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.
by Maria When Moomintroll is going on an expedition to the Lonely Mountains to learn about the comet, Moominmamma, as
on behalf of Ashley The next Children’s Book Group will take place on May 31st, 5pm-6pm in room MAB 104,
by Ghada As graduate students we are encouraged to “broaden our horizons” which entails venturing beyond our specific focus areas.
by Maria Pooh had had a Mysterious Missage underneath his front doot that morning, saying, ”I AM SCERCHING FOR A
on behalf of Ashley The next Children’s Book Group will take place on May 24th, from 5pm to 6pm, in
By DebbieOnce upon a time, a very long time ago, about last Thursday, the Cambridge–Homerton Research and Teaching Centre for
by Lauren Stephen Kelman’s debut novel Pigeon English, despite being an adult novel, is highly telling of the way in
by Richard John Christopher Timothy Jennings is a name I fondly associate with my childhood. He was mentioned to me
by Clementine It’s the Sunday post! Time to share the latest news from the Children’s Literature Research Centre. Graduation, elderflower
So…what has the royal wedding got to do with children’s literature? Well, the initial instinctive answer surely has to be not a lot, as Maria