
School of Advanced Study
The Humanities Now - Literature and the Public Good
Professor Rick Rylance
(Director of the Institute of English Studies, School of Advanced Study)
Chair: Professor Sir Adrian Smith
Dinah Birch
(Pro-Vice Chancellor for Research, University of Liverpool; Chair of the last REF Panel for English; Booker Prize judge; Chair of the Advisory Council for the Institute of English Studies. Distinguished scholar especially of Victorian literature)
Jacqueline Norton
(Chief Commissioning Editor for Literature of Oxford University Press)
Literature and the Public Good is Professor Rick Rylance's new book from Oxford University Press. Reading literature fosters personal development, positive social engagement and contributes to the runaway success of Britain's creative economy, he argues. The book emerges from his 6-year experience of leading the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
To celebrate its launch, OUP and the School of Advanced Study host a discussion on 'The Humanities Now'. Leading figures from the humanities, policy and publishing sectors will ponder why the humanities, so strong in Britain in reality, are perceived to be in retreat.
Professor Rick Rylance is Director of the Institute of English Studies in SAS. He was previously CEO of the AHRC and Chair of Research Councils UK. Before that he was Head of the School of Arts, Languages and Literatures at the University of Exeter and Dean of Arts at Anglia Polytechnic University. His research interests include the history of psychology and reading and the brain. He is currently writing the Oxford English Literary History volume covering the period 1930--1970.
Oct 19, 2016
42 min

School of Advanced Study
The Humanities Now - Literature and the Public Good
Professor Rick Rylance
(Director of the Institute of English Studies, School of Advanced Study)
Chair: Professor Sir Adrian Smith
Dinah Birch
(Pro-Vice Chancellor for Research, University of Liverpool; Chair of the last REF Panel for English; Booker Prize judge; Chair of the Advisory Council for the Institute of English Studies. Distinguished scholar especially of Victorian literature)
Jacqueline Norton
(Chief Commissioning Editor for Literature of Oxford University Press)
Literature and the Public Good is Professor Rick Rylance's new book from Oxford University Press. Reading literature fosters personal development, positive social engagement and contributes to the runaway success of Britain's creative economy, he argues. The book emerges from his 6-year experience of leading the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
To celebrate its launch, OUP and the School of Advanced Study host a discussion on 'The Humanities Now'. Leading figures from the humanities, policy and publishing sectors will ponder why the humanities, so strong in Britain in reality, are perceived to be in retreat.
Professor Rick Rylance is Director of the Institute of English Studies in SAS. He was previously CEO of the AHRC and Chair of Research Councils UK. Before that he was Head of the School of Arts, Languages and Literatures at the University of Exeter and Dean of Arts at Anglia Polytechnic University. His research interests include the history of psychology and reading and the brain. He is currently writing the Oxford English Literary History volume covering the period 1930--1970.
Oct 19, 2016

Institute of English Studies
The London Beckett Seminar
Remediating Beckett and the Graven Image
Professor David Houston Jones
(University of Exeter)
Nov 6, 2015

Institute of English Studies
The London Beckett Seminar
Beckett and Music
Dr Catherine Laws
(University of York)
Oct 23, 2015

Institute of English Studies
Researching Contemporary Culture
Interpretive Communities
Professor Matt Hills
(Aberystwyth University)
Researching Contemporary Culture is a series of summer workshops for postgraduate and early career researchers. It is organised by Dr Zara Dinnen (University of Birmingham) and Dr Tony Venezia (Birkbeck, University of London), conveners of the Contemporary Fiction Seminar. Researching Contemporary Culture is supported by an AHRC Collaborative Skills Award; with additional support from the University of Birmingham, Birkbeck, University of London, and the Institute of English Studies, University of London.
Researching Contemporary Culture aims to help researchers in the field address an array of issues that currently define the study of contemporary culture by offering workshops and presentations on: developing the impact of research through exhibition, curation, and the championing of particular artists’/directors’/authors’ work; producing research for open access publications; balancing public engagement and research needs; using online participatory culture as a research tool; conducting sustainable research with ephemeral data.
Jul 15, 2014

