Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Registration is now open for the symposium, at Newcastle University, 5th-6th July.
Online registration can be found at:
DAY
1: Mining Institute, Newcastle City Centre
Friday
5th July
11-11.30
Registration
11.30-12.30
Plenary: Katharine Craik, University of Oxford Brookes, ‘Unreasonable Readers’
12.30-1.30
Session 1
Sara Miglietti
(Warwick), ‘“Read thyself”: The reception of Plutarch’s De tuenda sanitate in sixteenth-century
England’
Thomas Charlton (Stirling), ‘Reading in the ‘Face of
Death’: The health and reading of Richard Baxter’
1.30-2.30
LUNCH
2.30-3.30
Session 2
William
Youngman (Cornell), ‘Textual healing at St Bartholomew’s hospital: Scribal liberty,
medical hospital’
Lana Harper
(Sussex and Shakespeare’s Globe), ‘Housewifery texts and female medical
identities’
3.30-4.30
Session 3
Toria
Johnson (St Andrews), ‘“And if thou never pitie my distresses”: The threatened
reader of English lyric poetry’
Erin Weinberg
(Queen’s), ‘Reading and misreading the body in The Comedy of Errors’
4.30-5
TEA & COFFEE
5-6.00
Plenary: Josie Billington and Phil Davis, University of Liverpool, ‘The very
grief a cure of the disease’
6-7.00
Reception, followed by Conference Buffet
DAY
2, Herschel Building, Newcastle University
Saturday
6th July
9.30-10.30
Plenary: Helen Smith, University of York, 'Reading and using: psyche and physic
in early modern England'
10.30-11.00
TEA & COFFEE
11-12.30
Session 4: Reading for bodily and spiritual health in seventeenth-century
women’s writings
Rachel
Adcock (Loughborough), ‘Dialogues between flesh and spirit: Reading for bodily
and spiritual health in mid-seventeenth-century female writings’
Sara
Reed (Loughborough), ‘Elizabeth Clinton’s Nurserie: Bodily and
spiritual health as a literary theme’
Anna
Warzycha (Loughborough), ‘“Sinner saved”: Gertrude More’s therapeutic Confessions
and
Spiritual Exercises (1657)’
12.30-1.30
LUNCH
1.30-3
Session 5
Sylvie
Kleiman-Lafon (Paris Université 8), ‘Reading as both a disease and cure, or the
paradox of medical treatises: Robert Burton, Bernard Mandeville, and George
Cheyne’
Kate Loveman
(Leicester), ‘Reading and ill-health in Samuel Pepys’s papers’
Guiliano
Mori (IULM, Milan), ‘Democritus Junior as reader of Auctoritates: History of
medicine through a sceptic eye’
3-4
Session 6
Lizzie
Swann (York), ‘Dulce et utile: Diagnosis, dietetics and taste in early modern
poetics’
Clarissa
Chenovick (Fordham), ‘“Inward corruption, and infected sin”: Reading and
penitential healing in Spenser’s House of Holiness’
4-4.30
TEA & COFFEE
4.30-5.30 Plenary: Richard
Wistreich, Royal Northern College of Music, ‘Reading the Voice: The Anatomy and
Physiognomy of Speaking and Singing’
5.30-5.45
Summary and Farewells
Friday, March 22, 2013
Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership
... present ‘Early Modern Texts: Digital Methods and
Methodologies’, University of Oxford, 16-17 September 2013
The Early English Books Online Text
Creation Partnership, based at the Bodleian Library in Oxford invites proposals
for conference papers. All papers that focus on early modern texts will be
considered, but we particularly encourage proposals on digital research and
editing methods and methodologies in early modern studies.
Possible topics could include:
Editing philosophies and
practicalities
Digital citation
Hidden or developing research
methodologies in the Humanities
Bridging traditional and digital
methods
Comparative studies of different
digital resources
Research based on EEBO-TCP
Digital tools to support early modern
research
Approaches to teaching methodology
The conference is intended as an
opportunity to explore the current state of early modern textual studies and editing,
and to consider possibilities for the future. There will be a particular focus
on developing potential for collaborative work through scheduled networking
sessions. Proposals including project demonstrations or ideas are encouraged,
as are submissions from postgraduate and early career researchers.
