Highlight of my term so far: teaching with the wonderful Rogers collection of nineteenth-century children’s literature, folklore and fairytales @NewnhamLibrary yesterday 🦉
BSLS Winter Symposium 2025 - Call for Organisers
The British Society for Literature and Science seeks organisers for its annual Winter Symposium.
For more details see: https://t.co/wbvdLp4VF8
‘The Tripos examination lasting 6 hours a day for 6 days, was so terribly exhausting that I felt that nothing would have induced me to go in for it if I had realised what it would be’ Constance Garnett on sitting exams in 1883. Congratulations to all my students finishing today!
Term’s over, sun’s out, back to research. Today’s tidbit: E. M. Forster’s New Year’s resolutions on the cusp of 1905, just before the publication of his first novel.
If you are a PGR or ECR, working with RRR is great experience - we are a friendly bunch (and we do our best to get you a physical review copy/comp tickets). I am still really keen to get a review of a theatre performance and/or conference. Please share widely!
Ideal Sunday read, on the journey to decode this portrait of Francis Williams & the ‘small, furry white blob’ in the sky behind him. Should be a film with interlocking storylines in 18th century & today! https://t.co/1qGIUPTH8D
I've opened my Etsy shop for:
🌿botanical calendars to arrive in Jan
🐚a few of my limited edition art prints
🪶jewellery orders for🌲(UK only)
🌸vouchers for my jewellery designs(rest of world)
My prints & calendars are designed to improve mental health:
https://t.co/Rb19nj8HVK
Should also say that the recent @Sadlers_Wells Pina Bausch
/ Germaine Acogny & Malou Airaudo
The Rite of Spring / common ground[s] was one of my performance highlights of the year!
Final teaching week of the year off to a great start with an appropriately lively discussion of the 1913 premiere of The Rite of Spring (featuring re-constructed Nijinsky choreography!) and chocolate treats from a sweet student
Congratulations to Olivia Krauze, our 2024 Hamilton Prize winner for their essay "What is a Violent Emotion?" Congrats to runner up Lucy Lawrence for an essay on The Evergreen. Many thanks to the panel judges, Alison Chapman, Natalie Houston, and Priti Joshi.
A trio of medieval hounds for #WorldDogDay.
They live in this Cambridge University Library bestiary, a medieval book of beasts (real and imaginary!).
You can see this extraordinary book close-up in the #CambridgeDigitalLibrary: https://t.co/gQtPDHIKij
HBD to Thomas De Quincey, a fellow lover of… tea: ‘tea, though ridiculed by those who are naturally of coarse nerves, will always be the favourite beverage of the intellectual’
#OTD 1785 Thomas De Quincey is born. Author of Recollections of the Lake Poets and Confessions of an English Opium Eater. He lived at Dove Cottage after the Wordsworths, bringing 30 chests of books (and it really isn't a big house)