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  • Cultural Studies
    • French Studies
    • Gender Studies
    • Irish Studies
    • Film and TV
    • Theatre and Dance
    • Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies
  • History
    • British History
    • Classics and Ancient History
    • Cultural History
    • Natural History
    • Religious History
    • Scottish History
    • World History
  • Language and Literature
    • Modernism
    • Literary Theory
    • Pre 19th Century Literary Studies
    • Post 19th Century Literary Studies
    • Scottish Literature
    • Atlantic Literature
    • Linguistics
  • Law
    • Comparative Law
    • European Law
    • Islamic Law
    • Roman Law
    • Scots Law
  • Politics, Philosophy and Religion
    • Religion
    • Philosophy
    • Politics
    • Political Philosophy
    • Scottish Politics
    • Film Philosophy
  • Publishing
  • Q&A with Chibli Mallat, author of Democracy Redefined

    Chibli Mallat introduces 'Democracy Redefined' and explores the Lebanese Constitution's history and its unique approach to democracy.

    September 12, 2025
    Read more: Q&A with Chibli Mallat, author of Democracy Redefined

The ACEs Movement in Scotland: policy entrepreneurship and critical activism

By Gary Walsh The purpose of this blog post is to introduce my article about the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) ‘movement’ and its influence in Scottish public policy. The paper is included in a special issue, Adverse Childhood Experiences in…

  • Teri Williams
  • January 25, 2021

Religion, Identity and Power: Turkey and the Balkans in the Twenty-First Century

by Ahmet Erdi Öztürk Religion and belief are two of humanity’s oldest identity codes. Identity is intertwined with religion and, with or without it, is an indicator of humanity’s ego, strengths and weaknesses. If we examine it through this lens,…

  • Helena Heald
  • January 21, 2021

How did the Festival industry repurpose Edinburgh’s public policy making?

By Cliff Hague COVID-19 brought Edinburgh’s tourism boom to a screeching halt, and wiped out the city’s main festivals in 2020. At the time of writing, the prospects for 2021 look uncertain, with speculation that many people will be anxious…

  • Teri Williams
  • January 19, 2021
Photograph of Emerson Hall, Harvard, where Whitehead lectured

The missing drafts of Whitehead’s books

Until recently, few people suspected that the missing drafts for Alfred North Whitehead’s books might still exist – in the notes of his Harvard and Radcliffe lectures.

  • Naomi Farmer
  • January 15, 2021

Divine Hiddenness in C.S. Lewis’s Till We Have Faces

By Derek King C. S. Lewis’s Till We Have Faces is a brilliant piece of fiction but also a mediation on an old problem called the problem of divine hiddenness. The problem of divine hiddenness refers to a lack in…

  • Teri Williams
  • January 12, 2021

The Appeal of the Fantastic and the Improbable in Late Eighteenth Century Children’s Literature: Part Three

By Maryam Khorasani and Hossein Nazari Read part 2 of the blog series. Maria Edgeworth’s Lucky Orphans As the century moved forward, the belief in the rags-to-riches narratives gradually started to give way to the significance of retaining social hierarchies,…

  • Teri Williams
  • January 7, 2021

The Appeal of the Fantastic and the Improbable in Late Eighteenth Century Children’s Literature: Part Two

By Maryam Khorasani and Hossein Nazari Read part 1 of this blog series. Much Ado about Witchcraft in The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes Often cited as the earliest example of a children’s novel, The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes[i],…

  • Teri Williams
  • January 6, 2021

The Appeal of the Fantastic and the Improbable in Late Eighteenth Century Children’s Literature: Part One

By Maryam Khorasani and Hossein Nazari Taking into account their concern about the moralistic upbringing of the children of a book-buying middle class, it should come as no surprise that the ‘irrational’ components of fairy stories were frowned upon by…

  • Teri Williams
  • January 5, 2021

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