Grant winners - 4 April 2013
Wellcome TrustInvestigators in Medical HumanitiesThese awards range from approximately £500,000 to just over £1 million for up to five yearsAward winners: Mark Thomas and Ian BarnesInstitutions:...

Wellcome TrustInvestigators in Medical HumanitiesThese awards range from approximately £500,000 to just over £1 million for up to five yearsAward winners: Mark Thomas and Ian BarnesInstitutions:...

Weekly transmissions from the blogosphere

A lecturer who inspired his students “to change the world of design†has died.

University of LincolnHugh ByrdHugh Byrd, who has just joined the University of Lincoln as professor of architecture, joked that he must be “crazy†to swap New Zealand for the East Midlands. “I have a...

The continent’s burgeoning economies could prove a major source of future student recruitment, says Marguerite Dennis

In an alternative universe, Christopher Bigsby is coining it in Vegas
I was amused to read recent Nobel prizewinner Sir John Gurdon’s account of his “crippling school reportâ€, which included the statement: “I believe he has ideas about becoming a Scientist; on his...
It is academics who will have ultimate responsibility for ensuring that students get a “higher†- not merely a “further†or a “secondary†- education in the new-style English higher education sector...
One looks to the humanities and the social sciences for rational analysis of human affairs. How astonishing, then, that a dean of arts and social sciences cannot distinguish between the justice of a...
My, that was a smug little piece by Felipe Fernández-Armesto (“Dens of inequityâ€, Opinion, 21 March). Apparently in his youth there was “no shame and no attested harm in a priest pinching a choirboy’...
Lisa Downing’s mantelpiece is truly terrifying (“‘Monsters, never mirrors’â€, Culture, 21 March). Perhaps she has a bone to pick with her interior designer.Name and address supplied

Duncan Wu savours the cadence and nuance that a superb cast bring to this portrayal of the relationship between art and life

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

James T. Crouse on a book that should be on every politician’s reading list

Harriet Harriss discusses a paragon of joined-up thinking