1,738 research outputs found

    Almost a Girl

    Get PDF

    Almost a Girl

    Full text link

    John Beer folio

    Get PDF
    A folio of English-language poetry by John Beer

    Perspectives on Social Inequalities

    Get PDF

    The role of dietary restriction in the construction of identity in the Graeco-Roman world

    Get PDF
    This thesis will attempt both to explore the phenomenon of dietary restriction within the context of Graeco-Roman antiquity and to prove that it existed in an intimate and causal relationship with the construction, maintenance and perception of cultural, political and religious identity. It will be the contention of this thesis that in the same way as social and ethnic groups may seek to utilise indigenous cuisines and particular modes of food consumption as social markers to define and negotiate notions of identity and as a way of asserting these notions within the context of a period of social transition, population migration and cultural hybridisation, so too may forms of dietary restriction serve an analogous function. The thesis will examine this phenomenon primarily through the literature of the Classical, Hellenistic and Roman periods. Its geographical background will be the Italian peninsula and the Greek speaking East. Chronologically the scope of the study will focus predominantly upon the first and second centuries A.D, a period rich in both cultural interaction and tension, but, owing to the particular cultural and philosophical strands that were current during this period, and the specific concerns of authors writing during this period, the material under contemplation will in fact range from the Homeric texts to Porphyry. These tensions throw into sharp relief the problems of defining the nature and limits of group and individual identity within a sprawling and heterogeneous ethnic melting pot. The thesis will examine such phenomena as vegetarianism, the taboos and anxieties surrounding the bean, the ambiguous status of fish, the dietary legislation of the Jewish people and the restrictions that were placed upon the consumption of alcohol. These particular instances of dietary restriction serve as examples of dietary flash points, when differing dietary ideologies act as potent illustrations of the simmering undercurrents of ethnic, racial and cultural tensions that existed in the ancient world

    Workforce Development in the South West Voluntary and Community Sectors:Skill Shortages Study

    Get PDF
    The Voluntary Sector National Training Organisation, now the National  Workforce Development Hub, describes the Voluntary and Community  Sector  as  diverse  and  covering  a  variety  of  different  organisations.  Organisations range from traditional charities, to companies that trade to  support their social aims, through to informal community organisations.  The sector also includes federations, or networks of local groups working  under national umbrellas.  Voluntary and community sector organisations  provide  a  wide  range  of  services  and  activities  and  many  of  the  organisations are involved in the delivery of learning, whether through  accredited training or informal learning.  The Government has increasingly recognised the importance of Voluntary  and  community  sector  organisations  and  the  key  role  that  they  play  nationally,  regionally  and  locally.    Initiatives  to  support  the  sector,  underpinned by funding, have been undertaken and the Government has  been  active  in  encouraging  and  commissioning  research  and  strategic  planning  in  the  sector,  in  particular  emphasising  the  importance  of  developing the skills, capacities and potential of the workforce.  Sector organisations generally display a strong commitment to training  and workforce development.  However, in spite of this commitment and  the presence of a high proportion of well‐qualified workers, skills gaps,  that is skills lacking in the current workforce, and skills shortages caused  by recruitment difficulties, are present in the sector.  There are also skills  gaps and shortages in the volunteer workforce

    Sexual selection, automata and ethics in George Eliot's The Mill on the Floss and Olive Schreiner's Undine and From Man to Man

    Get PDF
    This paper brings together two related areas of debate in the latter half of the nineteenth century. The first concerns how the courtship plot of the nineteenth-century novel responded to, and helped to shape, scientific ideas of sexual competition and selection. In The Mill on the Floss (1860), George Eliot strikingly prefigures Darwin's later work on sexual selection, drawing from her own extensive knowledge of the wider debates within which evolutionary theory developed. Maggie Tulliver's characterisation allows Eliot to explore the ethical complexities raised by an increasingly powerful scientific naturalism, where biology is seen to be embedded within morality in newly specific ways. The second strand of the paper examines the extension of scientific method to human mind and motivation which constituted the new psychology. It argues that there are crucial continuities of long-established ethical and religious ideas within this increasingly naturalistic view of human mind and motivation. The contention that such ideas persist and are transformed, rather than simply jettisoned, is illustrated through the example of Thomas Henry Huxley's 1874 essay on automata. Turning finally to focus on Olive Schreiner's Undine (1929) and From Man to Man (1926), the paper explores the importance of these persistent ethical and religious ideas in two novels which remained unpublished during her lifetime. It argues that they produce both difficulty and opportunity for imagining love plots within the context of increasingly assertive biological and naturalistic accounts of human beings

    Stochastic Model Updating with Uncertainty Quantification: An Overview and Tutorial

    Get PDF
    This paper presents an overview of the theoretic framework of stochastic model updating, including critical aspects of model parameterisation, sensitivity analysis, surrogate modelling, test-analysis correlation, parameter calibration, etc. Special attention is paid to uncertainty analysis, which extends model updating from the deterministic domain to the stochastic domain. This extension is significantly promoted by uncertainty quantification metrics, no longer describing the model parameters as unknown-but-fixed constants but random variables with uncertain distributions, i.e. imprecise probabilities. As a result, the stochastic model updating no longer aims at a single model prediction with maximum fidelity to a single experiment, but rather a reduced uncertainty space of the simulation enveloping the complete scatter of multiple experiment data. Quantification of such an imprecise probability requires a dedicated uncertainty propagation process to investigate how the uncertainty space of the input is propagated via the model to the uncertainty space of the output. The two key aspects, forward uncertainty propagation and inverse parameter calibration, along with key techniques such as P-box propagation, statistical distance-based metrics, Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling, and Bayesian updating, are elaborated in this tutorial. The overall technical framework is demonstrated by solving the NASA Multidisciplinary UQ Challenge 2014, with the purpose of encouraging the readers to reproduce the result following this tutorial. The second practical demonstration is performed on a newly designed benchmark testbed, where a series of lab-scale aeroplane models are manufactured with varying geometry sizes, following pre-defined probabilistic distributions, and tested in terms of their natural frequencies and model shapes. Such a measurement database contains naturally not only measurement errors but also, more importantly, controllable uncertainties from the pre-defined distributions of the structure geometry. Finally, open questions are discussed to fulfil the motivation of this tutorial in providing researchers, especially beginners, with further directions on stochastic model updating with uncertainty treatment perspectives

    Left-behind neighbourhoods in old industrial regions

    Get PDF
    This article focuses on the neighbourhoods and people that have been left behind in the economic transformation of two now-diversified old industrial regions: Geelong (Victoria) in Australia and Oshawa (Ontario) in Canada. Political discontent has found expression in different ways in the two locations. This, we contend, reflects policy frameworks that dampen the extent to which socio-spatial inequality and entrenched disadvantage generate discontent within regions. In assessing the factors producing this outcome, this article clarifies both the who, what and where of ‘left behindness’ and related regional policy responses
    corecore