Troubled, lovestruck and busy
The Collected Letters of W. B. Yeats
The Collected Letters of W. B. Yeats
The Hidden Wordsworth - Wordsworth and the Victorians
This week's First Impressions, the competition in which you have to identify a book from its opening sentence, comes from a sardonic observer of Mayfair folk: "It was clearly going to be a bad...
Taking a reign check During the 19th and 20th centuries, European monarchies rose and fell in astonishing numbers. Included were three great monarchies that crumbled between 1917 and 1919. The...
The departure of Stephen Tumim (right) from St Edmund's Hall has provoked its students to stage a sit-in. But is he the victim of an archaic college system that the government should scrap? Sian...
The type of welfare-to-work reforms so loved by new Labour will not protect the poor if the economy fails, warns William Julius Wilson, the top authority on US inner-city poverty. He talks to Tim...
Oxbridge still has face-to-face meetings to select students, but most universities have stopped. Marya Burgess looks at how choices are made and what to watch out for More and more universities are...
Richard Nicholson argues that the requirement that most doctors undertake some research pushes them towards unethical behaviour At long last the medical establishment, or parts of it, are beginning...
Monarchs have been shot, ridiculed, worshipped, even canonised, but they have not made much impact on academics. American and British historians are about to change that British scholars often write...
Monarchs have been shot, ridiculed, worshipped, even canonised, but they have not made much impact on academics. American and British historians are about to change that Over the years kings and...
Portraits of the royal family can tell us much about how their subjects' view them, argues Charles Saumarez Smith George VI is having tea in the Royal Lodge, Windsor with his family. The King is...
Recent biographers of Queen Victoria have become so familiar with "the private Victoria" that they have neglected the public figure known to her subjects, says Walter Arnstein, professor of history...
Ben Pimlott tells Harriet Swain why academics should take the British monarchy seriously When Ben Pimlott was preparing his biography of Elizabeth II last year, he ran into a former colleague. "I...
Why can't Britainbe a bit more likethe United States and come clean about everybody's wage rises and merit money, asks Keith Soothill I DID not get a salary rise this year. It did not really surprise...
Whether it is in the corridors of power or those of academia what is wrong with romance blossoming between two colleagues, asks Mark Griffiths THE Industrial Society reported recently that 40 per...