This post is written by Andrew Peacock, Bishop Wardlaw Professor of Islamic History at the University of St Andrews The Islamic world is well known to have played a crucial … Read More
Blog Takeover
Translating the polis in early-20th-century China
This post is written by Federico Brusadelli, Assistant Professor of Chinese History, University of Naples “L’Orientale”. In 1902, Liang Qichao 梁启超 (1873-1929) – a writer, philosopher and historian on his … Read More
Seeking Greece in Gujarat
This post was co-written by Dr Tana Trivedi (Ahmedabad University, Gujarat) and Soham Patel (Navajivan Trust, Ahmedabad, Gujarat). Tana’s field of research is in the area of political and economic … Read More
Chinese Translations of “Greece”
This post was written by Egas Bender de Moniz Bandeira who is a research fellow at the Department of Classics and Asian Cultures of Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg, and an affiliate … Read More
Neo-Latin Elephants
This post is written by Shruti Rajgopal, a final year PhD student at the school of History, University College Cork, Ireland Wildlife from Asia, especially from India, has stirred fascination … Read More
Athenian and Naga Hillsides – Ancient Greeks and Contemporary Nagas
This post is written by Jelle J. P. Wouters, an Associate Professor and Chair of the Himalayan Centre for Environmental Humanities at Royal Thimphu College, Royal University of Bhutan. During … Read More
Introducing the CRSN Asia Takeover
In a play first performed in Calcutta in 1911, at the height of anticolonial Indian agitation against the British Empire, a Greek princess, Helen, daughter of Seleucus I Nicator, announced … Read More
Classics and the Making of Ideal Womanhood in Colonial India
This post is written by Shuvatri Dasgupta, a doctoral candidate at the University of Cambridge and a visiting researcher at the School of History, University of St Andrews. Indians in … Read More
Affect Studies: A Brief Introduction to its Theory and Practice
The fifth post in the Realigning Reception blog series on Affect Studies is written by Marianna Leszczyk. Marianna is a DPhil student at Oxford whose doctoral project explores the reception … Read More
Classics and the Mass Market II: Cheap Books for Everyman
In the second post in this double bill, ‘Cheap Books for Everyman: Classic Reprints and the Twentieth-century Publisher’s Series’, Caterina Domeneghini examines cheap ‘classic’ books and their ever-changing defining attributes … Read More