Book Review: The art of useless: Fashion, media, and consumer culture in contemporary China
(2023)
Journal Article
Outputs (1565)
‘For few mean ill in vaine’: Roxolana and the clash of passion and politics in the Ottoman Court in Fulke Greville's The Tragedy of Mustapha (1609) and Roger Boyle's The Tragedy of Mustapha (1665) (2023)
Journal Article
Hussain, A. (in press). ‘For few mean ill in vaine’: Roxolana and the clash of passion and politics in the Ottoman Court in Fulke Greville's The Tragedy of Mustapha (1609) and Roger Boyle's The Tragedy of Mustapha (1665). Renaissance Studies, https://doi.org/10.1111/rest.12883Despite the many historical references to wealth, military strength and political efficiency, Turks were generally represented as violent, lustful and despotic figures in early modern cultural discourses. The stereotyped cultural Turk soon populated... Read More about ‘For few mean ill in vaine’: Roxolana and the clash of passion and politics in the Ottoman Court in Fulke Greville's The Tragedy of Mustapha (1609) and Roger Boyle's The Tragedy of Mustapha (1665).
The Foreign Office ‘Thought Police’: Foreign Office Security, the Security Department and the ‘Missing Diplomats’, 1940 – 1952 (2023)
Journal Article
Murphy, C. J., & Lomas, D. (2023). The Foreign Office ‘Thought Police’: Foreign Office Security, the Security Department and the ‘Missing Diplomats’, 1940 – 1952. Diplomacy and Statecraft, 34(3), 433-463. https://doi.org/10.1080/09592296.2023.2239638The protection of diplomats, embassies and sensitive information has always been
an important aspect of diplomacy. Today, security is an accepted norm of day-to-day diplomatic work,
yet the importance of security in the UK Foreign Office was not al... Read More about The Foreign Office ‘Thought Police’: Foreign Office Security, the Security Department and the ‘Missing Diplomats’, 1940 – 1952.
37 Funny fragments: the UoS Comedy and Performance Art Project assemblage (2023)
Journal Article
What follows is an account of the ongoing University of Salford (UoS) Comedy and
Performance Art Project. This has evolved into a series of staged and recorded ‘Non-Events’
that broadly seek to uncover any interactions between the fields of Comedy... Read More about 37 Funny fragments: the UoS Comedy and Performance Art Project assemblage.
Relational continuity in community policing: Insights from a human-centred design perspective (2023)
Journal Article
Signori, R., Heinrich, D. P., Wootton, A., & Davey, C. (2023). Relational continuity in community policing: Insights from a human-centred design perspective. Policing, 17, https://doi.org/10.1093/police/paad038Community policing prioritises building positive relationships between police officers and local communities. The approach focuses on working with communities to identify and address the causes of crime and disorder, rather than just reacting to call... Read More about Relational continuity in community policing: Insights from a human-centred design perspective.
Physical, Digital or Phygital? Assessing the Educational Potential of Virtual Reality in Heritage Interpretation (2023)
Journal Article
For decades technology has strived to provide an alternative virtual representation of
heritage, and in recent years technology has become so powerful and accessible that is
has supported an increasing trend in the creation and consumption of virtu... Read More about Physical, Digital or Phygital? Assessing the Educational Potential of Virtual Reality in Heritage Interpretation.
‘Gender, Disability, and Visual Forms in Hans Christian Andersen’s “Thumbelina” (1835)’ (2023)
Journal Article
This article explores representations of femininity and disability in Hans Christian Andersen’s fairy tale “Thumbelina” (1835) and select examples of his paper art. In this article, I argue that, on one level, the fairy tale and Andersen’s own paper... Read More about ‘Gender, Disability, and Visual Forms in Hans Christian Andersen’s “Thumbelina” (1835)’.
Augmented Encounters (2023)
Journal Article
Depths of Fields (2023)
Journal Article
Through overlaying and overlapping Chrystal Cherniwchan and Craig Tattersall bring print and sound together in their collaborative works, writes Sarah Bodman.