Centre for Cultural History
In collaboration with
- Research Centres
- Centre for Cultural History
- Centre for Education, Innovation and Equity
- Centre for Future Technologies
- Centre for Health and Allied Sport and Exercise Science Research (CHASER)
- Centre for Sustainable Business
- Centre for Workforce Development
- Centre of Excellence for Childhood, Society and Inclusion
- 91ƷƵ Centre for Critical and Creative Writing
- 91ƷƵ Centre for Fairy Tales, Fantasy and Speculative Fiction
- Creative Industries Research Centre
- MOVER Centre
- People and Well-Being in the Everyday Research Centre (POWER)
- Creative Research Methods Lab
- Child and Adolescent Socio-Emotional Development Lab
- Cognitive Ageing and Dementia Research Lab
- Cultural and Social Cognition Laboratory
- Human Attention Laboratory
- Employee Well-being in Work & Organisational Psychology (EWWOP) Lab
- Lab for Global Research on Gender, Sexuality and Identity
- Functional Behavioural Science Laboratory
- Mental Health and Wellbeing Lab
- Quantitative Criminology Lab
- Sexualised Violence and Abuse Research Lab
- Research in Practice Hub
- Vocal Communication Lab
- Qualitative Research Hub
- The Iris Murdoch Research Centre
- Social Work Collaborative Research Hub
- PhD and MPhil Degrees
- Research Excellence Framework
- Research Governance
- Research Office
- ChiPrints Repository
About
Examining a wide range of historical periods
The Centre for Cultural History was first set up in the early 2010s as an informal hub for scholars interested in a wide range of historical periods - from the late Middle Ages to the early twenty-first century. Following the insights of the later ‘Annales’ school, the Centre fosters innovative, interdisciplinary and microhistorical research into all aspects of ‘low’ and ‘high’ culture, and how they can reshape our awareness of wider contexts and trends.
By taking an inclusive view of cultural history, the Centre also supports collaborative research that draws on the University’s unique research strengths in art, literature, theology, philosophy and sporting history. In the REF 2021 research assessment, 65% of the 91ƷƵ’s History submission was judged to be either internationally renowned or world-leading.
We welcome approaches from potential postgraduate research students or cultural organisations interested in working with us. Please contact Professor Hugo Frey at h.frey@chi.ac.uk for more information.
People
Professor Hugo Frey
Alwyn Turner
Dr Danae Tankard
Dr Lorenza Gianfrancesco
Dr Mark Bryant
Professor Andrew Chandler
Daria Mattingly
Dr Miles Leeson
Dr Paul Quinn
Professor Benjamin Noys
Professor Fiona Price
Dr Tommy Lynch
Projects
We work at the forefront of diverse scholarly fields, both individually and with a variety of local, national and international partners – on research outputs, archival and oral history projects, and events.
History from below
To uncover the past, whether recent or distant in time, is to reframe the habits of thought that make and sustain contemporary life. Dr Alwyn Turner’s longstanding research on in twentieth century history excavates the messy political, cultural and social processes through which British national identity was made and remade in the Edwardian era, the post-war period, and beyond.
Reaching further back, Dr Nikki Clark’s research asks new questions about the Tudors – another powerful episode in national mythmaking – by turning attention away from the ‘household names’ of Henry VIII’s reign and focusing instead on the ladies-in-waiting who served them behind the scenes. Similarly, Dr Mark Bryant’s recent research has included a project exploring the neglected influence of the French King Louis XIV’s secret wife and confidant, Mme de Maintenon, and Dr Lorenza
Gianfrancesco’s groundbreaking research on early modern Naples places marginal communities at the heart of its analysis. By considering hitherto overlooked influences (and influencers) at moments of pivotal change, this work re-engages with enduring questions and assumptions in modern European history.
With Ukraine in the global spotlight following Russia’s full-scale invasion in early 2022, building and sharing an understanding of its history is more important than ever. Dr Daria Mattingly’s work on twentieth-century Ukraine, particularly the 1932-33 famine known as the Holodomor, traces the rank-and-file perpetrators of a tragedy that forms a crucial part of Ukraine’s collective memory and national identity. Mattingly is a contributor to the Ukrainian History Global Initiative, and the Advisory Board of the project ‘5am, 24.02.22’, which explores personal testimonies from the current war in Ukraine.
The lens of the local
The 91ƷƵ has a unique place in the history of West Sussex. One of our lecture rooms was used as the Operations Room of RAF Tangmere, acting as the nerve centre for squadrons of fighter planes involved in the D-Day landings of 1944.
The University was also an important context for local gender history in the 1870s, when Ms Louisa Hubbard, campaigning with the Suffragettes and supported by Florence Nightingale, successfully petitioned the institution (then known as Bishop Otter College) to become a training college specifically for women.
Professor Andrew Chandler’s longstanding research into modern church history includes a biographical dictionary (jointly edited) of women in British churches from 1890-1960, alongside a range of projects focussing on the importance of local church figures, such as Bishop George Bell, within the wider context of British religious history.
