Silence and Plurality: Emotions of Adolescent Suicide under 1930s Chinese Political Culture

Jianhao Xu, Newcastle University. This blog accompanies Xu’s forthcoming article in Cultural and Social History.  The historical context examined in this study is the profound social and political crisis experienced by China in the 1930s under the sustained pressure of Japanese aggression. Since the September 18 Incident, Japan’s military expansion in China had intensified continuously, … Continued

Crossing Borders: Expressing National Identity Through Headstones in the Bradford Reform Jewish Cemetery, 1877 to 1935

Until reading this blog, many of you have probably never heard of the Bradford Reform Jewish community. They are Britain’s third oldest Reform Jewish community and are still active today. Bradford’s earliest Jewish settlers arrived between the 1830s and 1870s. They were predominantly German woollen merchants because Bradford was the centre of the wool trade. … Continued

The Industrial Revolution, AI, and the Past and Future of Leisure

Blog by Dr Nicholas Collins, relating to his recent Open Access article in Cultural and Social History – read here! I’ve always been fascinated by a deceptively simple historical question: what did ordinary people in the past actually do all day? It’s a relatable topic, but it can be surprisingly difficult to study, and it’s … Continued

Metropolitan Science: London Sites and Cultures of Knowledge and Practice, c.1600-1800

Rebekah Higgitt r.higgitt@nms.ac.uk Jasmine Kilburn-Toppin Kilburn-ToppinJ@cardiff.ac.uk with Noah Moxham When you think of scientific activity in seventeenth century London your thoughts probably turn to learned societies and their experiments, like those conducted by the Royal Society of London for Improving Natural Knowledge, witnessed by gentleman natural philosophers. Our book Metropolitan Science suggests that such learned, … Continued

“Ito ang aming mga kwento”: building an oral history archive of Filipino migration to Britain, 1974-present

Oral History Project Led by Francesca Humi: Information and Call for Participants In Spring 2020, 22% of Covid-19 related deaths amongst NHS nurses were Filipino, despite them representing only 3.8% of NHS nurses. The pandemic threw health, care, and domestic work into the limelight and exposed the precarious working and visa conditions of many of … Continued

Pat Thane: Reflections on history, policy and action

On Friday 8th November 2024 a workshop was held at the Institute of Historical Research (IHR), London in honour of Professor Pat Thane. This workshop was generously funded by the Royal Historical Society and the Social History Society and with the support of the IHR. Pat is a pathbreaking figure in the historical profession, spearheading … Continued

Age and Health 1500-1800 Conference

Jennifer McFarland and Olivia Formby, University of Cambridge jmm269@cam.ac.uk occf2@cam.ac.uk   Held at St John’s College, University of Cambridge on 24 June 2024, Age and Health 1500-1800 brought together nine postgraduate and early career speakers working on various aspects of health and the life cycle, with a further thirty attendees in person and online. In … Continued

Animals and the Holocaust Workshop

Dr Roseanna Ramsden, University of Leeds R.Ramsden@leeds.ac.uk @RosieRamsden92   In July of this year, Barnabas Balint and Charlotte Gibbs, of the University of Oxford and the University of Southern California respectively, together hosted an academic workshop on the topic of animals and the Holocaust. Held at Magdalen College, Oxford, with the generous support of the … Continued