Skip to content

Retrospect
Journal.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Spotify

EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY'S HISTORY, CLASSICS AND ARCHAEOLOGY MAGAZINE

  • Home
  • Latest Articles
    • Academic
    • Features
    • Interviews
    • Reviews
    • Fiction
    • Retroshorts
  • Journal Archive
    • Rites of Passage
    • Home Fronts
    • Loss Lessons
  • Submissions Guide
    • Writing about Sensitive Topics
  • About Us
    • Contact
    • Team
Blog

https://retrospectjournal.com/

Profile

https://retrospectjournal.com/author/retrospectsubmissions/

  • Pet Cemeteries in the Victorian Era 

    Commemoration of pets has been an important part of human history that symbolizes our relationship with animals. Megan Crutchley analyzes how human’s relationship with pets changed during the Victorian Era.

  • Arctic Celebrities, Enlightened Savants, and the Open Polar Sea 

    The idea of the Open Polar Sea captivated scientists studying the Arctic in the 19th century. Kat Jivkova discusses how this supposed body of water near the North Pole galvanized exploration attempts to the Arctic.

  • Unmasking Identities: Exploring Public Fascination with the History of Imposters through the Trials of Guerre and Tichborne

    Nancy Britten explores the historical fascination with impostors and cases of fraud through two remarkable trials: those of Martin Guerre and Roger Tichborne, known as ‘The Tichborne Claimant’.

  • Women in Greek Mythology Should Know Their Place! – Debating the Necessity of Feminist Revisionist Mythology in Contemporary Literature.  

    The publishing industry has seen a surge in female-centered mythological retellings in recent decades. However, is the current literary trend a tired fad reaping the benefits of over-commercialized feminism? Or does it satisfy a long, unquenched thirst for female perspectives in hyper-masculine mythology? Either way, Mariela Brown delves into this inquiry, examining its nuances and…

  • The Paradox of Paradise Lost: Depiction of Monarchy in Restoration England 

    Paradise Lost is one of the most creative literary depictions of the Monarchy produced during restoration England. Edie Christian details how God, Satan, and the Garden of Eden are used as an allegory for the monarchy around the time of the English Civil War.

  • New Woman Myth: Did the 19th Amendment Completely Change Women’s Position in the U.S. in the 1920s? 

    The 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution formally gave all female citizens the right to vote. Isabelle Shaw discusses its legacy and whether it actually made significant change to women’s voting power.

  • When Mothers Hire Mothers: Oblique Maternal Identities in The Help

    Tate Taylor’s film The Help has been discredited for exaggerating historical tropes, but served as a window into the complex relationship between African American maids and their white employers in the American South. Harry Fry analyzes The Help to discuss the racial and employment dynamics impacted ideas of motherhood.

  • Lucrezia Borgia: A Woman whose Reputation has been Maligned by History

    Lucrezia Borgia is a figure defined by her proximity to political intrigue and sexual scandal. Francesca Newson outlines the historiographic treatment of Borgia, and the attempts to redefine her image.

Previous Page
1 … 47 48 49 50 51 … 129
Next Page
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Retrospect Journal
    • Join 254 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Retrospect Journal
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar