U&PU is a blawg,
which lawyer/blogger Denise Howell (Bag and Baggage) defined as
"a web log written by lawyers and/or concerned primarily with legal affairs."

Topics shall also include
- linguistics (often as it relates to law)
- politics and current events
- philosophy and jurisprudence, and naturally
Stuff Worth Reading, which includes books, articles, posts, caselaw, and more.

Read, share, and enjoy. Some rights reserved.

Unused and Probably Unusable

-- a linguistically inclined blawg

New recurring feature: Heinlein Fridays
Announcing a (hopefully) regularly recurring feature here on U&PU, a science fictional episodic essay, examining the works of Robert Heinlein, with particular attention to Law, Courts, Lawyers, as well as common non-legal themes, features, and characterizations.

(I don't know if I'll be able to hit every Friday, and for that matter when I'm going hot I may have to have supplemental posts - a post-Friday Heinlein Friday, if you will.)

Statement of Purpose

But my intention holds, sitting well in order, to push off, smite the sounding furrows, and blog about what were then newer worlds, and the baths of all the western stars, until I die. Deepest apologies of course to Tennyson. Heinlein was a fan of "Ulysses," it seems; he titled one of his last, fat novels after a line in the poem: To Sail Beyond the Sunset. The penultimate sentence, in fact:
Come, my friends,
'T is not too late to seek a newer world.
Push off, and sitting well in order smite
The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds
To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths
Of all the western stars, until I die.
Good stuff. The protagonist, Maureen Long, mother of the much-storied Lazarus Long, and perhaps a thinly-veiled female version of Heinlein himself, trades quotes with a Dean, in the process each satisfying the other that they Love Good Literature.

The themes of the poem, too, and particularly of those lines, are commonly featured in Heinlein's work. Adventure, traveling, endless exploration, scouting into the unknown, and a happy death while pushing the boundaries.

In my Heinlein posts, I intend to do what I always wanted to do with a webpage, but never had the opportunity to: lay out some of my insights into commonalities, weaknesses, strengths, and intriguing features of Heinlein's work, and invite others to respond. I know not everyone's fond of him; fortunately there's no need to agree with me about the significance or value of RAH's work. If you don't like it, don't read it. Same goes for my posts.

I also wish to draw attention at this time to Tenser, Said the Tensor, which has a marvelous feature on Linguistics in SF, with prominent presence of Heinlein (who in Gulf, Friday, and numerous other stories and novels added a heavy dose of linguistic ideas into the plots, or even scenery, of his fictons). [ed.: are we sure the plural of ficton isn't ficta?] While I invariably read Language Log for the widest possible coverage of pop ling news, T,stT is an outstanding effort in its area.
Posted by Eh Nonymous on Friday May 26, 2006 at 2:46pm

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