Jonathan Willis (@drjpw.bsky.social)

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Jonathan Willis (@drjpw.bsky.social) banner
Jonathan Willis (@drjpw.bsky.social)

Jonathan Willis (@drjpw.bsky.social)

@drjpwillis

associate professor ▪ reformation historian ▪ husband ▪ music lover ▪ cat person ▪ scifi & fantasy nerd▪ cynic ▪ all views are my own ▪ 🎓📚⛪🕕🎼🐈🤖❓🏳‍🌈

University of Birmingham Beigetreten Aralık 2014
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Jonathan Willis (@drjpw.bsky.social)
How did living through a period of violent religious change transform people’s experience of distress? What new light does a history of emotions approach shed on our understanding of the English Reformation? For answers see my new OA article in the JEH! doi.org/10.1017/S00220…
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Birmingham Bach Choir
Birmingham Bach Choir@BirminghamBach·
NEW YEAR! NEW TERM! NEW CHOIR? Why not join @BirminghamBach for Bach’s iconic 'B minor Mass', starting Wed 8th January? Open evenings for gents, with no obligation, 8th & 15th, others interested in joining also welcome! 🎶🎶🎶 Full details: birmingham.bachchoir.com/join.html
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Jonathan Willis (@drjpw.bsky.social)
@BenLTJackson I don't know the actual answer, but I'm haunted by an off-the-cuff comment by the (genuinely lovely) external examiner of my PhD that my thesis had a 'Germanic flavour' because I'd chosen to capitalise so many nouns; so nowadays I try to only capitalise when absolutely necessary!
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Midland History
Midland History@MidlandHistory·
The Midland History Essay Prize 2024 is now live! Submit an article not exceeding 10,000 words on any aspect of Midlands history by 31st October 2024 for a chance to win £400 and have your article published in the journal. See below for submission instructions:
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Liesbeth Corens
Liesbeth Corens@onslies·
Always miffed by the suggestion that the premodern isn't relevant. The premodern is the starkest reminder that the world wasn't always like it is now, and that humans were instrumental in changing it (for better and worse). Isn't that the most important thing to grasp right now?
Renaissance SRS@SRSRenSoc

The premodern world held possibilities and imagined futures: the physical and metaphysical systems that were actively built and contested then continue to inform the world in the present. Read our statement on the value of Renaissance & Premodern Studies: rensoc.org.uk/statement-on-t…

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