UKRI CEO announces his plans for communicating research opportunities quarterly and notes upcoming AHRC, ESRC, BBSCR, MRC, NERC, EPSRC and other grant opportunities coming soon. www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z1Oc...
UKRI CEO announces his plans for communicating research opportunities quarterly and notes upcoming AHRC, ESRC, BBSCR, MRC, NERC, EPSRC and other grant opportunities coming soon. www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z1Oc...
And they're not even polite when they ask you to write the reference asap....
As far as I know, farm archives have never really been used to track queer histories before. Given they mostly record the financial ongoings on a given farm, you can understand why. However, my year of research at The MERL has proved their potential.
Find out more in this blog:
Check out the latest #handoftheweek
More news on our upcoming events π
We are very excited about our upcoming workshops π
Barriers preventing working class talent from succeeding include class-based discrimination, low pay, a lack of connections and exploitative practices. Over 150 hours of interviews with artists ranging from teenage musicians to globally recognised playwrights were conducted.
A huge thank you to all our delegates for joining The Hand: Emotion, Embodiment, Identity!
Your ideas, questions and conversations made the conference such a rewarding and inspiring event. We are grateful to everyone who contributed and helped make it a success π€
A patchwork quilt features vintage, monochrome portraits of women, accented with embroidery. A blue fabric piece and beige, circular embroidery are in progress. Emotive and historical feel
π Two weeks on from The Hand: Emotions, Embodiment and Identity conference, we reflect on the stimulating contributions of scholars, artists and makers who explored the hand across historical, cultural and creative contexts.
Read our latest blog here: www.thevictorianhand.uk/gallery/conf...
π€© This is how it's done, folks!
'A lesbian couple at the centre of their community and a pair of brothers said to have been among the first people to medically transition are among the people whose stories are told in the Queer Norfolk archive.' π³οΈβπππ³οΈββ§οΈπποΈ
www.bbc.co.uk/news/article... #queerhistory
The bad news rolling in from across Britain's universities seems endless. Very little of the traditional infrastructure outside the top-ranked 25 or so institutions will survive at this rate. Especially in the Arts and Humanities.
Read this thread for the lived experience of what it's like in almost all UK universities now - just an internal implosion. Organisationally, morally, in terms of capacity and morale.
Still thinking about the Carney speech today. It is also interesting that the first inkling I had of this was from Michael Ignatieff in a @financialtimes.com piece. Canadians get it and yes, due to our proximity we have no choice but to.
π¨ BREAKING π¨
The UK Govt has quietly published - without announcement - the Joint Intelligence Committee/DEFRA report it suppressed last October. They tried to sneak it out in the midst of crisis. Read and share:
βGlobal Biodiversity Loss, Ecosystem Collapse & National Security.β
(link below)
'The report highlights that at 16 providers, once the international student fee levy has been implemented, the exchequer will collect more in revenue that these providers received in grants from the Office for Students in 2023-24.' LSE could pay Β£7M levy, receiving less than Β£500k direct grant. 3/3
Ah no, not me. I'm from Durham!
Conference programme for "The Hand: Emotions, Embodiment, Identity" held at London College of Fashion, 8-9 January 2026.
Delighted to be presenting today at @victorianhand.bsky.social conference "The Hand: Emotions, Embodiment, Identity" part of @jbhist.bsky.social and @medhistoryman.bsky.social exciting AHRC project π
Range of historic and contemporary textiles on display in front of screens displaying first slide of a PowerPoint presentation
Really great workshop at @jbhist.bsky.social and @medhistoryman.bsky.social conference @victorianhand.bsky.social to think about textile making and sense of touch with artist and curator Ruth Singer. Very interesting for those of us not makers to think through its implications for our understanding.
It is EXHAUSTING not only being made responsible for coming up with new kinds of assignments for our students; it's also tedious reading op-eds that suggest the core problem is a crisis in teaching. But, as Chris and I lay out here, this isn't a crisis in teaching; it's an attack on learning.
This is very good and goes in front of my MA students next term for sure. It's a lot better than the various medium posts I've written but it's reassuring to see so many people arrive at the same answer after checking. No, AI is not capable of "replacing" historians. Not even close, wrong timezone.
Resharing our #Handoftheweek posts
'Founded in 1878 by the City of London and a group of 16 livery companies, the original institute developed a national system of technical education, offering qualifications and apprenticeships in fields ranging from manufacturing and mechanical engineering to hairdressing and horticulture.' 1/2
β This 1845 daguerreotype captured the branded hand of Jonathan Walker - marked βSSβ for βslave stealerβ after he tried to help enslaved people escape Florida. Intended as punishment, it became an abolitionist symbol, though his story often overshadowed those of the enslaved people he sought to aid.
Hands can be subject to punishment and agents of resistance or in this fascinating case, both at the same time.
Another #Handoftheweek - exploring marks inscribed on the hand and their capacity to be read in multiple ways. Please share more widely.
A vintage prosthetic arm lies on a textured surface. The metal hand, detailed with joints, is palm-facing up. A strap extends from the arm's base. Historic, mechanical.
βοΈ GΓΆtz von Berlichingen lost his hand to a cannonball in 1504 and commissioned an iron prosthesis with hinged, lockable fingers for use in battle.
He later adopted a more advanced model - one of the earliest functioning mechanical prosthetic hands - which he used across his military career.
What an amazing #Handoftheweek π π
Graduate of the American Studies programme that the University of Nottingham wishes to close wins 2025 Wolfson History Prize for Survivors: The Lost Stories of the Last Captives of the Atlantic Slave Trade.
History, it's a long game. Divest in haste, repent for the longue durΓ©e.
Solidarity with every trans person struggling to keep their heads in the game today. Along with everything else, this is absolutely a war against our collective and individual mental and emotional health - against our very sense of self.
It's expected to feel the blow. But we stay fighting.
Annual shameless Xmas or other seasonal holiday gift suggestion for those interested in any of material culture, empire or British country houses. Over 500 pages & 100 illustrations. Paperback a mere Β£30. (Alternatively, free to download from @uclpress.bsky.social or @jstor.bsky.social ).