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  • Words of Power: Reading Shakespeare and the Bible

quiteirregular

~ Jem Bloomfield on books and faith

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Tag Archives: lad culture

“unwelcome advances”: Sexual Harassment and Assault on Campus

September 17, 2014

More than a third of student women surveyed by the National Union of Students reported “unwelcome sexual advances” on campus, …

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Lad Culture = Loser Culture: Elizabeth Rogers on the Lad Culture Report

May 1, 2013

This is part of a series in response to a report on Lad Culture in British Universities. Previous posts in this …

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Clampdown: Pop-Cultural Wars on Class and Gender by Rhian E Jones

March 31, 2013

Rhian E. Jones is a historian and commentator on politics, music and pop culture.  Her book Clampdown: Pop-cultural Wars on …

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The Joke’s Wearing Thin: Nikki Rivers on the Lad Culture Report

March 25, 2013

This is part of a series in response to the publication of the Lad Culture Report, which began with a …

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All Up In Their Space: Glosswitch on the Lad Culture Report

March 23, 2013

This is part of a series in response to the publication of the Lad Culture Report, which began with a …

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That’s What She Said: The Lad Culture Report

March 16, 2013

The Lad Culture project, undertaken by Dr. Alison Phipps and Isabel Young of Sussex University, has just produced a report …

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My latest book investigates a literary urban legend about Shakespeare and the King James Bible.

Words of Power: Reading Shakespeare and the Bible - my book on the history and use of these two texts.

Recent Posts

  • Disclosures of Form: Shakespeare, N.T. Wright, Malcolm Guite and An Unexpected Journal
  • The Betrothal Shillings and the Silent Ones in Church: Customs of a Cumbrian Parish
  • End-of-Year Books Roundup 2022 (Part 2)
  • End-of-Year Books Roundup 2022 (Part 1)
  • Review: Murder While You Work, by Susan Scarlett

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Blogroll

  • Bad Reputation
  • California Literary Review
  • Clamorous Voice
  • Feministe
  • In A Merry Hour
  • Reclamation and Representation
  • Shakesville
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  • Velvet Coalmine

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Top Posts & Pages

  • Wildest Dreams: The Pervasive Irony of Taylor Swift's 1989
  • Rereading Austen: Lizzie Bennet Is A Great Reader
  • Misunderstood Shakespeare: Yorrick, We Hardly Knew Thee
  • Eleven Ways of Looking At A Sexist Apple Tree
  • The Grammar of Praise: "Immortal, Invisible", Verse 1

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