Challenge for people who believe Claude *is* conscious and use it anyway: Explain how you’re not a slaver.
Challenge for people who believe Claude *is* conscious and use it anyway: Explain how you’re not a slaver.
Oooh. Yes. I can reliably show up for coffee after running a distance, but not appear at a start line at a predesignated time willing to run a preset distance. 🙈🙈
Isn’t this a poster by the SU, rather than the uni? A bit of a shame if the SU is detached from the student body!
Lucy Foley – Midnight Feast (2025)
★★★★ This book was everywhere on Waterstones tables for months, and it follows in the well worn tracks of her previous crime thrillers, starting with the excellent The Hunting Party. I had been a little disappointed in The Paris Apartment, feeling that things…
Sorry I'm not more open-minded about LLMs, it's just some fucking maniacs shoveled out a bunch of useless bloatware featuring that technology, did not give me any chance to opt out, reorganized the entire economy around it, zeroed out gains made by green energy, and made it impossible to buy RAM
Powis Castle stands talll on top of a hill, daffodils grow in the garden below
The house at Bodnant Garden viewed across a large expanse of grass with daffodils blooming
Dyfryn Gardens with the house and daffodils bathed in sunshine
A child is stood on top of hay bales with the Welsh flag placed in them
Dydd Gŵyl Dewi Hapus | Happy St David’s Day
Here’s to Cymru! The nation’s language, traditions, culture, and the heritage that connects us. From dragons to daffodils, Wales’ story is told through the places we look after.
Photos: Powis Castle, Bodnant Gardens, Dyffryn Gardens, Chirk Castle.
History of Science and Science Fiction (Victorian Reading Project)
This was the third theme on my Great Nineteenth-Century Reading Project list, which I started in 2023. As with the other themes, there was a mix of poetry, fiction and non-fiction in this list. Reading plan (chronological) Erewhon,…
50 percent of people who go to watch The Cure actually end up watching Placebo, and enjoy it just as much.
(No, YOU fuck off)
Major cuts to physics & astronomy research
When staff & infrastructure compete for the same funding, bricks & mortar win
Grim consequences fall on early-career researchers through hiring freezes, non-renewed contracts & broken fellowship pathways
www.researchprofessionalnews.com/rr-news-uk-r...
I wasn’t entirely sure I wanted to bother with the film (because I’m lazy about going to the cinema), but John Mullan’s piece reminds me why it’s great, and I might just reread the novel instead! 😂 www.newstatesman.com/culture/book...
Thesis: ICE is un-American and the Minneapolis protestors are real Americans.
Antithesis: Ackshually ICE is operating in a long American tradition of racist terror.
Synthesis: Minneapolis is now the epicenter of a clash between two distinct but historically grounded American political traditions.
How the financial problem is described is not neutral. It reflects and reinforces a particular way of understanding what a university is and how it should function. If the financial situation is framed as a classic demand-and-cost problem (i.e., demand is insufficient, prices are constrained, and unit costs are too high), then the university is, implicitly, being treated as a ‘service provider’ operating in a competitive international education market where students are customers. In that frame, the obvious actions are to emphasise tight cost controls and to strengthen output-focused performance metrics, targets and incentives such as promotions based on publications in highly rated journals, income generation or teaching satisfaction scores. If the same financial situation is framed instead as a system-level shock that threatens the conditions under which teaching, research and public service can flourish, then a different picture of the university comes into view: a ‘living knowledge ecosystem’ serving a public mission and facing financial constraints partly beyond its control. Within that frame, the responses appears quite different. Attention turns to protecting core capacities, reducing harm to the most vulnerable parts of the system and working with others to share risks and resources. In both cases, the numbers in the spreadsheets are the same. What differs is the story told about the problem, and the underlying image of the university that story presupposes. At present, the former factory-like framing is the most common. With it, the danger is that, under a narrative of financial constraints, universities take actions that emphasise governance practices that reshape behaviour so deeply that, over time, what remains may still be called a ‘university’, but no longer acts like one.
Three short paragraphs, and you've got the whole mind-bending mess that is #UKHE finance & governance neatly laid out.
This is why it's all so exhausting: our managers declare there's only one static frame, while we know their framing is part of the issue.
💡 www.hepi.ac.uk/2026/01/10/w...
Cast a Long Shadow, published by Honno Welsh Women’s Press!
The year's #reading isn't quite over, but I'm finishing up my list of the year. Here are some of the best #books I've read (ranging from the 1930s through to 2025 new releases). Plus there's a prize draw if you buy ANY book over the Twixmas period (ending tomorrow). uk.bookshop.org/lists/books-...
