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  2. English Faculty News | Page 80

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/news/page/80
    The title of her talk is ‘John Clare’s Soundscapes’. http://www.poetryinaldeburgh.org/. Dr Robert Macfarlane’s work on land use, language and environmental economics features in a Slate.com
  3. Events This Week | Renaissance Research Group

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/renaissance/?p=677
    Economic and Social History. Thursday, 27 October, 5 PM, Lecture Theatre, Trinity Hall.
  4. Speakers will include: Richard Fisher (former Managing Director of Academic Publishing at Cambridge University Press), Rupert Gatti (Faculty of Economics/Open Book Publishers), Anne Jarvis (University Librarian, Cambridge University Library), Danny
  5. Cognitively Responsible | What Literature Knows About Your Brain

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?p=653
    It led me towards an interesting paper that tests some key ideas in relation to one potentially modular feature, mind-reading, and makes reference to literary experience along the way: Gregory
  6. Posture in Purgatory | What Literature Knows About Your Brain

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?p=618
    de Boer, ‘Motor resonance as a function of narrative time: further tests of the linguistic focus hypothesis’, Brain and Language, 112 (2010), 143-9.
  7. books ‘in tangible form’ – Contemporaries

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/contemporary/?p=674
    Closer to home, London’s Test Centre publishes ‘tangible’ books and spoken word LPs by writers like Chris Petit, Iain Sinclair, Stewart Home and Tom McCarthy.
  8. Philosophical Bite | What Literature Knows About Your Brain

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/research/cogblog/?p=610
    Whereas scientists and philosophers have theories which they test according to rigorous criteria (a process that leads to knowledge in the sense Lamarque prefers), novelists and poets do not.
  9. Israel. Psychometric tests were, in their modern form, an American invention and remain more popular in the Anglophone world, though not to the exclusion of graphology.
  10. Faculty of English

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/people/Claire.Wilkinson/
    I returned to the Faculty of English in 2013 to begin work on my PhD as the Winton Doctoral Scholar in English and Economics. ... My general research interests are: eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literature and culture; economics and literature
  11. rhyme tests derived from the work of Cambridge University Librarian Henry Bradshaw. ... The article explains the nature of these philological tests and their proper application based on Bradshaw’s unpublished working papers.

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