Hill wins Oxford poetry post
Geoffrey Hill has been elected the University of Oxford’s new professor of poetry
Geoffrey Hill has been elected the University of Oxford’s new professor of poetry
Students who take two-year undergraduate degrees achieve better results than those who study for the standard three years, a conference will hear today.An evaluation of the fast-track degrees carried...
The spirit of #loveHE was displayed in abundance in Mayfair last night as an awards ceremony showcased the best in administrative excellence in the sector.  The second annual ߣߣÊÓÆµ...

The death of the poet self-foretold: David Gewanter on an esteemed critic's graveside meditation

Simon Blackburn wonders why some moral questions are so tantalisingly difficult to answer
Do we need another book on the evacuation of children in Britain during the Second World War? John Welshman asks this question of himself in the opening of this compelling narrative account of the...
Victor Klemperer's vital contribution to academia doesn't take the form of an influential theory, or a path-breaking conceptual framework, or even a scholarly mastery of his field (although he was an...
Seismologist Ian Main on why more lives are saved by preparation than prognostication
John Brewer's Peace Processes: A Sociological Approach stands out for two reasons: first because it is written in an accessible, reader-friendly manner - a sign, I always think, of the author's self-...
We are all, at least partly, Londoners. As far back as the 18th century, a surprisingly large proportion of England's population had lived for a while in London.Contemporaries commented on the number...
Hilary Rose hails powerfully unflinching reflections on the researcher's obligations to her subjects
Nothing out-gays the heritage film. From a perspective that simultaneously addresses Victorian and 20th-century issues and anxieties, Dianne Sadoff analyses the heritage film in its many iterations,...
ARTS AND DESIGNWhere Music Helps: Community Music Therapy in Action and ReflectionBy Brynjulf Stige, professor in music therapy, University of Bergen; Gary Ansdell, director of education, Nordoff-...
Tailor-made courses to fill local skills gaps will also bring in much-needed cash. Hannah Fearn reports

This "lay figure", or life-sized artist's model, belonged to Walter Sickert (1860-1942), the English Post-Impressionist whose images of drab female nudes and murdered prostitutes have led to claims...