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  • Andrew Dunn: Page 191

    Academic Librarian.

  • Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Lei

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • 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.

  • Research Staff and Early Career Researchers

    Information on development opportunities for staff, engagement and impact, research effectiveness, quantitative skills, qualitative skills and supporting postgraduate researchers.

  • Beauty, Sex & Science: Whose Body is it Anyway c.1550-2015?

    Module code: HS3773 A flourishing branch of cultural history that has become popular during the last two decades is the history of the body. Known as the ‘corporeal turn’ in cultural history, the focus in a history of the body entails much more than a narrow medical study.

  • Cultural History

    Module code: HS2235 Module Outline As one of the pioneers of cultural history, Raymond Williams, once said “culture is one of the two or three most complicated words in the English language”.

  • Transforming space exploration

    Our University is spearheading the development of new power generation technologies for space exploration as part of a European Space Agency funded programme.

  • University of Sanctuary

    Explore the University of Sanctuary initiative in partnership with the English Language Teaching Unit

  • Talking points a range of topical issues tackled by academics 15 21 October

    Dr Samantha Johnson from the Department of Health Sciences has written an article for Action Medical Research about developing a programme to help children with maths skills that are vital for their future life chances.

  • Swift satellite spots its thousandth gamma-ray burst

    Leicester scientists are celebrating the discovery of the 1,000th gamma-ray burst (GRB) by the US/UK/Italian Swift spacecraft. GRBs are the most powerful explosions in the universe, typically associated with the collapse of a massive star and the birth of a black hole.

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