Please send proposals of no more than
300 words, together with a brief biography (100 words maximum), to eebotcp@bodleian.ox.ac.uk.
The deadline for submissions is Friday 5 April 2013. Acceptances will be
notified by Monday 29 April 2013.
For further details, see http://www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/eebotcp/.
London Job!
Reader in Renaissance Studies, Queen Mary, University of London -School of English & Drama
Queen Mary's Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences is embarking on the latest phase of strategic investment to recruit excellent researchers and teachers who can contribute to the achievement of its ambitious and exciting plans.
English seeks to appoint a Reader of
international standing with an outstanding track record in research, teaching
and academic leadership. We seek someone who will play a prominent role in our
research and teaching programmes through innovative critical and pedagogical
practice, both individually and through collaboration with others. We invite
applications from excellent candidates in any area of early-modern studies, but
we especially welcome applications from those who will extend the historical
reach of our scholarship, expand the cultural breadth of our work, and offer
original perspectives on our interdisciplinary and archival study. The post is full time and
permanent, starting from 1 September 2013 or as soon as possible thereafter.
Starting salary will be within the range £50,627 – £56,185. Benefits include 30
days annual leave, defined benefit pension scheme and interest-free season
ticket loan. Candidates must be able to demonstrate
their eligibility to work in the UK in accordance with the Immigration, Asylum
and Nationality Act 2006. Where required this may include entry clearance or
continued leave to remain under the Points Based Immigration Scheme.
Details about the School of English
and Drama can be foundat www.sed.qmul.ac.uk
Details about the English Department
can be found at www.english.qmul.ac.uk
Further details and an application
form can be found at: http://www.jobs.qmul.ac.uk
The closing date for applications is
30th March 2013. Interviews will be held on Wednesday
22nd May 2013.
Job!
FACULTY
OF HUMANITIES & SOCIAL SCIENCES
SCHOOL
OF HUMANITIES
Lecturer in
English
Salary:
Grade 7a £32,267
We are seeking to appoint a Lecturer with
research interests in literature of the period 1550-1640, who will join a
successful, established English programme, delivering a range of degrees at
both undergraduate and postgraduate levels. An ability to teach Shakespeare,
early modern drama and other literature of the early modern period is a
requirement of the post; research interests in Shakespeare and/or other early
modern dramatists would be an advantage, as would openness to teaching modules
outside the candidate’s period of specialisation. Third-year options run by
previous Early Modernists at Keele on Shakespeare on Film have proved popular
in the past not only with English students but also with Media and Film Studies
students; it would be an advantage (although not by any means essential) if
candidates for the current vacancy were able to develop a similarly filmic
offering at level 3.
Candidates for the position will be engaged in
high-quality research, suitable for submission to the forthcoming Research
Excellence Framework.
Informal enquiries may be addressed to: Professor Susan Bruce, Head of the School of Humanities. Email: s.e.bruce@keele.ac.uk, tel 01782 734119
Job packs available: www.keele.ac.uk/jobs, vacancies@keele.ac.uk, Human
Resources, Keele University, Staffordshire, ST5 5BG or Fax: 01782 733471.
Please quote post
reference: AC13/15
Closing date for
applications: 18 April 2013
The Early English Drama and Performance Network
...is a new resource for scholars, students, and practitioners of medieval
and Tudor drama and performance. The Network seeks to promote this field of
study by bringing together researchers from multiple disciplines (including drama,
dance and performance studies, literature, music, and art history), facilitating
cross-disciplinary, cross-period dialogue and acting as a central hub for
the community on the internet.
The
Network’s website acts as a conduit for the latest news on research,
publications, performances and conferences. There are also pages
dedicated to upcoming events, funding and useful links, as well as a list of
scholars from around the world who are currently working in the field.
There has
already been considerable interest in the site; we now have over 230 followers
worldwide and have received over 1000 views since launching the site in
February. As the Network grows we will be able to create new features, connect
researchers from various disciplines and open up some exciting new directions
for research in medieval and Tudor performance.
If you would
like to know more, explore the website for yourself or get involved, the web
address is: http://earlyenglishdrama.wordpress.com/.
