Skip to content
  • 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

  • About Us
  • Journals
  • Books
  • SUBSCRIBE TO OUR BLOG
Edinburgh University Press Blog

No results
  • 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
  • Shame in Contemporary You-Narration: Q&A with the author

    Denise Wong discusses Shame in Contemporary You-Narration, exploring second-person storytelling, shame, temporality, and narrative experimentation across literature and media.

    February 11, 2026
    Read more: Shame in Contemporary You-Narration: Q&A with the author

Freedom of Speech as Well as Listening: From Thinking with Words to Listening Through Language

By Igor R. Reyner It is evident that we are living in a particularly challenging time, where transformative and empathic ways of listening, as well as of understanding, are much needed. Surrounded by fake news and intransigent behaviour, isolated in…

  • Teri Williams
  • June 18, 2021

A Sociologist and a Philosopher Attempt to Learn from COVID

Edward Avery-Natale, interviewed by Colin C. Smith My childhood friend Dr. Edward Avery-Natale is a professor of contemporary sociology, while I am a lecturer in ancient philosophy.  Although Ed studies the modern world and I the ancient, we are often…

  • Teri Williams
  • June 2, 2021

In Memoriam Sophinette Becker (1950-2019): Appreciation of new thoughts on sexuality, psychoanalysis and politics from the past

By Patrick Henze-Lindhorst Stubborn, a loving mentor and dedicated therapist, and an acutely perceptive authority on countless political and theoretical issues: The psychoanalytically oriented psychologist, sexuality researcher, and psychosomatics specialist Sophinette Becker shaped the renowned Institute for Sexual Science at…

  • Teri Williams
  • May 24, 2021

St. Helen’s, the East India Company and Shakespeare

by Geoffrey Marsh Wednesday 31 December 1600 is one of the pivotal dates in English history. It was not only the end of the 16th century but the day Queen Elizabeth I granted a charter to 215 London merchants for…

  • Kirsty Crosbie
  • May 14, 2021

Q&A with Mark Mclay, author of ‘The Republican Party and the War on Poverty: 1964–1981’

Tell us a bit about your book. My book is on recent American political history. It examines the Republican Party’s challenge to Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson’s ‘War on Poverty’. It shows that leading Republicans – most notably President Ronald…

  • Kirsty Crosbie
  • May 11, 2021

The Lost Splendour of Ghazni: Rediscovering an Islamic Capital in Medieval Afghanistan

By Viola Allegranzi Located in present-day Afghanistan, Ghazni was once a prosperous commercial and cultural centre at the crossroads of Iranian, Central Asian and Indian regions. Under the rule of the Ghaznavid dynasty (r. 977-1186), the city was home to…

  • Teri Williams
  • May 3, 2021

Five Interesting Neighbours of Shakespeare in the 1590s

by Geoffrey Marsh Who were the most interesting ‘neighbours’ of that Living with Shakespeare explores?  I tried to follow up on all of the hundred or so families that made up the parish of St. Helen’s, Bishopsgate in the 1590s.…

  • Kirsty Crosbie
  • April 30, 2021
  • 2 Comments

Shakespeare in the North: Nation, Race and Haircuts

by Adam Hansen I got a post-‘lockdown #3’ haircut in my Tyneside town recently, to my relief, and everyone else’s.  (You know things are getting desperate when 90% of what anyone sees onscreen in a Zoom call is not your…

  • Kirsty Crosbie
  • April 27, 2021

The Importance of Legacy in the Histories of Mycologists

By Nathan Smith How many animals can you name? How many plants? The answer to both questions is probably quite a few and, indeed, the total would probably number in the hundreds for both were you to sit down and…

  • Teri Williams
  • April 26, 2021
Prev
1 … 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 … 35
Next

Popular Posts

Shame in Contemporary You-Narration: Q&A with the author

A sepia-toned 18th-century printed broadside titled “TRANSPORTED FOR SEDITION.” The design features ornate borders and three oval engravings of men in period clothing holding papers. Text around the portraits names individuals convicted of sedition and sentenced to transportation (penal exile), including references to courts and dates in the early 1800s. The overall style is decorative and historical, resembling a political or legal proclamation from Britain.

The Scottish Martyrs and the antagonisms between Scots Law and British penal practice

Stone statue viewed from behind beneath tall Gothic arches and dark stone columns, framing a bright blue sky with clouds

The Future of Scottish Higher Education

5 Things You Didn’t Know about Milton and Disability

Emperor Justinian and court officials in a colourful mosaic, Gothic soldiers on the left side.

Barbarians as the Religious Other in the Late Roman World: Q&A with the author

Subscribe To Blog Via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Copyright © 2026 - Edinburgh University Press | All Right Reserved. | Privacy Policy