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Bigoted British tiger that bit off more than it could chew

Bigoted British tiger that bit off more than it could chew

by Talking Humanities | Feb 16, 2021 | Features, Human Rights, Libraries & Publications, Politics & Law, Publications, Research & Resources

Graham McKerrow, a contributor to ‘Queer Between the Covers’ (University of London Press, May 2021), looks at Operation Tiger, the British state’s attempt in the 1980s to prohibit the importation of all queer books, newspapers and magazines, including the latest...
So you’ve read ‘Moby-Dick’? Which one?

So you’ve read ‘Moby-Dick’? Which one?

by Talking Humanities | Feb 12, 2021 | Analysis & Comment, Archives & Libraries, Languages & Literature, Libraries & Publications, Publications, Research & Resources

Dr Christopher Ohge delves into the multiple levels and meanings of a classic piece of American literature. ‘About the “whaling voyage”—I am half way in the work, & am very glad that your suggestion so jumps with mine. It will be a strange sort of a...
Cellini’s life: ‘riotous’ on paper, but spare in artworks

Cellini’s life: ‘riotous’ on paper, but spare in artworks

by Talking Humanities | Feb 10, 2021 | Archives & Libraries, Features, Languages & Literature, Libraries & Publications, Publications, Research & Resources

Dr Karen Attar is fascinated by a rare Senate House Library autobiography full of art, politics and scandal. Like any venerable institution, the University of London accrues a variety of artworks. For example, it holds various sculptures: marble busts of Victorian...
Spectres, smoke and spring-heeled Jack: ‘Into the London Fog’

Spectres, smoke and spring-heeled Jack: ‘Into the London Fog’

by Talking Humanities | Jan 25, 2021 | Features, History & Classics, Languages & Literature, Libraries & Publications

Dr Elizabeth Dearnley discusses the eerier side of the capital and her recent book Into the London Fog, ahead of her upcoming online talk at the City of Westminster Libraries and Archives. Near the beginning of Hitchcock’s 1927 silent chiller The Lodger, respectable,...
The blues across four centuries – Robert Burton’s ‘Anatomy of Melancholy’

The blues across four centuries – Robert Burton’s ‘Anatomy of Melancholy’

by Talking Humanities | Jan 13, 2021 | Analysis & Comment, Archives & Libraries, Features, Libraries & Publications, Publications

Self-help books about depression are nothing new. Institute of English Studies fellow, Dr Karen Attar, looks at an important example that was first published in 1621. The Anatomy of Melancholy is the subject of a double anniversary for Senate House Library. The year...
‘Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?’ – a very Christmas murder

‘Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?’ – a very Christmas murder

by Talking Humanities | Dec 10, 2020 | Archives & Libraries, Features, Languages & Literature, Libraries & Publications

Dr Karen Attar, research fellow at the Institute of English Studies, uncovers traces of Thomas Becket in the Senate House Library. December 2020 possibly marks two anniversaries concerning the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket. He might have been born 900 years...
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