Likewise looking into the local past, Dr Danae Tankard’s scholarship reconsiders the history of everyday things in Sussex – especially clothing – and how they played into contemporary ideas about individuality, community and place. What we wear has always been a way of asking something of the world around us, and of placing ourselves, in often complex ways, within that world. Tankard’s current research considers the importance of factionalism and dissent in late seventeenth-century 91ƷƵ, specifically.
Reading visual culture
Professor Hugo Frey’s work on graphic novels, comics and film is known all over the world. In 2022 he was a Visiting Professor at the University of Ghent, where he researched French and Belgian 1940s and 1950s comics and their representations of post-war society. This is being followed by a planned exhibition of Visionary Comics at the Museum of Comic Art, Brussels, in 2025.
He is currently a co-recipient of a British Academy conference grant for research, soon to be published in the Proceedings of the British Academy, and will, with the help of a PhD researcher be partnering up with the Italian Cultural Centre in London to make a small exhibition of 1960s Italian comics and the British strips that were translated and published in Italy.
Publications
Our members publish regular monographs, journal articles, book chapters and other work with leading publishing houses.
The REF 2021 research assessment exercise saw 66% of our work rated as internationally excellent or world leading.
We also serve on a host of editorial boards and historical society committees with responsibility for outputs of various kinds, including the Institute of Historical Research, Manchester University Press, the Association for the Studies of Nationalities, the Heldt Book Price Committee, the Sussex Record Society, the British Agricultural Society, and the new Churches Forum for History.
Professor Hugo Frey is currently co-editing the groundbreaking book series.
Other recent and ongoing book-length publications include Dr Alwyn Turner’s Little Englanders: Britain in the Edwardian Era (part of a multi-volume series on Britain in the twentieth century with Profile Books), Dr Nikki Clark’s The Waiting Game: The Untold Story of the Women who Served the Six Wives (Weidenfeld & Nicolson), Dr Danae Tankard’s Factionalism & Dissent in a Late Seventeenth-Century City: 91ƷƵ, 1678–1685 (Routledge), Dr Gianfrancesco’s The Science of Naples: Making Knowledge in Italy’s Pre-eminent City, 1500–1800 (UCL Press, co-edited with Neil Tarrant), and Professor Andrew Chandler’s The Letters of George Bell and Alphons Koechlin, 1933–1958 and War, Peace and the British Free Churches 1900–1945 (both Bloomsbury, co-edited with Gerhard Ringshausen and David Ceri Jones, respectively).
Current peer-reviewed journal articles and chapters include studies on Stalinism and sexual violence during the Holdomor famine in Ukraine by Dr Daria Mattingly, and a special edition article on noblewomen, court service and crossing borders in sixteenth-century England, by Dr Nikki Clark.
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Impact
Fully half our research impact in History was judged to be of the highest 4* (world-leading) quality in the most recent REF (2021) assessment. We are eager to continue to work with external organisations and individuals to make a difference through our research.
Our members regularly feature in prestigious media outlets, in writing, interviews, and public engagement events. Current and recent engagements include:
Reframing the Political Present
With the 2024 publication of his most recent monograph Little Englanders, Alwyn Turner is busy with interviews and podcasts, including for HistoryExtra, Engelsberg Ideas, The Books Podcast and Times Radio, alongside guest talks at various historical societies.
Amplifying Ukrainian History
Dr Daria Mattingly’s recent public engagements have included appearing on the Daily Telegraph podcast Ukraine: The Latest, in December 2023, and speaking at a press conference on the launch of the Ukrainian History Global Initiative (UHGE) at the British Museum in November 2023.
History around Henry
Dr Nikki Clark’s many ongoing speaking commitments include talks at Southwark Cathedral, the British Library’s Histfest, Hillingdon Archaeology Festival, and Suzannah Lipscomb’s Not Just For Tudors podcast. Her work has also featured in the Six Wives exhibition catalogue at the National Portrait Gallery.
Comic art exhibitions
In partnership with Italian Cultural Institute London, Professor Hugo Frey is curating an exhibition of 1960s pop art-inspired comics (91ƷƵ University Campus), and is co-organizing (with Professor Simon Grennan) a British Academy-funded conference entitled ‘The Business of Comics’ (May 2024). In 2022 he was a Visiting Professor at the University of Ghent, where he researched French and Belgian 1940s and 1950s comics and their representations of post-war society. This is being followed by a planned exhibition of Visionary Comics at the Museum of Comic Art, Brussels, in 2025
Events and News
The Centre hosts a regular series of talks, including free public lectures at the University and in 91ƷƵ and the surrounding area.
We are also closely affiliated with 91ƷƵ Marks Holocaust Memorial Day, which organises a diverse programme of events each year.
Externally, centre members are engaged in a wide range of events and promotional activities across 2024, including:
- Book launch event for Dr Alwyn Turner’s Little Englanders on 6 March (Bishop Otter Campus)
- Talks by Dr Nikki Clark on her latest book The Waiting Game on 2 May (Southwark Cathedral), 11 July (National Portrait Gallery) and 13 July (Hillingdon Archaeology Festival)
- A talk on 'Clothing in Seventeenth-century Sussex' by Dr Danae Tankard at a Tudor & Stuart Sussex day school (12 October 2024)
- Professor Hugo Frey was part of the panel on the Contours: The Cambridge Literary Studies Hour episode The Graphic Novel. You can watch the full episode below.