From Euripides' Medea and Charlotte Brontë's "madwoman in the attic" to more modern reclamations, portrayals of madwomen in literature have come a long way.
A high school teacher describes how she teaches her students that disciplinary literacy is more than ‘fancy’ vocabulary.
The Infosys Prize 2025 in Humanities and Social Sciences was recently awarded to Professor Andrew Ollett, who teaches at the ...
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A ruling by a Lewis and Clark County District Court judge has cleared the way for school counselors to challenge laws that ...
There is anguish and confusion that the ‘prince of the humanities’ has fallen so far ...
We’re obsessing about sleep like never before. But much of the messaging is exaggerated, distorted and unhelpful, asks Royal Holloway Sleep Laboratory co-director Alice Gregory ...
Music connects in different ways. For some, it is the rhythm and the arrangement. For the others, the pull comes from the ...
Children can learn so much from books that sustain us and contribute to a sense of wellbeing and healing in our mental health.
Quote of the day by William Butler Yeats: 83% of top performers in 2026 share one habit: they start before they feel ready. W ...
For Mother’s Day, we asked ten academic experts to tell us who they think is the worst mother in literature. From serious ...
The UK Governemnt backtracks, leaving confusion on AI training, Copyright and its relation to media, gaming, publishing and more.