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  • August Book Group: Helena

    Summary of Waugh Book Group meeting on Helena, held at Leicester Central Library on 29 August 2015.

  • Leicestershire and Rutland County Lunatic Asylum

    What we have known since the 1960s as the Fielding Johnson Building was originally the Leicestershire County Lunatic Asylum: the first public provision of care for pauper ‘lunatics’ (an all-encompassing term used at the time for many mentally and physically debilitating...

  • Previous Brixworth Lectures

    Browse our archive of previous Brixworth Lectures, which are organised by the University of Leicester's Medieval Research Centre alongside The Friends of All Saints Church in Brixworth.

  • Korean Women and the ‘Cat’s Labour Union’

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on March 24, 2017   In this week’s blog, ULSB PhD student Chanhyo Jeong ( cj156@le.ac.

  • We are one community: De Montfort and Leicester students pledge to protect against COVID-19

    Students from the University of Leicester and De Montfort University have pledged to help protect themselves and others in the community from COVID-19 infection.

  • Career opportunities

    There are numerous careers for students who come to university to study for a degree in history. History and joint degree graduates of the University of Leicester are highly skilled and readily employable. Find out more about our graduate destinations and skills gained.

  • American Masculinities

    Module code: EN3150 From rugged frontiersmen to fearless cowboys, male heroes have occupied a central place in American writing ever since the first colonists set foot in the New World.

  • Student involvement in patient carer educator sessions

    Takunda Nhiwatiwa gives a student' perspective of leading a patient educator session

  • Protests and Suffragettes

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on April 21, 2023 A project led by artists, activists & archivists who are working with schools and Wikipedia to rediscover and celebrate the women of Scotland and their history.

  • Politics, Popular Culture and the 2011 Egyptian Revolution

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on April 27, 2020 Politics, Popular Culture and the 2011 Egyptian Revolution A digital archive of text multimedia and images curated by staff at the University of Warwick.

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