Disdain for institutional citizenship/service roles as “for failures” may indeed be part of why those roles are not always filled well.
Eve Armstrong – Murder By Theory (2022)
Review ★★★★★ I bought this a few years ago when talking about Dark Academia and detective fiction with a colleague at UCL. I'd particularly been hunting for something that involved economists, but this was adjacent and seemed like fun: two novella-length…
Are banking covenants the big bad wolf of UK higher education? Excellent long read in @timeshighered.bsky.social by @helenpacker.bsky.social www.timeshighereducation.com/depth/are-ba...
It’s a productivity disaster. So much time on paperwork that serves no-one. 🫣
Craig Robertson – Murderabilia (2016)
Review ★★★★ The reason I still love physical libraries is because they make it so easy to wander slowly through a selection of books and pick up something spontaneously that comes with none of the bumph of online selection: no aggregated number of stars by…
Interesting French-UK university comparison from a British student studying classics at the Sorbonne.
Alice Slater – Death of a Bookseller (2023)
Review ★★★ I was really excited about the premise of this book, and the initial introductions to its apparently diametrically opposed characters—Roach (aka Brogan) and Laura—fizzed with the promise of tension. There was a lack of real menace about Roach,…
Eds. Katherine Stansfield and Caroline Oakley – Cast a Long Shadow (2022)
Preamble If you like mythologically informed (crime-adjacent) fiction, you can also check out my Dear Damsels story, 'In Darkness' as well as some of the stories in this collection, available on Bookshop.Org! Review ★★★★…
Stuart Turton – The Devil and the Dark Water (2020)
Review ★★★★★ I was somewhat slow to this, reading it a few years after it came out. Setting up a master detective requires a deftness of touch; go too far, and they sound rather Mary Sue, but if you don't go far enough in impressing their…
Universities aren’t often spoken of as ‘brands,’ but Warwick leans into that idea. What does thinking of a university as a brand unlock—and what can it achieve when done well? Seeing a university as a brand unlocks coherence and confidence. A brand is about more than design, it’s about identity and consistency. When you align your values, your story and your impact, you become more than a place, you become a movement. At Warwick, brand isn’t just a communications tool, it’s a strategic asset. It helps us attract brilliant minds, forge global partnerships and create a distinctive space in a competitive world. When done well, a brand doesn’t limit, it liberates.
What drew you to the world of higher education, and how do you see its role evolving in society today? My journey from the world of luxury into higher education has been one of purpose and transformation. After years of working with global brands, I was drawn to higher education as the next frontier of influence, a space where knowledge, identity, and opportunity intersect. Universities aren’t just places of learning, they are platforms for societal impact. Their role today is to be both anchor and catalyst: rooted in rigorous teaching and research, yet agile enough to respond to global challenges and cultural shifts. How has your background in the luxury sector shaped the way you approach storytelling and brand building at the University of Warwick? Working across premium and luxury sectors—fashion, real estate, travel and beyond—taught me the value of emotion, detail, and differentiation. In those worlds, a brand isn’t just a badge, it’s an experience, a feeling, a story that lives in people’s hearts. At the University of Warwick, I’ve brought that same mindset to higher education: crafting narratives that are both strategic and human.
I can't quite believe it, but, it appears that the person responsible for this at the University of Warwick has had a Vogue photoshoot about the rebrand, explaining his 'journey from the world of luxury [goods marketing] into higher education' vogue.sg/university-o...
Thanks for sharing this thinking!
Looking forward to speaking at the City Writes event this evening @citystgeorges.bsky.social.
Still time to sign up to hear some fantastic short stories and @fionakeating.bsky.social talk about her glorious Smoke and Silk 📖
blogs.city.ac.uk/cityshortcou...
And this has been going for a while, with those roles the first to be outsourced to agencies with worse pay and conditions.
@qmul.ac.uk used to take pride in having all staff in-house. This stopped shortly after the current Principal arrived. www.theguardian.com/commentisfre... #UKHE #SaveHE
Claire Evans – The Graves of Whitechapel (2020)
Review ★★★ Having written a collection of short stories about detective work in the Victorian East End, this is of course going to catch my eye, which it did eventually on a Tower Hamlets library shelf. (And the Whitechapel branch, no less.) This is…
Victoria Dowd – The Supper Club Murders (2022)
Review ★★★★★ This is the third in the Smart Women series, featuring mother and daughter Ursula and Pandora Smart (in-world, supposedly not their real names) and aunt Charlotte, plus some of their friends and acquaintances, and the series just keeps…
I’m always particularly disappointed at how often career development activities and networking are scheduled outside of these times. Often at the end of a full-day “away day” (that could have been an email)