By Tamsin McLaren, Senior Lecturer in Marketing, University of Bath
In 1875, Arthur Liberty established a fabric company at the forefront of the aesthetic movement, and within 20 years was a byword for the very best in avant-garde textile design.
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By Lucy Whitehead, Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow, Royal Holloway, University of London
A Christmas Carol is usually read as a Victorian morality tale about capitalism and compassion. Yet an autographed script written by Charles Dickens during the American Civil War raises the possibility he may also have understood the story as speaking to the cause of ending slavery in the US. First published in the UK on December 19 1843, the novella is famous for its advocacy of a reformed relationship between the Victorian capitalist Scrooge and the workers whose labour he profits from, epitomised by his downtrodden clerk, Bob Cratchit. The story has inspired countless…
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By Katy Highet, Lecturer in English Language & TESOL, University of the West of Scotland
Just as the protests outside asylum hotels of summer 2025 faded from headlines, some anti-immigration groups turned their attention to another target: English classes. On November 24, a protest was organised outside a primary school in Glasgow, in opposition to an Esol (English for speakers of other languages) class being delivered for parents of children at the school. Holding placards reading “protect our kids”, protesters claimed that these classes presented a danger to children at…
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By Panagiota Tragantzopoulou, Visiting Lecturer, University of Westminster
As daylight shortens and routines slow down, many people experience a dip in mood and motivation. The run-up to Christmas is marketed as joyful, but for a large number of households it brings family strain and a surprising amount of loneliness. Against this backdrop, it’s no wonder the idea of welcoming a dog into the home feels appealing. One of the most consistent findings in human–animal studies is that dogs often act as emotional stabilisers. In
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By Robin Bailey, Assistant professor, University of Cambridge
Christmas can be hard. For some people, it increases loneliness, grief, hopelessness and family tension, and the festive season has a way of turning ordinary concerns into urgent ones. Not because something terrible is guaranteed to happen, but because more is often at stake: money, time, family dynamics, travel and expectations. A large study found a small but consistent dip in people’s wellbeing in the run-up to Christmas. One psychological process that often shows up under this pressure is worry. It…
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By Flynn Ames, PhD candidate, Meteorology, University of Reading
A small, icy moon of Saturn called Enceladus is one of the prime targets in the search for life elsewhere in the solar system. A new study strengthens the case for Enceladus being a habitable world. The data for those new research findings comes from the Cassini spacecraft, which orbited Saturn from 2004-2017. In 2005, Cassini discovered geyser-like plumes of water vapour and ice grains erupting continuously out of cracks in Enceladus’ icy shell. In the latest study, Nozair Khawaja, from the…
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By Robert Applebaum, Senior Research Scholar in Gerontology, Miami University
US health care policy will remain fractured until lawmakers address the core question of who is responsible for health care costs.
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By Alexandria Mitchem Hansen, Ph.D. Candidate in Anthropology, Columbia University
Rats and other rodents and pests can make great archivists. That’s because they forage food and build dens, storing fabric, paper, animal bones, plant remains and other materials under floorboards, behind walls and in attics, crawl spaces and wells. There, these materials might dry out and remain undisturbed for hundreds of years. By analyzing the materials in these nests, archaeologists…
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By Margaret Murray, Associate Professor of Public Communication and Culture Studies, University of Michigan-Dearborn
Boredom is a common part of life, across time and around the world. That’s because boredom serves a useful purpose: It motivates people to pursue new goals and challenges. I’m a professor who studies communication and culture. I am currently writing a book about modern parenting, and I’ve noticed that many parents try to help their kids avoid…
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By Mary J. Scourboutakos, Adjunct Assistant Professor in Family and Community Medicine, Macon & Joan Brock Virginia Health Sciences at Old Dominion University
C-reactive protein – a marker of inflammation – is as easily measured with blood work in a doctor’s office as cholesterol.
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