747 research outputs found

    Knowing Dickens

    Get PDF

    Henry James, in Short

    Get PDF

    Wishing to be interviewed in Henry James's The 'Reverberator'

    Get PDF
    University of Pennsylvania’s Humanities Forum Andrew W. Mellon Fellowshi

    From Shell Shock to Shellac: The Great War, Blindness, and Britain's Talking Book Library.

    Get PDF
    Britain's Talking Book Service began as a way of providing reading material to soldiers blinded during the First World War. This account traces the talking book's development from the initial experiments after the War to its debut and reception among blind soldiers and civilians in the 1930s. It has been put together using archives held by the Royal National Institute of Blind People (before its Royal Charter, the NIB) and Blind Veterans UK (formerly St. Dunstan's), the two organizations responsible for Britain's Talking Book Service. The essay's first section reconstructs the search for an alternative way of reading that would benefit people with vision impairments. The next part demonstrates the talking book's impact on the lives of people with disabilities, recovering the voices of blind readers left out of most histories of books, literacy, and reading practices in the twentieth century. The final section reconstructs a debate over the value of recorded books, showing that disputes over their legitimacy are as old as recorded books themselves. In sum, this essay confronts the central issue raised by the convergence of books, media, and disability in the War's aftermath: can a book talk

    Play It Again, Sam Weller: New Digital Audiobooks and Old Ways of Reading

    Get PDF

    Unspoken intimacy in Henry James's The 'Papers'

    Get PDF

    'Bleak House' in real time (Charles Dickens)

    Get PDF

    "The Turn of the Screw" on the Turntable

    Get PDF

    Gender, foundation degrees and the knowledge economy

    Get PDF
    This article questions the concept of ‘education for employment’, which constructs a discourse of individual and societal benefit in a knowledge‐driven economy. Recent policy emphasis in the European Union promotes the expansion of higher education and short‐cycle vocational awards such as the intermediate two‐year Foundation Degree recently introduced into England and Wales. Studies of vocational education and training (VET) and the knowledge economy have focused largely on the governance of education and on the development and drift of policy. Many VET programmes have also been considered for their classed, raced and gendered take‐up and subsequent effect on employment. This article builds on both fields of study to engage with the finer cross‐analyses of gender, social class, poverty, race and citizenship. In its analysis of policy texts the article argues that in spite of a discourse of inclusivity, an expanded higher education system has generated new inequalities, deepening social stratification. Drawing on early analyses of national quantitative data sets, it identifies emerging gendered, classed and raced patterns and considers these in relation to occupationally and hierarchically stratified labour markets, both within and without the knowledge economy
    corecore