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This book assesses association football's history and development
in Ireland from the late 1870s until the early twenty-first
century. It focuses on four key themes-soccer's early development
before and after partition, the post-Emergency years, coaching and
developing the game, and supporters and governance. In particular,
it examines key topics such as the Troubles, Anglo-Irish football
relations, the failure of a professional structure in the Republic
and Northern Ireland, national and regional identity, relationships
with other sports, class, economics and gender. It features
contributions from some of today's leading academic writers on the
history of Irish soccer while the views of a number of pre-eminent
sociologists and economists specialising in the game's development
are also offered. It identifies some of the difficulties faced by
soccer's players and administrators in Ireland and challenges the
notion that it was a 'garrison game' spread mainly by the military
and generally only played by those who were not fully committed to
the nationalist cause. This is the first edited collection to focus
solely on the progress of soccer in Ireland since its introduction
and adds to the growing academic historiography of Irish sport and
its relationship with politics, culture and society. The chapters
in this book were originally published an a special issue in Soccer
& Society.
Every time I write about my heart, I write about walking. Every
time I write about walking, I write about my heart. What is it like
to be born with a congenital heart defect? What does it mean to
live knowing your heart will one day fail you? How do you walk
without moving a muscle? In Pacemaker, poet David Toms deftly
blends creative nonfiction, poetry and diary in an account of
resisting, confronting, and living with a rare heart condition. His
experience, including his hospitalisation during the Covid-19
pandemic, speaks to all of us in its exploration of what it means
to live in a fragile yet resilient body, to walk multiple
challenging paths, and to always a find a way to keep moving.
Quantum field theory in curved spacetime has been remarkably
fruitful. It can be used to explain how the large-scale structure
of the universe and the anisotropies of the cosmic background
radiation that we observe today first arose. Similarly, it provides
a deep connection between general relativity, thermodynamics, and
quantum field theory. This book develops quantum field theory in
curved spacetime in a pedagogical style, suitable for graduate
students. The authors present detailed, physically motivated,
derivations of cosmological and black hole processes in which
curved spacetime plays a key role. They explain how such processes
in the rapidly expanding early universe leave observable
consequences today, and how in the context of evaporating black
holes, these processes uncover deep connections between gravitation
and elementary particles. The authors also lucidly describe many
other aspects of free and interacting quantized fields in curved
spacetime.
This book assesses association football's history and development
in Ireland from the late 1870s until the early twenty-first
century. It focuses on four key themes-soccer's early development
before and after partition, the post-Emergency years, coaching and
developing the game, and supporters and governance. In particular,
it examines key topics such as the Troubles, Anglo-Irish football
relations, the failure of a professional structure in the Republic
and Northern Ireland, national and regional identity, relationships
with other sports, class, economics and gender. It features
contributions from some of today's leading academic writers on the
history of Irish soccer while the views of a number of pre-eminent
sociologists and economists specialising in the game's development
are also offered. It identifies some of the difficulties faced by
soccer's players and administrators in Ireland and challenges the
notion that it was a 'garrison game' spread mainly by the military
and generally only played by those who were not fully committed to
the nationalist cause. This is the first edited collection to focus
solely on the progress of soccer in Ireland since its introduction
and adds to the growing academic historiography of Irish sport and
its relationship with politics, culture and society. The chapters
in this book were originally published an a special issue in Soccer
& Society.
Detailing a program that has been proven to provide results and
significantly improve a golfer's game from within 100 yards of the
hole, this revised edition includes added features, enhancing the
ground-breaking instruction that motivates golfers to practice
their short game and produces measurable results. The new version
of "Golf's Red Zone Challenge" includes a revised and expanded
version of one of the easiest-to-follow programs ever created to
lower every golfer's score; new tips and drills that cover all
aspects of the short game, from putting to chipping to pitching to
bunker play; an appendix that details golf's three essential
elements--face, path, and lag; and a series of challenging
five-minute drills meant to hone any golfer's short game. With a
foreword written by David Toms, this book also includes
testimonials from other Akins' students, such as high-profile
golfer Chris DiMarco and NBA legend Jerry West.
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