Clare Lees
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clarelees.bsky.social
Clare Lees
@clarelees.bsky.social

Director of the Institute of English Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London. Medievalist. Feminist. Poetry now and in the last 1000 or so years. Arts. Practice. All kinds of books and their histories.

Clare A. Lees is professor of medieval literature and history of the language, and Director of the Institute of English Studies, University of London.

Source: Wikipedia
History 41%
Philosophy 19%

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

"Too Catholic, Too Medieval" by CMS Professor Emeritus, David Townsend.

substack.com/inbox/post/1...
Too Christian, Too Medieval
As a scholar of medieval literature, I’m long used to writing books that only a few people read and that make virtually no money.
substack.com

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

Interested in Greek Palaeography?

Join our LIPS Online Short Course with Dr. Laura Franco on the 4th-6th February 2026, from 14:00 - 17:00!

Sign up here: buff.ly/CcGO6QT

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

Join us in February 2026 for our acclaimed Latin Palaeography short courses led by Dr. Marigold Norbye.

Discover more and register here:
buff.ly/pBrdHHY

#Latin #Palaeography

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

We're thrilled to introduce our new IES Winter School in collaboration with LIPS and LRBS!

Choose from one of our four short courses and secure your spot now

Book here: buff.ly/ul7DsUz

#shortcourse #rarebooks #palaeography

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

We are delighted to host a major international symposium occasioned by the publication of 'Literature and Learning: A History of English Studies in Britain' by Stefan Collini

⏰Thurs 30 Oct 2025, 2-7pm

📍Senate House, London

The event is free to attend

BOOK NOW ⤵️
ies.sas.ac.uk/news-events/...
The History of English Studies in Britain: a Symposium
ies.sas.ac.uk
Next Tuesday the Medieval Manuscripts Seminar is online. Kate Gerry will be sharing her work on the Guthlac Roll. Book 👇 ies.sas.ac.uk/news-events/...

Brilliant and inspiring exhibition co-curated by Cynthia Johnston @ies-sas.bsky.social and @blackburnmuseum.bsky.social

New exhibition explores history of decorative borders: from medieval manuscripts to William Morris
theconversation.com/new-exhibiti...
New exhibition explores history of decorative borders: from medieval manuscripts to William Morris
The new show at Blackburn Museum and Art Gallery covers the late medieval age to the Arts and Crafts Movement.
theconversation.com
Good job if you care about the arts and humanities.

Executive Director for Portfolios, Partnerships and Engagement at the Arts and Humanities Research Council - £91k-£99k
fa-evzn-saasfaukgovprod1.fa.ocs.oraclecloud.com/hcmUI/Candid...
Executive Director for Portfolios, Partnerships and Engagement
Salary: £91,943 - £99,000 | UKRI Band X | Closing Date: 5th October 2025
fa-evzn-saasfaukgovprod1.fa.ocs.oraclecloud.com

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

The Institute of Museum and Library Services has published the results of its 2023 Public Libraries Survey
IMLS Releases 2023 Public Libraries Survey Data
The Institute of Museum and Library Services’ national survey collects information about when, where, and how public libraries are changing to meet the needs of Americans.
buff.ly

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

Our CEO Anthony Cond, the Chair of LUP's Board of Directors Professor Georgina Endfield FBA, and the Chair of LUP's Editorial Advisory Board Professor Claire Taylor have all been appointed to #REF2029 panels.
Find out more about @ref2029.bsky.social: 2029.ref.ac.uk/news/expert-...
Expert panels appointed for REF 2029  – REF 2029
2029.ref.ac.uk

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

Extract from #REF2029 Commitment to diversity and inclusion in REF panels

“we…actively encourage and support applications to REF panels from individuals across … career stages …”

Law panel is (currently) 100% Professors and B&M is 96.67% (which rather makes sense but for the statement above)

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

And the criteria-setting Sub-panel membership for REF2029 is now up. All the best to them and to the later additions to the SPs: it's exhausting but also stimulating and vital work. 2029.ref.ac.uk/news/
Sub-panel membership for criteria setting phase of REF2029 to be announced later today. PCE pilot report publication delayed to 'by the end of October'. Overall, changes to be announced by end December and 'Every opportunity will be taken to simplify, streamline and reduce burden on the sector.'
Pause to REF 2029 criteria setting and publication of final guidance – REF 2029
2029.ref.ac.uk
'If a conclusion is reached that it is not feasible to carry the sector toward a new REF in time for 2029 there only seems to be one route forward which is to return to a system more like 2021.' A good analysis of many of the woes of REF2029.
The disagreements on REF cannot go on forever – it may be time for a compromise
The debates on REF risk becoming a fatal distraction for the whole exercise. James Coe plots a path forward
wonkhe.com

Delighted to see this! @ies-sas.bsky.social is lucky that Natasha is currently a Fellow. Plus I’m an Elstob fan too.
I could not be more proud that my article on Elizabeth Elstob, precarity, scholarship, teaching, women's time, and having toast for dinner has now been published in this special issue on 'Precarity.' This one was personal and meant a lot to me.
academic.oup.com/english/arti...

