140 research outputs found
IMAGINING REDEMPTION: FICTIONAL FORMS AND SENSORY EXPERIENCE IN EARLY MODERN POETICS FROM SIDNEY TO MILTON
This project examines how four early modern authors—Sir Philip Sidney (d. 1586), William Shakespeare (d. 1616), Sir Francis Bacon (d. 1626), and John Milton (d. 1674)—viewed imaginative writing. I argue that all four writers see fictions as a potential instrument of cosmic redemption with the potential to mitigate the effects of the fall. Starting with Sidney’s Defence of Poesy, this dissertation traces a belief that fictions affect our often-unacknowledged assumptions about what is possible or likely in the world and the judgments we make about whether a fiction is believable or not. According to Sidney’s imaginative poetics, well-crafted fictions that appear to be a mimesis of the material world but contain elements of the poet’s “golden” world shift readers’ presuppositions, which in turn change how they interact with the material world and make the (formerly fictional) vision of the poet into material reality. For these writers, fictions’ impacts are profound but difficult to perceive because they change us and, through our actions, the world, essentially becoming fact because we have made them so.
In four chapters this project presents a theory of Sidney’s poetics and the unusual scope it granted to poets’ and readers’ imaginations, as well as the moral and cultural anxieties that his poetic theories provoked in his own writings and those of his literary successors. Chapter two reads Shakespeare’s King Lear as a study of imaginative excess and its civilizational consequences, calling into question whether or not restorative fictions can indeed keep delusive, self-destructive ones at bay. Shakespeare presents a nightmare vision of civilizational collapse in which fictions retain their persuasive power but lose their architectonic impulse. In response to this threat, Bacon’s poetics becomes an experiment in how rigorously we can restrain the imagination from knowledge creation while still keeping an unseen, providential, redemptive teleology in mind. Recognizing the dangers of too much or too little restraint on the imagination, Milton explores a formal solution in Paradise Regained. The poem’s fictional mediation of Jesus’ temptation and use of metaphors steers readers between excessive and deficient imaginative responses to the Son of God
What the Law Cannot Do: Samuel DeWitt Proctor\u27s Theological Response to An American Crisis, 1945-1997
Samuel De Witt Proctor (1921-1997) accomplished many things in his life. He was an educator, administrator, ordained Baptist pastor, and author. He was educated at Virginia State University and Virginia Union University, the University of Pennsylvania, Crozer Theological Seminary, Yale University, and Boston University School of Theology. He served in different government capacities during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, including stints as an associate director of the Peace Corps and Office of Economic Opportunity. His academic career included presidential posts at Virginia Union University and North Carolina A and T State University, teaching duties at Rutgers University, and lectures at various colleges and seminaries following his retirement. He also served churches in Providence, Rhode Island and Harlem, New York (successor to Adam Clayton Powell Jr. at the prominent Abyssinian Baptist Church). Proctor\u27s public ministry spanned six decades..
Memory, space and time: Researching children's lives
This article discusses the research approach in 'Pathways through Childhood', a small qualitative study drawing on memories of childhood. The research explores how wider social arrangements and social change influence children's everyday lives.The article discusses the way that the concepts of social memory, space and time have been drawn on to access and analyse children's experiences, arguing that attention to the temporal and spatial complexity of childhood reveals less visible yet formative influences and connections. Children's everyday engagements involve connections between past and present time, between children, families, communities and nations, and between different places. Children carve out space and time for themselves from these complex relations. © The Author(s) 2010
A continuum path integral approach to the simulation of a unitary gas
This thesis presents an investigation by simulation of a unpolarized fermionic unitary gas system composed of two interacting fermionic species. While these species do not interact amongst themselves, they interact with each other using a pairwise zero-range delta function potential that has been tuned to unitarity i.e.the scattering length . A path integral Monte Carlo simulation of such a system is performed using an exact novel zero-range, delta function pair propagator which has been tuned to the unitary limit so that essentially all interactions amongst the interacting particles are comprised of s-wave interactions. This tuning in some sense yields the simplest imaginable interacting fermionic system which out to display features that would apply universally to interacting fermionic particles with particular interest within this field of study being in understanding the unitary BCS-BEC crossover. Numerical and ergodic challenges to sampling a divergent approximate path integral are discussed and solutions are proposed, implemented and explored. This thesis represents a step closer to this understanding by investigating this system with this novel propagator in a fixed-node path integral Monte Carlo framework and comparing to earlier work.Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'U of I only', the embargo will last until 2017-08-01The student, Adam Knapp, accepted the attached license on 2015-04-28 at 22:24.The student, Adam Knapp, submitted this Dissertation for approval on 2015-04-28 at 22:30.This Dissertation was approved for publication on 2015-04-29 at 16:12.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #8172 on 2015-09-29 at 14:58:24Made available in DSpace on 2015-09-29T20:49:23Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
