1,885 research outputs found
Reading the postcolonial island in Amitav Ghosh's The Hungry Tide.
This paper argues that literature has much to contribute to the theoretical work
of island studies, and not just because literary texts provide evidence of the ways islands
are conceptualized in different historical and cultural contexts. To this end, it discusses
Amitav Ghoshâs The Hungry Tide (2004), a novel which actively theorizes key concepts in
island studies. The Hungry Tide is set in the Sundarbans, an âimmense archipelagoâ in the
Ganges delta, and tells the largely forgotten history of the forced evacuation of refugees
from the island of MorichjhĂŁpi in 1979. The liminal space of the Sundarbans, the âtide
countryâ, is an extraordinary setting for a literary exploration of the relationship between
postcolonial island geographies and identities. Ghoshâs depiction of the âwatery labyrinthâ
(Ghosh, 2004: 72) and âstorm-tossed islandsâ (Ghosh, 2004: 164) of the Sundarbans raises
and addresses questions, which should be at the heart of the critical meta-discourse of
island studies
Historical Romance, Gender and Heterosexuality: John Fowles's The French Lieutenant's Woman and A.S. Byatt's Possession
This essay is a comparative analysis of two historical romance novels:
John Fowlesâs The French Lieutenantâs Woman and A.S. Byattâs
Possession. While I acknowledge that some of the key storytelling
priorities in Possession oppose those of The French Lieutenantâs
Woman, I emphasise structural similarities in the treatments of the
heroines in these two novels. My analysis of the characterisation and
narrative function of Sarah Woodruff and Christabel LaMotte illustrates
the novelsâ common paradigmatic structure and reveals a
deeper shared allegiance to heterosexual hegemony. I argue that
these characters are crucial to the complex negotiation of the past
which both novels offer. They enable, in Diane Elamâs words, âa reâ
engendering of the historical past as romance.â Sarah and Christabelâs
representation as both historical and outside of history provides
the conduit for the elaborate toâing and froâing between the
Victorian age and the late twentieth century which is central to both
novels. The double aspect of these characters depends on allegorical
stereotyping of women as âmysteryâ and âtruth.
Intermediate behavior of Kerr tails
The numerical investigation of wave propagation in the asymptotic domain of
Kerr spacetime has only recently been possible thanks to the construction of
suitable hyperboloidal coordinates. The asymptotics revealed an apparent puzzle
in the decay rates of scalar fields: the late-time rates seemed to depend on
whether finite distance observers are in the strong field domain or far away
from the rotating black hole, an apparent phenomenon dubbed "splitting". We
discuss far-field "splitting" in the full field and near-horizon "splitting" in
certain projected modes using horizon-penetrating, hyperboloidal coordinates.
For either case we propose an explanation to the cause of the "splitting"
behavior, and we determine uniquely decay rates that previous studies found to
be ambiguous or immeasurable. The far-field "splitting" is explained by
competition between projected modes. The near-horizon "splitting" is due to
excitation of lower multipole modes that back excite the multipole mode for
which "splitting" is observed. In both cases "splitting" is an intermediate
effect, such that asymptotically in time strong field rates are valid at all
finite distances. At any finite time, however, there are three domains with
different decay rates whose boundaries move outwards during evolution. We then
propose a formula for the decay rate of tails that takes into account the
inter--mode excitation effect that we study.Comment: 16 page
The Hââș ionosphere of Uranus: decades-long cooling and local-time morphology
The upper atmosphere of Uranus has been observed to be slowly cooling between 1993 and 2011. New analysis of near-infrared observations of emission from Hââș obtained between 2012 and 2018 reveals that this cooling trend has continued, showing that the upper atmosphere has cooled for 27 years, longer than the length of a nominal season of 21 years. The new observations have offered greater spatial resolution and higher sensitivity than previous ones, enabling the characterization of the Hââș intensity as a function of local time. These profiles peak between 13 and 15âh local time, later than models suggest. The NASA Infrared Telescope Facility iSHELL instrument also provides the detection of a bright Hââș signal on 16 October 2016, rotating into view from the dawn sector. This feature is consistent with an auroral signal, but is the only of its kind present in this comprehensive dataset
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