Institute of English Studies
Researching Contemporary Culture
Interpretive Communities
Professor Matt Hills
(Aberystwyth University)
Researching Contemporary Culture is a series of summer workshops for postgraduate and early career researchers. It is organised by Dr Zara Dinnen (University of Birmingham) and Dr Tony Venezia (Birkbeck, University of London), conveners of the Contemporary Fiction Seminar. Researching Contemporary Culture is supported by an AHRC Collaborative Skills Award; with additional support from the University of Birmingham, Birkbeck, University of London, and the Institute of English Studies, University of London.
Researching Contemporary Culture aims to help researchers in the field address an array of issues that currently define the study of contemporary culture by offering workshops and presentations on: developing the impact of research through exhibition, curation, and the championing of particular artists’/directors’/authors’ work; producing research for open access publications; balancing public engagement and research needs; using online participatory culture as a research tool; conducting sustainable research with ephemeral data.
Jul 15, 2014
1 hr 11 min

Institute of English Studies
Researching Contemporary Culture
Archiving Now
Professor Roger Luckhurst
(Birkbeck, University of London)
Researching Contemporary Culture is a series of summer workshops for postgraduate and early career researchers. It is organised by Dr Zara Dinnen (University of Birmingham) and Dr Tony Venezia (Birkbeck, University of London), conveners of the Contemporary Fiction Seminar. Researching Contemporary Culture is supported by an AHRC Collaborative Skills Award; with additional support from the University of Birmingham, Birkbeck, University of London, and the Institute of English Studies, University of London.
Researching Contemporary Culture aims to help researchers in the field address an array of issues that currently define the study of contemporary culture by offering workshops and presentations on: developing the impact of research through exhibition, curation, and the championing of particular artists’/directors’/authors’ work; producing research for open access publications; balancing public engagement and research needs; using online participatory culture as a research tool; conducting sustainable research with ephemeral data.
Jul 14, 2014

Institute of English Studies
Researching Contemporary Culture
Archiving Now
Dr Kieran Connell
(University of Birmingham)
Researching Contemporary Culture is a series of summer workshops for postgraduate and early career researchers. It is organised by Dr Zara Dinnen (University of Birmingham) and Dr Tony Venezia (Birkbeck, University of London), conveners of the Contemporary Fiction Seminar. Researching Contemporary Culture is supported by an AHRC Collaborative Skills Award; with additional support from the University of Birmingham, Birkbeck, University of London, and the Institute of English Studies, University of London.
Researching Contemporary Culture aims to help researchers in the field address an array of issues that currently define the study of contemporary culture by offering workshops and presentations on: developing the impact of research through exhibition, curation, and the championing of particular artists’/directors’/authors’ work; producing research for open access publications; balancing public engagement and research needs; using online participatory culture as a research tool; conducting sustainable research with ephemeral data.
Jul 14, 2014

Institute of English Studies
Researching Contemporary Culture
Archiving Now
Dr Kieran Connell
(University of Birmingham)
Researching Contemporary Culture is a series of summer workshops for postgraduate and early career researchers. It is organised by Dr Zara Dinnen (University of Birmingham) and Dr Tony Venezia (Birkbeck, University of London), conveners of the Contemporary Fiction Seminar. Researching Contemporary Culture is supported by an AHRC Collaborative Skills Award; with additional support from the University of Birmingham, Birkbeck, University of London, and the Institute of English Studies, University of London.
Researching Contemporary Culture aims to help researchers in the field address an array of issues that currently define the study of contemporary culture by offering workshops and presentations on: developing the impact of research through exhibition, curation, and the championing of particular artists’/directors’/authors’ work; producing research for open access publications; balancing public engagement and research needs; using online participatory culture as a research tool; conducting sustainable research with ephemeral data.
Jul 14, 2014
43 min

Institute of English Studies
Researching Contemporary Culture
Archiving Now
Professor Roger Luckhurst
(Birkbeck, University of London)
Researching Contemporary Culture is a series of summer workshops for postgraduate and early career researchers. It is organised by Dr Zara Dinnen (University of Birmingham) and Dr Tony Venezia (Birkbeck, University of London), conveners of the Contemporary Fiction Seminar. Researching Contemporary Culture is supported by an AHRC Collaborative Skills Award; with additional support from the University of Birmingham, Birkbeck, University of London, and the Institute of English Studies, University of London.
Researching Contemporary Culture aims to help researchers in the field address an array of issues that currently define the study of contemporary culture by offering workshops and presentations on: developing the impact of research through exhibition, curation, and the championing of particular artists’/directors’/authors’ work; producing research for open access publications; balancing public engagement and research needs; using online participatory culture as a research tool; conducting sustainable research with ephemeral data.
Jul 14, 2014
43 min
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