糖心Vlog

Carina Buckley, Danny Dorling, David Hardiman, R. C. Richardson, Vernon Trafford...

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Published on
May 21, 2015
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Carina Buckley, learning skills tutor, Southampton Solent University, is reading Tove Jansson鈥檚 The Summer Book (Sort of Books, 2003). 鈥淩esolutely unsentimental, Jansson uses Sophia and her grandmother鈥檚 summer adventures to explore loss and grief. From the cat who won鈥檛 be loved to the storm that Sophia and God caused, the absences of Sophia鈥檚 mother and her grandmother鈥檚 independence are sensitively handled but never allowed to steal centre stage from the rugged beauty and endless possibilities of the island.鈥


Book review: Everything is Connected to Everything Else, by Carl Lee

Danny Dorling, Halford Mackinder professor of geography, University of Oxford, is reading Carl Lee鈥檚 Everything is Connected to Everything Else: 101 Stories About 21st Century Geography (Fou Fou, 2015). 鈥淭he most beautiful book I have read in many years. Designed by Sheffield鈥檚 renowned Human Studio, it illustrates what modern geography reveals about the world. No other contemporary academic work can match its lucidity and clarity. Finding a hard copy of the limited edition can be a challenge, but it is all , for free, animated and magical.


Book review: Gandhian Nonviolent Struggle and Untouchability in South India, by Mary King

David Hardiman, emeritus professor of history, University of Warwick, is reading Mary King鈥檚 Gandhian Nonviolent Struggle and Untouchability in South India: The 1924-25 Vykom Satyagraha and the Mechanisms of Change (Oxford University Press, 2015). 鈥淎 veteran of the US civil rights movement and a leading writer on non-violent struggle provides a critical perspective on a campaign for the civil rights of Dalits 鈥 the 鈥榰ntouchables鈥 鈥 that Gandhi became associated with. Applying lessons learned in the US, King identifies drawbacks to Gandhi鈥檚 guidance of this movement 鈥 issues that haunt the fight for Dalit rights to this day.鈥


Book review: English Traits, by Ralph Waldo Emerson

R. C. Richardson, emeritus professor of history, University of Winchester, is re-reading Ralph Waldo Emerson鈥檚 English Traits (Routledge, 1856). 鈥淒rawn to England, like other Americans at this time, in part by the arresting novelty of the first Industrial Revolution, Emerson offers a stock-taking of England鈥檚 national character and prosperity, institutions and writers, and it makes for absorbing reading even today. Full of admiration for what he saw, he was also embarrassed by the blinkered national pride and shallowness of thinking that he found so much in evidence.鈥


Book review: Dancing with Doctoral Encounters, by Yusef Waghid

Vernon Trafford, emeritus professor of education, Anglia Ruskin University, is reading Yusef Waghid鈥檚 Dancing with Doctoral Encounters: Democratic Education in Motion (Sun Press, 2015). 鈥淪upervisor and candidate doctoral encounters may be lucid, well-timed, crisp, rambling or dazzling. Waghid interprets his own supervisory encounters as a dance involving movements by each person in their respective intellectual positions. Drawing on democratic understandings of education, and applying Richard Rorty鈥檚 pragmatism and J眉rgen Habermas鈥 communicative rationality, Waghid explains supervisor-candidate relationships from a new perspective.鈥

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