Exploring the Game of Thrones Citadel's library: Knowledge repositories in history and fantasy Knowledge is power, and libraries are its centres of preservation, both in history and in fiction. How closely does the fantastic Game of Thrones' Citadel Library mirror equivalents from history? Fleur Praal and Andrea Reyes Elizondo • September 07, 2017
Trust me, I’m an expert! What AirBNB and Academia have in common With the summer holidays approaching, you'll probably feel more like browsing AirBNB than like analysing academia. Well, what luck: in this post, you can do both! Fleur Praal • July 17, 2017
A Literary Shroud: Embroidering Derek Walcott’s Omeros A bird stitching an epic: intertextuality and metaliterature in Derek Walcott’s Caribbean epic Omeros. Amaranth Feuth • March 02, 2017
The many meanings of reading (2). Imagery. The term 'to read' is used for a myriad of activities. In this series, I will explore the different uses of the word in the context of book history. In this second instalment: text vs. images. Andrea Reyes Elizondo • February 23, 2017
Landscape: The LUCAS Graduate Conference Some reflections on last week's LUCAS Graduate Conference on 'Landscape' Lieke Smits, Anna Volkmar and Tessa de Zeeuw • February 02, 2017
Interview Loredana Paracciani: "Southeast Asian artists have a genuine interest in their culture" A conversation with London-based independent curator Loredana Paracciani on her work with contemporary art from Southeast Asia Leonor Veiga • January 19, 2017
Making Drawings Move To set drawings in children’s programs in motion, tv-illustrators had several tricks up their sleeves. Grietje Hoogland • January 12, 2017
Why We Need Nuclear Art Green glowing chandeliers, jewellery you’ll never be able to wear … A review of the exhibition “Perpetual Uncertainty / Contemporary Art in the Nuclear Anthropocene” at the Bildmuseet, Umeå. Anna Volkmar • December 15, 2016
The Romance between Television and Illustration For a long time, children's television programs in the Netherlands weren't animated, like in Japan or the US. Instead, they were illustrated. Grietje Hoogland • November 10, 2016