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.
Madeleine Hunter is a second-year PhD candidate at the Centre for Research in Children’s Literature at the University of Cambridge.
Anna Purkiss is a first-year PhD student at the Centre for Research in Children’s Literature at Cambridge. Her empirical research
Katy Day just passed her PhD viva here at Cambridge, and is putting off finishing her minor corrections by writing
Maya Zakrzewska-Pim is a second year PhD candidate studying twenty-first century popular culture in adaptations of Charles Dickens’s novels for
Madeleine Hunter is a second year PhD candidate studying media convergence and recombination in twenty-first century children’s media. She studies
Anna Purkiss is a first year PhD student at the Children’s Literature Research Centre at the University of Cambridge. Her
Nic Hilton is a first year PhD candidate at the Children’s Literature Research Centre at the University of Cambridge studying
Michelle Anya Anjirbag is a first year PhD student at the Children’s Literature Research Centre at the University of Cambridge.
Vera Veldhuizen is a second year PhD (which terrifyingly means that she should know what she’s doing by now). Her
Emma Reay is a first year PhD student. Her research is on video games! Academic publications and academic lectures are