Items where Department is "Humanities" and Year is 2025
Article
Bradshaw, Penelope
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7240-9206
(2025)
Who was Jane Austen’s best leading man? These experts think they know.
The Conversation UK
.
Bradshaw, Penelope
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7240-9206
(2025)
Experiments in travel writing and romantic constructions of place: Ann Radcliffe’s 1795 account of Continental Europe and the English Lake District [in press].
European Romantic Review
.
Huggins, Mike
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2789-4756
(2025)
Book review: Female football spectators in Britain 1863–1939: a historical analysis, by Robert Lewis.
Victorian Studies, 67
(2).
pp. 305-307.
Huggins, Mike
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2789-4756
(2025)
From popularity to suppression: cockfighting and English society c.1730 to the 1835 Cruelty to Animals Act.
Sport in History, 45
(1).
pp. 53-80.
Nowak, Jakub (2025) A multi-perspective and functional analysis of English abstract nouns in academic texts. Journal of Language Science and Practice, 1 (1).
Saadaoui, Nada (2025) For Jane Austen and her heroines, walking was more than a pastime – it was a form of resistance. The Conversation UK (online) .
Saadaoui, Nada
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0004-5496-4187
(2025)
Who was Jane Austen’s best heroine? These experts think they know.
The Conversation UK
.
Wilkinson, Sue (2025) The Grasmere Dialect Plays. Cumbria Life, Oct 25 . p. 245.
Conference or Workshop Item
Bradshaw, Penelope
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7240-9206
(2025)
Trees, fairies, and ecological perspectives in the work of Beatrix Potter.
In: Higham Hall Lecture, 20 July 2025, Higham Hall College, Bassenthwaite Lake, Cockermouth, UK.
(Unpublished)
Hillier-Broadley, Meghann (2025) Nature and narrative: environmental thought in the short stories and plays of Norman Nicholson. In: Norman Nicholson Symposium: Place, Space and Time in Norman Nicholson's Oeuvre, 27 September 2025, University of Cumbria, Ambleside, UK. (Unpublished)
Book
Cookson, Jade (2025) The Wordsworth Way: a literary walking guide between Glenridding and Ambleside. Friends of the Ullswater Way.