PhD working with English Heritage 'to better understand the long history of creative responses to the historic environment and ‘prehistoric’ monuments... with a focus on outsider art and alternative narratives' - sounds like a job for a FOLKLORIST https://t.co/778xMoxBgB
Don't forget to submit your abstract for our June conference, 'Bodies and Environments in the Early Modern World' - speaker expenses will be covered and we have two amazing keynotes in Marcy Norton & Sara Miglietti!
Hey everyone! The Cabinet of Curiosities is sending out a call for papers for our annual summer conference! For more information, check link to the pdf here: https://t.co/saMQz0Em1Z
📢📢📢DEADLINE: Applications close on Mon 13 January. M4C 4 year Fully-Funded Collaborative Doctoral Award. This project investigates the construction, interpretation, and definition of local ‘belonging’ between c.1500 and 1750 focusing on early modern Warwickshire.
New research project underway in @TheJohnRylands today. I'm so grateful to have been awarded a Visiting Early Career Research Fellowship here https://t.co/xPZfGd0wH4
Please share the CFP for our Work, Authenticity, and Social Identity in Early Modern Britain Conference, to take place 10-11 June 2025 at the University of Warwick, with keynote addresses from Steve Hindle, @jcwhittle1, @mark_hailwood & @Brodie_Waddell ✨
Don't forget to get your abstracts in for our ghost conference! We will have two keynotes: Prof. Sasha Handley (Manchester) and Dr. Shane McCorristine (Newcastle). It's going to be spooktacular! #earlymodern#twitterstorians#emostorians
Pedagogy Forum update: Graduate Teaching Roundtable on 3 December (1-2.30pm) online. Great opportunity to explore exciting and innovative work done by GTAs. Register now: https://t.co/jCcIGGXdwc Note: undertaking and pedagogical research is postponed but we will reschedule
We hope everyone had an enjoyable reading week! Do join us tomorrow evening, both in person and online from 5pm, to hear @Imogen_Knox a recently completed PhD at Warwick who will be discussing her postdoctoral research!
Dr Martha McGill is a historian of supernatural beliefs at the @uniofwarwick Read her article on Divination in early modern Britain sought signs in swine, the stars and scripture