Literary Studies Research Cluster
Description
In the Literary Studies cluster, members conduct research in English Literature and Drama from the Middle Ages to the present, with a special focus on The Long Eighteenth Century and the Modern Period.
The cluster's Literary Studies specialists publish at the highest level on a very wide range of topics in literary theory, drama and poetics. The research in this cluster intersects many different fields and topics, among them philosophy, art, cultural studies, reception studies, history and music, but also censorship, gender studies, disability studies and translation.
Outstanding impact in this cluster is achieved by Islam Issa’s research on the reception of English literature in the Middle East, for which he was selected as an AHRC / BBC Radio 3 New Generation Thinker in 2017. Issa’s book Milton in the Arab-Muslim World (Routledge, 2016) won the 'Milton Society of America’s First Book Award', while his Milton in Translation (OUP, 2017) won the Milton Society of America’s 'Irene Samuel Memorial Award'.
His groundbreaking work on the Stories of Sacrifice project and exhibition was awarded £97,500 by the Ministry of Defence’s Covenant Fund with matched funding from the British Muslim Heritage Centre. This work has increased public awareness of the role played by Muslim soldiers in the Allied campaign during WWI by revealing that at least twice as many (885,000) fought in the war than had previously been reported.
Stories of Sacrifice won the prize for Research Project of the Year in the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences at the 2019 Times Higher Education awards, the Muslim News Awards 'Excellence in Community Relations' prize, and the Manchester Culture Awards 'Highly Commended Exhibition'. The project has increased cross-cultural and cross-faith awareness at local, national, and international levels, with the UK Army changing its Diversity and Inclusion strategy as a direct result of Issa’s findings.
The cluster continues to invest in research with an impact on a diverse range of stakeholders, such as the education of students at A-Level and the first two years of undergraduate study. David Roberts’s book Restoration Plays and Players: An Introduction (Cambridge University Press, 2014) was commissioned to meet the needs of undergraduates and is widely used.
His textbook Games for English Literature (Libri, 2016), co-authored with Izabela Hopkins, is a resource for A-Level and first-year undergraduate tutors that derives from work funded by the HEA Innovative Pedagogies programme. Individual staff in each research area are also active in translating research for non-academic and school audiences.
The cluster's specialists conduct research on a wide range of topics in literary theory, drama and poetics.
These include literary controversy, literary criticism, letter writing and the intellectual, political and imaginative traditions in which literature participates.
The cluster's research covers periods from the 17th century to contemporary literature, for example English romanticism, postcolonial approaches to literature, literary modernism, and the modern-day reception of Early Modern English literature in global contexts.
The cluster's research on poetry investigates the Gothic, eco-criticism, as well as the relationship between poetry, philosophy. The cluster's specialists in drama and theatre studies cover the 17th- and 18th-century Early Modern and Restoration periods as well as modern and contemporary writing for the stage.
Offers funding
No, this infrastructure does not provide funding.
Contact details
B4 7XG
United Kingdom
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Categorisation
Type
Project Tags
University affiliation(s)
Birmingham City University
University House
15 Bartholomew Row
Birmingham
B5 5JU
Last modified:
2024-09-24 00:00:06