10 research outputs found

    Science in neo-Victorian poetry

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    This article considers the work of three contemporary poets and their engagement, in verse, with Victorian science. Beginning with the outlandish ‘theories’ of Mick Imlah’s ‘The Zoologist’s Bath’ (1983), it moves on to two works of biografiction – Anthony Thwaite’s poem ‘At Marychurch’ (1980), which outlines Philip Henry Gosse’s doomed attempts to unite evolution and Christianity, and Ruth Padel’s Darwin: A Life in Poems (2009). Starting off with John Glendening’s idea that science in neo-Victorian fiction, if fully embraced, provides an opportunity for self-revelation to characters, this article explores the rather less happy resolutions of each of these poems, while in addition discussing the ways in which these poems perform the formal changes and mutability discussed within them

    A study in trunks [picture] /

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    Condition: Stains, lower left and right; numerous small edge tears; "10/-"? in pencil, upper left; "3" in blue pencil, upper left, another number, partly illegible, in blue pencil, lower right; Conservation treatment: glued to backing sheet.; Inscriptions: signed "H. Garlick - '01"--on image, lower edge; title in pencil below image; "Mr. Isaac Gabriel Goldsteinich visits the zoo and is highly amused at that mawcaw's awful beak - while the bird wonders how the blanky blank [word (men or new?) deleted beneath] could have got loose"-- in pencil below image, changed with numerous corrections in ink to read: "a foreign gentleman visiting the zoo is highly amused at that mawcaw's awful beak - while the macaw wonders how on earth this elephant could have got loose".; Also available in an electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3354740; Acquired from Bridget McDonnell Gallery in 2005

    Elektrische Leitungsphänomene, 1

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    Career intentions of medical students in the UK: a national, cross-sectional study (AIMS study)

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    Objective To determine current UK medical students’ career intentions after graduation and on completing the Foundation Programme (FP), and to ascertain the motivations behind these intentions.Design Cross-sectional, mixed-methods survey of UK medical students, using a non-random sampling method.Setting All 44 UK medical schools recognised by the General Medical Council.Participants All UK medical students were eligible to participate. The study sample consisted of 10 486 participants, approximately 25.50% of the medical student population.Outcome measures Career intentions of medical students postgraduation and post-FP, motivations behind these career intentions, characterising the medical student population and correlating demographic factors and propensity to leave the National Health Service (NHS).Results The majority of participating students (8806/10 486, 83.98%) planned to complete both years of the FP after graduation, with under half of these students (4294/8806, 48.76%) intending to pursue specialty training thereafter. A subanalysis of career intentions after the FP by year of study revealed a significant decrease in students’ intentions to enter specialty training as they advanced through medical school. Approximately a third of surveyed students (3392/10 486, 32.35%) intended to emigrate to practise medicine, with 42.57% (n=1444) of those students not planning to return. In total, 2.89% of students intended to leave medicine altogether (n=303). Remuneration, work-life balance and working conditions were identified as important factors in decision-making regarding emigration and leaving the profession. Subgroup analyses based on gender, type of schooling, fee type and educational background were performed. Only 17.26% of surveyed students were satisfied or very satisfied with the overall prospect of working in the NHS.Conclusions The Ascertaining the career Intentions of UK Medical Students study highlights UK students’ views and career intentions, revealing a concerning proportion of those surveyed considering alternative careers or emigration. Addressing factors such as remuneration, work-life balance and working conditions may increase retention of doctors and improve workforce planning efforts

    How the world stage makes its subjects: an embodied critique of constructivist IR theory

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    Australian Press, Radio and Television Historiography: An Update

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