Student Statement Against Racism in the Centre and Faculty
This blog represents students at the Centre for Research in Children’s Literature within the Faculty of Education at the University
This blog represents students at the Centre for Research in Children’s Literature within the Faculty of Education at the University
We are pleased to announce that the Centre will hold an international conference on the role of sex in young adult fiction on the 11th and 12th of September 2020.
Today’s blog post represents a statement from the graduate student community in support of the CRCLC’s administrator, Lucian M. Stephenson, who has been informed by the Faculty of Education at the University of Cambridge that his position is at risk of redundancy.
This blog represents students at the Centre for Research in Children’s Literature within the Faculty of Education at the University
The current pandemic is a good time to remember a post by Amy Ryder last year on the power of
A classic of children’s literature about time travel, Philippa Pearce’s Tom’s Midnight Garden is one of those books that has
When I began my doctoral project on the role of HIV/AIDS in young adult literature, I never expected to find
I came to the MPhil after working as a UK state school English teacher for fifteen years (a career I
By Sapphire Demirsöz February in Cambridge is a magical month. Not only is it the most romantic city in which
The new year is a time of reflection and prediction. As an educator of 620 children aged three to twelve,
*Note: this post contains spoilers about the film Little Women. “I am working on a novel, and it’s about my
“if I had had a princess like Elsa as a role model when I was a child, who knows how much more quickly I would have come to understand and accept my queerness.”
This guest post is written by Liz Osman. Liz is Fellow Librarian at Homerton College Library. It’s always enjoyable to