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School News

Conference: “World Literature and Epigenetics: Women Narrating Transgenerational Trauma” – 27 March 2026

An interdisciplinary workshop organised by MLAC and Durham’s Institute for Medical Humanities explores how literature and emerging research in epigenetics illuminate the transmission of trauma across generations. The event brings together scholars and the writer Igiaba Scego to examine women’s narratives of transgenerational trauma.
Conference poster: “World Literature and Epigenetics: Women Narrating Transgenerational Trauma” – 27 March 2026

New publication by Professor Luke Sunderland explores new horizons in medieval French and Occitan studies

New MLAC publication: Professor Luke Sunderland has co-edited The Horizons of Medieval French and Occitan: New Approaches to Manuscripts and Texts, a new volume exploring how medieval French and Occitan manuscripts shape literary voice, cultural identity, and sensory experience.
New publication by Professor Luke Sunderland explores new horizons in medieval French and Occitan studies

Professor Catherine Dousteyssier-Khoze to deliver Wheeler Distinguished Annual Lecture at the University of Bristol

The French section in the School of Modern Languages and Cultures (MLAC) at Durham University is delighted to announce that Professor Catherine Dousteyssier-Khoze (MLAC, Durham University) will deliver one of this year’s Wheeler Distinguished Annual Lectures, hosted in Bristol on Wednesday 4 March 2026.
Wheeler Distinguished Annual Lecture

Exploring Food, Time and Meaningful Work: New Publication by Janita Van Dyk

Janita Van Dyk (Durham University) has published “Hustle Horticulture: Time, Plant-Discipline, and Meaningful Work” in Anthropology News (American Anthropological Association). The article examines food, labour, and temporality and contributes to Professor Rosi Song’s RELISH project on food, ethics, and sustainability.
Sunset in Tuscany, Italy

Marie Darrieussecq at Collected Books

Marie Darrieussecq celebrates the 30th anniversary of Pig Tales and discusses her new French translation of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein in a reading and Q&A at Collected Books (11 March, 7:30pm). Part of International Women’s Day and Francophone Month events, funded by the French Embassy. Student ticket holders receive 25% off Pig Tales.
Marie Darrieussecq at Collected Books

Landmark book on the transformative power of art in health research

An agenda-setting volume of essays on the contribution that art can make to our understanding of health and illness has been published, co-edited by Dr Fiona Johnstone from our Institute for Medical Humanities and School of Modern Languages and Cultures.
Cover of

Japanese Film Festival comes to Durham for the first time

Durham hosts its first Japanese Film Festival on 25 February 2025 (17:00–21:00), featuring a pre-screening panel, the film The Lines That Define Me, and a reception with Japanese snacks and drinks. Free entry—registration required.
Japanese film fest 26 - Poster

Participate in a Horizon Europe Study on Food, Culture and the Future

RELISH, a Horizon Europe project led at Durham by Professor Rosi Song, invites students and the wider community to contribute to research on European food cultures through three short online surveys exploring habits, heritage, and future perspectives.
Relish survey image

The Battleship Potemkin at 100: why Sergei Eisenstein’s powerful silent film remains unforgettable

Dr Dušan Radunović, Director of Russian Studies in Durham’s School of Modern Languages and Cultures, and Daniel O’Brien from the University of Essex, mark 100 years of Sergei Eisenstein’s The Battleship Potemkin. They explore why this silent masterpiece continues to resonate, inspiring filmmakers and audiences across shifting historical and cultural landscapes.
An image of a mother holding her head from silent film The Battleship Potemkin

Dr Polly Dickson on BBC Radio 4 and the Art of Doodling

Polly Dickson explored her research on doodling and the potential virtues of idleness on BBC Radio 4’s Free Thinking
BBC4 Free Thinking logo

Major American Prize Awarded to Dr Lorenzo Dell’Oso for Groundbreaking Dante Monograph

Dr Lorenzo Dell’Oso has received the first-ever Kleinhenz Prize for Publication from the Dante Society of America for his influential new study on Dante’s early intellectual formation. His award-winning monograph re-examines the poet’s links with Santa Croce and Pietro delle Travi, earning international recognition for its innovative contribution to Dante studies.
Dr Lorenzo dell'Oso

A partnership to create a new Hong Kong Durham East-West research institute

Durham University has entered into a partnership with the MarcoPolo700 Foundation to develop a pioneering East-West Institute in Hong Kong and Durham.
Mountains with winding roads across them
Boat trip in the Rainforest - Peruvian Amazon

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