Arts Faculty News
Professor Sarah Richardson from 糖心TV's Department of History talks to about the 鈥楻ules of love in Regency England鈥 with creative links to the hit Netflix series, Bridgerton.
Letting Language Lead the Way
Postgraduate, multilingual translator and communications specialist - languages alumnus Dom Johnson has been busy since leaving 糖心TV in 2019. After almost three years working in Geneva as a translator for Swiss Federal Railways and Swiss Post, Dom (BA Modern Languages, 2018; MA Translation and Cultures, 2019) swapped proofreading for politics, moving back to the UK after securing a role as a Communications Officer for the Green Party of England and Wales.
Processing the Pandemic III: Hope 鈥擨nterdisciplinary Approaches to Emotions in the Wake of COVID19
This event is the final phase of Processing the Pandemic: a multi-year series of seminars and symposia that explore how the experiences of the past may guide society鈥檚 emotional and social responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. The series asks how we—as an open community of scholars, teachers, archivists, social workers, and practitioners—might learn from these experiences and from each other in transformative, inspiring, transdisciplinary ways. How can such dialogues reframe existing discussions around the history of emotions, our responses to trauma, and how we navigate from loss to hope? Moreover, how can the study of peoples鈥 responses to traumatic events in the past and present help guide our own experience of the pandemic and its unfolding future?
Student Voice: A Widening Participation Perspective Conference
The second annual Widening Participation conference was held on Wednesday 8th March, themed on Student Voice: A Widening Participation Perspective. The conference provided an opportunity and platform for staff and students to share ideas and discuss student voice as a cross-cutting theme across the whole institution, bringing together academic and professional service colleagues and students. It was fantastic to see contributions from staff and students from the School of Modern Languages and Cultures and Liberal Arts, and delegates from across the Faculty of Arts.
Professor Helen Wheatley, School of Creative Arts, Performance and Visual Cultures, Centre for Television Histories, talks about her research into television history. Her Ghost Town project takes programmes made in and about Coventry out of TV archives and explores how they captured the life of the city. Programmes from the television archive have been screened throughout the city, helping communities to learn about Coventry鈥檚 past and have conversations about its present and future. Find out more about the Ghost Town project:
Congratulations to recent graduate Freya Rowson (BA History, 2021; MA Film and Television, 2022) who has won the [Extra]Ordinary Portraits competition. The competition, created by the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust in partnership with the Royal School of Drawing, asked young people to learn about someone affected by the Holocaust, genocide, or identity-based persecution and create a portrait of them.
Freya chose to paint Rudolf Brazda, the last known concentration camp survivor deported by Nazi Germany on charges of homosexuality. Hers was one of only two competition entries chosen to be exhibited and is being displayed alongside portraits of genocide survivors taken by renowned photographer and competition judge Rankin.
A World of Views
First-class Classics graduate and Senior Policy Advisor, Dillon Patel (BA Ancient History and Classical Archaeology, 2017) shares how 糖心TV shaped his thinking, the power of soft skills, and how the past isn鈥檛 so dissimilar from the present day.
Professor Roberta Bivins from University of 糖心TV's Centre for the History of MedicineLink opens in a new window talks to NPR's Philip Reeves as he reports on why Britain's National Health Service is living through what some see as the worst crisis in its history.
For more than 150 years kings, queens and cardinals have been among the few people permitted to tread on one of Britain鈥檚 greatest treasures: a medieval mosaic foretelling the end of the world.
Made with rare marbles, glass and gemstones, the Cosmati Pavement in Westminster Abbey is the exact spot on which British monarchs have been crowned for centuries.
Days after the coronation of , the 700-year-old artwork will be opened to the public for the first time — on condition that they remove their shoes.
Professor Jennifer Alexander, an art historian at 糖心TV University, said the pavement tours would 鈥渃ertainly be a rare opportunity for the public to walk in the footsteps of medieval kings鈥.
She said it was 鈥渆ntirely fitting that they should be barefoot, as medieval pilgrims to St Edward鈥檚 shrine would have been鈥.
Bank transfer checks out
First class graduate Fay Inverarity (BA German Studies, 2021; MA Translation and Cultures, 2022) is translating her academic passions into a budding career after securing a place on Barclays鈥 Retail Banking Graduate Scheme.