented by low HI mass galaxies 10^7.5 to 10^8 M_solar is
greater at moderate column densities. This result implies that moderate column
density Lyman-alpha absorption systems may be caused by a range of galaxy types
and not just large spiral galaxies as originally thought.Comment: 5 pages, including 1 figure. To appear in "Extragalactic Gas at Low
Redshift" (ASP Conf. Series, Weymann Conf.
Book review: improving criminal justice workplaces: translating theory and research into evidence-based practice by Paula Brough, Jennifer Brown and Amanda Biggs
In Improving Criminal Justice Workplaces: Translating Theory and Research into Practice, Paula Brough, Jennifer Brown and Amanda Biggs bridge academic research into organisational behaviours and the experiences of workers within criminal justice workplaces at a time of significant funding cuts and decreasing morale to both identify a number of problems and to suggest strategies and solutions. Emma Smith finds this a well-researched, timely and informative text that sheds light on the effects of austerity upon criminal justice organisations
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