A digitised archive British regional and local newspapers, providing an alternative voice to national press and an alternative view on events and issues.
Biography, overview and critical analysis drawn from journals and periodicals in Gale Databases, exploring the author best known for An Answer from the Silence and Man in the Holocene.
Biography, overview and critical analysis drawn from journals and periodicals in Gale Databases, exploring the author best known for Cranford and Wives and Daughters.
Biography, overview and critical analysis drawn from journals and periodicals in Gale Databases, exploring the author best known for Gösta Berling's Saga and Jerusalem.
Biography, overview and critical analysis drawn from journals and periodicals in Gale Databases, exploring the author best known for À la recherche du temps perdu and Les plaisirs et les jours.
A selection of material from Gale resources exploring global warming, human activities that have contributed to rising global temperatures.
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An essay on the the Daily Mail, which was never content to be a passive spectator, from its launch trying to influence national decision–making processes.
We commission essays from leading scholars to detail the history of our archives and popular research themes.
Much of the rise in literacy was brought about through increases in the provision of schooling during the nineteenth century—especially for working-class children. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, education for the working classes was available on a haphazard basis in England and Wales.
An essay on the Daily Mirror, which broke the mould in its fourt decade by moving away from conservative world-views promoted by other papers.
"The first Illustrated London News gossip column was published on 16 March 1850 under the name Angus B. Reach and carried his initials through 15 November 1851…"
"It can be difficult to grasp the scale of newspaper publishing in the United Kingdom. Taken as a whole, the huge and diverse production of newspapers since 1700…"