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20643 results for: ‘institution fpgr archive of past festivals 2015 meet 2014 elyse wakelin’

  • Historical Fiction

    Module code: EN1080 During this module you will explore novels written in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries that are set in periods from the Renaissance to Victorian times.

  • Old Haunts: The Ghost Story in Medieval and Early Modern Culture

    Module code: EN7242 Following the Reformation, the boundary between living and dead was abruptly redrawn. With the simplification of funerary rites, and the abolition of purgatory as ‘a fonde thing’, the old medieval channels of communication were swiftly severed.

  • Summer School

    Students on flexible learning programmes in Museum Studies at the University of Leicester can take part in a 5-day Summer School in Leicester each year.

  • Inspiration, identity, learning: the value of museums

    This research gives both a perspective of the national impact of museum education and a view of the extent to which this may be seen as contributing social value.

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 63

    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

  • Regulations governing professional Doctorate programmes: Submission of assessed work excluding the Thesis

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  • New research on the Caribbeans largest concentration of indigenous preColumbian rock art

    New research by academics from our university and the British Museum working with colleagues from the British Geological Survey and Cambridge University outlines the science behind the largest concentration of indigenous pre-Columbian rock art in the Caribbean.

  • Data Science MSc, PGDip

    In this conversion course you will learn how to interrogate existing data sets to solve problems and communicate your solutions with maximum visual impact to a range of audiences.

  • International Relations After the Cold War

    Module code: PL7161 This module critically examines the means by which the West maintains its concept of Order.

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