Ted Tregear’s first book, Anthologizing Shakespeare, 1593–1603, is published by Oxford University Press in April 2023. Between 1599 and 1601, no fewer than five anthologies appeared in print with extracts from Shakespeare’s works. Some featured whole poems, while others chose short passages from his poems and plays, gathered alongside lines on similar topics by his […]
Continue ReadingMonth: March 2023
Philip Knox shortlisted for a Student-Led Teaching Award 2023
Philip Knox has been shortlisted for a Cambridge SU Student-Led Teaching Award in the category ‘Postgraduate Research Supervisor of the Year’. Link to further information about the Student-Led Teaching Awards: https://www.cambridgesu.co.uk/ourpriorities/education/student-ledteachingawards/
Continue ReadingNew Open Humanities Publication: ‘Articulating Media: Genealogy, Interface, Situation’
Open Humanities Press is pleased to announce the publication of ‘Articulating Media: Genealogy, Interface, Situation’, edited by James Gabrillo and Nathaniel Zetter, with one of the chapters written by Caroline Bassett. Nathaniel Zetter is a College Teaching Associate in English at Selwyn College, University of Cambridge. Caroline Bassett is Professor of Digital Humanities in the […]
Continue ReadingFitzwilliam Islanders Exhibition Supported by CDH
The Fitzwilliam Museum’s new exhibition ‘Islanders: the making of the Mediterranean’ has received critical acclaim, thanks in part to the resources funded by Cambridge Digital Humanities. CDH provided a Digitisation Award to bring archival material – notebooks, plans, and photographs that document archaeology at Knossos from the 1930s to the 1950s – from the British School at […]
Continue ReadingProfessor Kasia Boddy speaks at ‘Exploring Cambridge University Herbarium in its Historical Context’, March 2023
The Cambridge University Herbarium is one of the most diverse and historic natural sciences collections held by the University of Cambridge. Professor Boddy was one of a panel of experts from the arts and sciences contributing to a series of talks, presentations and discussions with audience participation that aimed to bring the diverse histories embodied […]
Continue ReadingLouise Joy and Jessica Lim publish ‘Women’s Literary Education, 1690–1850’ (Edinburgh University Press)
Louise Joy and Jessica Lim publish Women’s Literary Education, 1690–1850 (Edinburgh University Press), an edited volume containing essays by English faculty colleagues including Jennifer Wallace, Rebecca Anne Barr and Jonathan Padley. The book brings together leading critical voices from a range of disciplines to examine the complex and significant ways in which female literary artists […]
Continue ReadingConor McKee asks whether the ‘Tree of Charity’ is the right name for a celebrated passage from Piers Plowman in ‘The Yearbook of Langland Studies’
In passus B.XVI, the narrator of Piers Plowman is shown an allegorical tree to teach him what ‘charite is to mene’, yet despite the ‘Tree of Charity’ label which follows this passage in critical literature, in the B-text Langland never actually calls the tree itself ‘charity’ but rather ‘patience’. Conor McKee’s article looks at the […]
Continue Reading‘Who makes AI?’, co-authored by Dr Kanta Dihal, attracts media attention
A recent paper on ‘Who makes AI? Gender and portrayals of AI scientists in popular film, 1920–2020’ has attracted considerable media attention. The authors are Dr Kanta Dihal, Dr Stephen Cave, Dr Eleanor Drage and Dr Kerry Mackereth from Cambridge University’s Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence (LCFI). Abstract It is well established both that women […]
Continue ReadingLaunch of ‘Migrant Ecologies’, a collaborative project between Cambridge University and Ashoka University
Prof. Subha Mukherji launches the collaborative project, Migrant Ecologies, with Martin Crowley (MML, Cambridge), Jonathan Gil Harris (Ashoka University) and Sumana Roy (Ashoka University), at Ashoka University, Delhi (India), from the 20th of March to the 4th of April. She gives a talk on ‘Migrant Forms’ at the opening symposium, ‘Migrant Ecologies’. This project is supported […]
Continue ReadingDr Mina Gorji speaks about wildness at StAnza, Scotland’s International Poetry Festival, 9-12 March 2023
‘WILD: forms of resistance’, StAnza 2023, takes place from 9-12 March, in St Andrews, live and online. Dr Gorji speaks about wildness on Friday 10 March: https://stanzapoetry.org/events/breakfast-at-the-poetry-cafe-wild/ and reads poems on Sunday 12 March: https://byretheatre.com/shows/stanza-23-reading-mina-gorji-and-tim-cresswell/
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