Inspired by the collection The Good Immigrant, Know Your Place: Essays on the Working Class by the Working Class brings together 22 stories reflecting on working-class lives and experiences in the UK today. Edited by Nathan Connolly, this volume offers tales of sadness, struggle, resilience and resistance, all told with warmth and love, that show how class inequality is both personal and structural, writes Lisa McKenzie
Drawing on her book, Cut/Copy/Paste, Whitney Trettien reflects on the history of radical bookwork an...
The digital era has changed the way we humans read a book. No longer are words confined to a bound l...
The introduction to the second edition of Understanding & Responding to Behaviour that Challenges in...
This essay co-authored with Mark Hope, co-founder of the Barn, Banchory, forms a chapter in the book...
The author of this book, Thomas Maschio, has lived two anthropological lives; an earlier one as an a...
In a frenetic world obsessed with deliverables and results, Jenny Odell makes the case for How to Do...
In Complaint!, Sara Ahmed follows the institutional life of complaints within the university, explor...
In Easy Living: The Rise of the Home Office, Elizabeth A. Patton explores how the status of the home...
The novels O Pioneers!, Song of the Lark, and My Antonia are often considered together as Willa Cat...
My paintings use slow, subtle gestures to create experiences of quiet emotion: casual warmth and com...
Is it possible to have a just politics of citation? Reflecting on their work to create a guide to fa...
This essay describes and reflects on the integration of computational research skills into core (tha...
Coinciding with the 75th anniversary of the Beveridge Report and written in the spirit of George Orw...
In Subversive Pedagogies: Radical Possibility in the Academy, Kate Schick and Claire Timperley bring...
The Burden of Gravity, a poetry collection, explores the fraught history of Woodlands School, a form...
Drawing on her book, Cut/Copy/Paste, Whitney Trettien reflects on the history of radical bookwork an...
The digital era has changed the way we humans read a book. No longer are words confined to a bound l...
The introduction to the second edition of Understanding & Responding to Behaviour that Challenges in...
This essay co-authored with Mark Hope, co-founder of the Barn, Banchory, forms a chapter in the book...
The author of this book, Thomas Maschio, has lived two anthropological lives; an earlier one as an a...
In a frenetic world obsessed with deliverables and results, Jenny Odell makes the case for How to Do...
In Complaint!, Sara Ahmed follows the institutional life of complaints within the university, explor...
In Easy Living: The Rise of the Home Office, Elizabeth A. Patton explores how the status of the home...
The novels O Pioneers!, Song of the Lark, and My Antonia are often considered together as Willa Cat...
My paintings use slow, subtle gestures to create experiences of quiet emotion: casual warmth and com...
Is it possible to have a just politics of citation? Reflecting on their work to create a guide to fa...
This essay describes and reflects on the integration of computational research skills into core (tha...
Coinciding with the 75th anniversary of the Beveridge Report and written in the spirit of George Orw...
In Subversive Pedagogies: Radical Possibility in the Academy, Kate Schick and Claire Timperley bring...
The Burden of Gravity, a poetry collection, explores the fraught history of Woodlands School, a form...
Drawing on her book, Cut/Copy/Paste, Whitney Trettien reflects on the history of radical bookwork an...
The digital era has changed the way we humans read a book. No longer are words confined to a bound l...
The introduction to the second edition of Understanding & Responding to Behaviour that Challenges in...