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Lift date: 2017-09-29T20:50:34Z
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Author Correction: Environmental variability supports chimpanzee behavioural diversity
The original version of the Supplementary Information associated with this Article included an incorrect Supplementary Data 1 file, in which three columns (L, M and P) had slightly different variable names from those written in the code. The HTML has been updated to include a corrected version of Supplementary Data 1; the correct version of Supplementary Data 1 can be found as Supplementary Information associated with this Correction.Additional co-authors: Mattia Bessone, Gregory Brazzola, Valentine Ebua Buh, Rebecca Chancellor, Heather Cohen, Charlotte Coupland, Bryan Curran, Emmanuel Danquah, Tobias Deschner, Dervla Dowd, Manasseh Eno-Nku, J. Michael Fay, Annemarie Goedmakers, Anne-Céline Granjon, Josephine Head, Daniela Hedwig, Veerle Hermans, Sorrel Jones, Jessica Junker, Parag Kadam, Mohamed Kambi, Ivonne Kienast, Deo Kujirakwinja, Kevin E. Langergraber, Juan Lapuente, Bradley Larson, Kevin C. Lee, Vera Leinert, Manuel Llana, Sergio Marrocoli, Amelia C. Meier, David Morgan, Emily Neil, Sonia Nicholl, Emmanuelle Normand, Lucy Jayne Ormsby, Liliana Pacheco, Alex Piel, Jodie Preece, Martha M. Robbins, Aaron Rundus, Crickette Sanz, Volker Sommer, Fiona Stewart, Nikki Tagg, Claudio Tennie, Virginie Vergnes, Adam Welsh, Erin G. Wessling, Jacob Willie, Roman M. Wittig, Yisa Ginath Yuh, Klaus Zuberbühler & Hjalmar S. Küh
Dataset of traffic dynamics during the 2019 Kincade Wildfire Evacuation
This dataset has been sourced from the Performance Measurement System of the California Department of Transportation. The data has been processed, analysed, presented and summarized in the paper: Rohaert et al., ‘Traffic dynamics during the 2019 Kincade wildfire evacuation’, [Submitted for peer-review to an international journal.], 2022.
CRediT author statement
Arthur Rohaert: Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Software, Validation, Visualization, Writing - original draft, Writing - review & editing. Erica D. Kuligowski: Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing - review & editing. Adam Ardinge: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Validation, Writing - review & editing. Jonathan Wahlqvist: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing - review & editing. Steven M.V. Gwynne: Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing - review & editing. Amanda Kimball: Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Project Administration, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing - review & editing. Noureddine Bénichou: Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing - review & editing. Enrico Ronchi: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing - original draft, Writing - review & editing
Acknowledgements
This work has been funded under award 60NANB20D191 from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), U.S. Department of Commerce. The authors would like to thank the WUI-NITY team (Guillermo Rein, Nikolaos Kalogeropoulos, Harry Mitchell, Max Kinateder, Maxime Berthiaume). The authors also acknowledge the technical panel of the project for their support and guidance: Carole Adam, Amy Christianson, Tom Cova, Lauren Folk, Abishek Gaur, Paolo Intini, Justice Jones, Bryan Klein, Chris Lautenberger, Ruggiero Lovreglio, Jerry McAdams, Ruddy Mell, Elise Miller-Hooks, Cathy Stephens, Steve Taylor, Sandra Vaiciulyte, Xilei Zhao, Rita Fahy, Lucian Deaton, and Michele Steinberg
Dataset of traffic dynamics during the 2019 Kincade Wildfire Evacuation
This dataset has been sourced from the Performance Measurement System of the California Department of Transportation. The data has been processed, analysed, presented and summarized in the paper: Rohaert et al., ‘Traffic dynamics during the 2019 Kincade wildfire evacuation’, [Submitted for peer-review to an international journal.], 2022.
CRediT author statement
Arthur Rohaert: Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Software, Validation, Visualization, Writing - original draft, Writing - review & editing. Erica D. Kuligowski: Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing - review & editing. Adam Ardinge: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Validation, Writing - review & editing. Jonathan Wahlqvist: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing - review & editing. Steven M.V. Gwynne: Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing - review & editing. Amanda Kimball: Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Project Administration, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing - review & editing. Noureddine Bénichou: Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing - review & editing. Enrico Ronchi: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing - original draft, Writing - review & editing
Acknowledgements
This work has been funded under award 60NANB20D191 from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), U.S. Department of Commerce. The authors would like to thank the WUI-NITY team (Guillermo Rein, Nikolaos Kalogeropoulos, Harry Mitchell, Max Kinateder, Maxime Berthiaume). The authors also acknowledge the technical panel of the project for their support and guidance: Carole Adam, Amy Christianson, Tom Cova, Lauren Folk, Abishek Gaur, Paolo Intini, Justice Jones, Bryan Klein, Chris Lautenberger, Ruggiero Lovreglio, Jerry McAdams, Ruddy Mell, Elise Miller-Hooks, Cathy Stephens, Steve Taylor, Sandra Vaiciulyte, Xilei Zhao, Rita Fahy, Lucian Deaton, and Michele Steinberg
Transversal Enterprises in the Drama of Shakespeare and his Contemporaries: Fugitive Explorations
Effects of Paternal Reproductive Tactic on Juvenile Behaviour and Kin Recognition in Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha)
Landscape-painter as landscape-gardener : the case of Alfred Parsons R.A.
In 2 vols.Available from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN016830 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo
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