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CONNECTING LINES celebrates twenty years of the ongoing ‘Artists Lives’ project, run by National Life Stories in association with the Tate. A crucial aim of the project is to create an opportunity for...
Video recording of a lecture given in 2010 by Malcolm Heggie, Professor of Theoretical Chemistry at the University of Sussex, in which he talks about the properties of graphite (one of the crystalline forms...
This podcast explores why 1980s British fiction turned to pornography in order to explore Thatcherism’s contradictions, focusing on Martin Amis’ ‘Money: A Suicide Note’ (1984) and Alan...
Patrica Waugh and Jennifer Hodgson discuss their motivations for writing their article ‘On the Exaggerated Reports of a Decline in British Fiction,' published in The White Review arts journal. In this...
The network of co-operative business is worth £36 billion to the UK economy, but little is known about how co-operatives deal with employment issues. This instructional short film for HR professionals in...
This resource is a comprehensive and accessible guide to the way things work around us. Professor Stephen Ressler investigates, among other topics, power plants, dams, aqueducts, railroads, communication...
The history of graph (network) theory (GNT) started with an attempt to find a single walking path, which crosses, once and only once, each of the seven bridges of old Königsberg - known as the Seven Bridges...
Extracts from two BBC radio interviews with Joseph Heller, In the first, originally broadcast on Radio 4’s WOMAN’S HOUR on 27/5/1980, Joseph Heller talks about: what the term Catch 22 means 0 min 41;...
The Shipman Inquiry concluded that there were 215 "confirmed" and 45 "probable" victims of Harold Shipman, and it is natural to ask if he could have been caught earlier if some sort of statistical monitoring...
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