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Singing the News in Paperback
I’m really pleased that this week, my monograph Singing the News: Ballads in Mid-Tudor England comes out in paperback. I first got an inkling of this a couple of months ago, when I came across the pre-order button on the Routledge website by accident. At the time, I hadn’t been contacted by the publishers so…
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Teaching on the EAP
It’s been a busy few weeks, and the scheduled blog posts ran out while my attention was elsewhere because I’ve been teaching full time on the English for Academic Purposes course at Lancaster University. The course is for overseas students to introduce them to academic skills such as essay writing, referencing and collaborative presentations, so…
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MedRen 2020 Part 4
This is the fourth in a series of posts about the Virtual Medieval and Renaissance Music conference, which should have been held in Edinburgh. For me, this was one of the unexpected boons of the Covid-19 pandemic – I wouldn’t have been able to attend in person, but I was really glad of the opportunity…
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MedRen 2020 Part 3
This is the third in a series of posts about the Virtual Medieval and Renaissance Music conference, which should have been held in Edinburgh. For me, this was one of the unexpected boons of the Covid-19 pandemic – I wouldn’t have been able to attend in person, but I was really glad of the opportunity…
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MedRen 2020 Part 2
This is the second in a series of posts about the Virtual Medieval and Renaissance Music conference, which should have been held in Edinburgh. For me, this was one of the unexpected boons of the Covid-19 pandemic – I wouldn’t have been able to attend in person, but I was really glad of the opportunity…
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MedRen 2020 part 1
This is the first in a series of posts about the Virtual Medieval and Renaissance Music conference, which should have been held in Edinburgh. For me, this was one of the unexpected boons of the Covid-19 pandemic – I wouldn’t have been able to attend in person, but I was really glad of the opportunity…
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MEMSFest 2020 Part 2
This is the second of two posts about my attendance at the first day of MEMSFest2020. After lunch, I chose to go to Patronage, Community, and Civic Participation, chaired by Cassandra Harrington. Chris Hopkins was the first speaker on the panel, talking about One Day in Canterbury: The Story of an Anglo-Saxon Charter. Chris used…
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MEMSFest 2020 Part 1
Although the coronavirus pandemic has caused some considerable problems with research and the sudden reorganisation of teaching, it has also opened up some opportunities that I wouldn’t ordinarily have had to network, attend conferences and hear about other people’s research. As an early modernist working in a department where there aren’t all that many of…
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Getting to know John Balshaw – Part 7
This is the last in a short series of posts on my research into John Balshaw’s Jig. It’s a short ‘musical comedy’ written by a man in Brindle, Lancashire, in the mid-seventeenth century. I found the manuscript in the British Library a couple of years ago, and transcribed it, and I’ve already written a blog…
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Getting to Know John Balshaw – Part 6
This is the sixth in a short series of posts on my research into John Balshaw’s Jig. It’s a short ‘musical comedy’ written by a man in Brindle, Lancashire, in the mid-seventeenth century. I found the manuscript in the British Library a couple of years ago, and transcribed it, and I’ve already written a blog…