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The Journal of Victorian Culture is a quarterly academic journal of cultural history.Established in 1996 and published by Oxford University Press, it tries to promote the best work on all aspects of nineteenth-century society, culture, and the material world including: literature, art, performance, politics, science, medicine, technology, lived experience, and ideas.
Heather Ellis, "Thomas Arnold, Christian Manliness and the Problem of Boyhood' Journal of Victorian Culture, 2014, 19#3, pp. 425–441 online; Giorgia Grilli, "English public schools and the moulding of the'Englishman'." History of Education & Children's Literature 2015, 10.1
The Journal of Korean Studies; Journal of Popular Romance Studies; Journal of the Academic Association of Koreanology in Japan; Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth; Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies; Journal of Transnational American Studies; Journal of Victorian Culture; Journal of William Morris Studies
Born in 1973, [1] Strange completed a Bachelor of Arts degree and a Master of Philosophy degree at the University of Wales, Cardiff. [2] From 1996 to 2000, she carried out doctoral studies at the University of Liverpool [3] under the supervision of Andrew Davies and Jon Lawrence; [4] she was awarded a PhD in 2000 for her thesis on death and mourning in the British working classes during the ...
'Culture, "race" and the missionary public in mid-Victorian Wales', Journal of Victorian Culture, November 2005 'The transforming gaze: the photography of Welsh Christians in Sylhet, India, 1890-1947', Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bangladesh (Humanities), December 2004
Pages in category "Victorian culture" The following 34 pages are in this category, out of 34 total. ... Journal of Victorian Culture; Jugum penis; L. Language of flowers;
[3] [1] She joined the staff of Leeds Trinity University in 1999, subsequently becoming Professor of Victorian Studies in 2018. [4] She was also the Director of the Leeds Victorian Studies Centre. [3] She retired from Leeds Trinity University in 2019. [5] She was a member of the editorial board of the Journal of Victorian Culture. [3]
Lynda Nead in the Journal of Victorian Culture wrote: "Both the image and its title are emphatic and unambiguous…should there be any remaining traces of uncertainty, however, there is a sub-title: Queen Victoria Presenting a Bible in the Audience Chamber at Windsor….although the subject depicted can be related to various colonial visits ...