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  • March 28, 2014

    Quick update

    A week of cataloguing ballads, redrafting bits of writing about news, transcribing, trying to define news, staring out the window looking at the birds, thinking and making birthday cakes. Not necessarily in that order. Some progress made, but not a great deal. As yet, I’ve not located a satisfactory definition of sixteenth century news, so…

  • March 28, 2014

    A very conservative Renaissance

    Originally posted on bonæ litteræ: occasional writing from David Rundle, Renaissance scholar: I am not in the habit of shouting at the television.  In part, that is because I am not much of a TV-watcher: until my then partner, now wife, moved in, there was no box in the house. When I do sit in…

  • March 28, 2014

    social media – with/against academic writing?

    Originally posted on patter: When I go on the road – as I have just done – I always try to take with me a couple of slim volumes that I can dip in and out of. These are not the academic equivalent of airport novels. Rather, they are often books with quite serious philosophical…

  • March 28, 2014

    Reader Services – Curious Finds – “Nuns’ Buns”

    If you’re out there somewhere, Christina, I hope all is going well! Rylands Blog This Curious Find comes to us from Christina Brindley who is researching images of female piety and the development of post-reformation Catholicism in the Diocese of Chester 1558-1630. Christina discovered an amusing poem written by an unknown English nun in Louvain.…

  • March 24, 2014

    Hello Samantha! *waves*

    My research would have been impossible without the internet, not just because the digitisation of so many archives allows me to research from home while bringing up my family but also because of the connexions that I manage to make with friends and fellow scholars all over the world. Some of my best friends never…

  • March 17, 2014

    Parenting your way to a PhD

    So much of this is so true and relevant to those of us juggling a family with a full time PhD workload. The Thesis Whisperer This post is by Susan Stewart Loane, who is a PhD student at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia.  Susan left a career as a management consultant when her first child…

  • March 15, 2014

    On the move

    As I write this, I’m speeding through the countryside on the train to London again for another Historical Association committee meeting. I’m armed with an enormous cup of tea, a book about sound in the early modern world, some paper and my ipod. If the meeting finishes early, I will pop into the British Museum…

  • March 10, 2014

    Rosy Rickett @ The Museum of Transport

    Rosy Rickett @ The Museum of Transport

    Another of my PhD colleagues is a Researcher in Residence, so here is a piece by the lovely Rosy Rickett.

  • March 9, 2014

    Musical musings part 2.

    After last week’s musical musings, I had great fun on Thursday discussing the terminology of sixteenth century music with my music supervisor. I freely admit to butterflies before the meeting, but in a change of insect metaphor, I came out buzzing. I think we have come up with a solution concerning how to talk about…

  • March 9, 2014

    Lyndal Roper and news

    I’ve spent a lot of time in the company of Luther in the last few days, courtesy of Professor Lyndal Roper and Manchester’s Dr Jenny Spinks.  Prof Roper’s seminar on Thursday evening described Luther’s polemical writing as an expression of his masculinity, but surprised many of the audience with his scatology and lewdness.  On Friday…

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