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

I could not be more proud that my article on Elizabeth Elstob, precarity, scholarship, teaching, women's time, and having toast for dinner has now been published in this special issue on 'Precarity.' This one was personal and meant a lot to me.
academic.oup.com/english/arti...

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

A key message is be aware of the very heavy workloads and time-commitment involved in being a panellist.

We do not consider REF's current guidance of a '40-60 days' commitment between 2026 & 2029 accurate for History and other Panel D subjects, based on the experience of members for REF2021, 3/4 👇
'UK research council leaders are bracing for cuts to quality-related (QR) research funding of up to £100 million a year ahead of next week’s Spring Statement – a move likely to lead to a fresh round of redundancies at UK universities.' 1/3
Job fears grow as Research England models £100 million QR cut
Loss of almost 8 per cent of mainstream quality-related funding feared amid concerns that Spring Statement will deepen sector funding crisis
www.timeshighereducation.com

Looking forward to this great collaborative event @ies-sas.bsky.social
Book now for Spineless Wonders at Aberystwyth School of Art in March!
14 Mar: Conversing, traversing, translating the collection
& Off The Shelf–Performing The Collection
15 Mar: Workshop, creative writing and making
@senatehouselib.bsky.social
@ies-sas.bsky.social

Free, book via 🔗
bit.ly/sa_soa
Spineless Wonders at Aberystwyth School of Art
Spineless Wonders Exhibition of Small Press Publications, Words and Images: Re:Collection: Out of the Collection: School of Art, (SOA) Aberystwyth University, also runs 10 March–6 May 2025 (check Abe...
bit.ly

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

Academic freedom is a fundamental pillar of democratic societies & essential for knowledge production & innovation worldwide. The open & collaborative nature of global research strongly depends on the ability of researchers & scientific institutions to operate free from undue political interference

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

A strong statement from ALLEA

allea.org/portfolio-it...
ALLEA Statement on Threats to Academic Freedom and International Research Collaboration in the United States
allea.org

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

The BSA Events Committee is proud to support the Winterthur Library's virtual symposium, "Fresh Perspectives on Collecting", organized by @book-historia.bsky.social  💻 📚 Stay tuned for deets on future sessions!

📅 Date: 18 & 19 March 2025
📍 Location: Virtual
👥Link in bio to register

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

Cambridge people! On March 3rd I will be talking about Francis Wormald as a collector of medieval manuscripts. It would be lovely to have an audience. Book 👇 www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/cambridge-...
Cambridge Medieval Art Seminar: Francis Wormald and Medieval Manuscripts
Francis Wormald as a Collector of Medieval Manuscripts: Laura Cleaver, Institute of English Studies, SAS, University of London
www.eventbrite.co.uk

Great to see, even better to listen in! @oewordhord.bsky.social is doing great work for Old English. Plus @michaelrosenyes.bsky.social
On BBC’s Word of Mouth podcast, @michaelrosenyes.bsky.social and I discuss Old English and life in early medieval England. Listen here: www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m...
If you want more Old English, check out my books, follow me, & download the free app (more info on oldenglishwordhord.com).
BBC Radio 4 - Word of Mouth, Old English, New English
Michael Rosen on the Old English words used in daily life then and now, with Hana Videen.
www.bbc.co.uk

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

There are around 200 languages spoken in Manchester making it the most languages in the densest population in the UK, so this is a brilliant day to celebrate with local communities.
This year there are a range of events in person & some are online.
www.manchestercityofliterature.com/event/intern...
International Mother Language Day 2025 - Manchester City of Literature
International Mother Language Day takes place on the 21st February every year. This year to celebrate, Manchester City of Literature and partners from our networks have a series of activities and even...
www.manchestercityofliterature.com

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

On BBC’s Word of Mouth podcast, @michaelrosenyes.bsky.social and I discuss Old English and life in early medieval England. Listen here: www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m...
If you want more Old English, check out my books, follow me, & download the free app (more info on oldenglishwordhord.com).
BBC Radio 4 - Word of Mouth, Old English, New English
Michael Rosen on the Old English words used in daily life then and now, with Hana Videen.
www.bbc.co.uk

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

On Thursday, 27 February, at 17.00 GMT, the Society will travel virtually to visit the library at St. Catherine’s Monastery, Mount Sinai. The library, founded in the 6th century, is the world’s oldest continuously operating library.
Bibliographical Society Virtual Winter Visit
ies.sas.ac.uk

Reposted by Clare A. Lees

We are delighted to be hosting the reception for the IES's study day Belle da Costa Greene and the European Book Trade on Monday 24 February! https://buff.ly/4i6pHdR