If
you would like to be added to the ‘Members’ list, please send your name,
position (and institution where relevant), and a short outline of your current
project or research interests to clare.wright@nottingham.ac.uk. Do let us know if you have any news that you would like to share or any suggestions you may have for the Network, either via the email address above or our Twitter account @EarlyDramaNet.
We hope that
you will find the Network useful and would welcome any comments that you might
have.
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
RICHARD CRASHAW: POETICS, DEVOTION, MUSIC
Saturday 13th
April, 2013, 9.30-5.30 Little St Mary's Church, Trumpington St, Cambridge
This symposium will commemorate the 400th anniversary of
the birth of Richard Crashaw, poet and divine. Crashaw is renowned as a unique
voice in seventeenth-century English poetry, and a central figure in the
Anglican Counter-Reformation of the 1620s and 30s. His life and verse have
lately enjoyed renewed scholarly attention: through his acquaintance with the
community at Little Gidding, for instance, and the history of his conversion to
Roman Catholicism. This symposium, taking place at Little St Mary's Church,
where Crashaw served as catechist and curate (next to Peterhouse, where he was
a Fellow) will develop and enhance this interest in his work from literary,
theological, philosophical, and musical perspectives.
Speakers:
John Adamson (University of Cambridge)
Katrin Ettenhuber (University of Cambridge)
Gary Kuchar (University of Victoria)
Alison Milbank (University of Nottingham)
Arabella Milbank (University of Cambridge)
Sophie Read (University of Cambridge)
Vincent Roger (Lille Catholic University)
Kate Shelly (University of Albany, SUNY)
For further information, please visit:
The symposium is free to attend, but places are limited.
To register
your attendance, please contact the organisers:
Christopher Burlinson
(cmb29@cam.ac.uk),
Lucy Razzall (lmfr2@cam.ac.uk), and Simon
Jackson
The symposium will be preceded by a concert in the
church, on Friday 12
April at 8pm, featuring readings and musical settings of
Richard Crashaw
from the seventeenth century to the present day,
including music from
the Peterhouse Partbooks, the first modern performance of
an ode by
Jeremiah Clarke, and new settings by Robin Holloway and
Alec Roth.
Performed by the Choir of Little St Mary's, directed by
Simon Jackson;
The Choir of Gonville and Caius College, directed by
Geoffrey Webber;
and Chesterton Baroque, directed by Dan Tidhar.
Friday 12 April, 8 pm: tickets (£8/£5) available on the
door.
Monday, March 18, 2013
Gardens and Herbal History
Herbal History Research Network Research Seminar
Wednesday 26 June 2013, 10.30 am–4.30 pm Bath Royal
Literary and Scientific Institution,
16–18 Queen Square, Bath, BA1 2HN
Gardens and Herbal History Research Seminar Programme
10.30 am–4.30 pm, Wednesday 26 June 2013 at Bath Royal
Literary and Scientific Institution, 16–18 Queen Square, Bath, BA1 2HN, UK
10.00 Registration, tea and coffee provided
10.30 Welcome
Morning session: Locating sources for garden and herbal
history 'Lady Boscawen's seventeenth-century plant notebook: Some issues in
herbal and garden history', Dr Anne Stobart (Herbal History Research Network)
'The culture and folklore of orchards: Considering the sources', Joanna Crosby
(University of Essex) 'The influence of Roman writers on Elizabethan gardens',
Christina Stapley (Herbal History Research Network)
1.15-2.15 Lunch (included in registration cost) Afternoon
session: Using and interpreting sources 'Maintaining and developing a
physician's garden in London', Jane Knowles (Head Gardener, Royal College of
Physicians) 'Reviving a late medieval garden: Dean William Turner and his
“garden at Wellis”', Frances Neale (formerly Archivist to the Dean and Chapter
of Wells Cathedral) 'New World Gardens: medicinal plants in colonial America',
Dr Bruna Gushurst-Moore (University of Plymouth)
4.15–4.30 Concluding discussion
Registration
Advance registration is essential as space is limited.
The cost of this seminar is £48 (£28 for students). Early bird registration
before 24th April 2013 is discounted by £6 per place to £42 (£22). To book your
place send a cheque payable to Herbal History Research Network with the slip
below. Confirmation of your place will be sent to you.
…………………………………………………………………
Return to: Herbal History Research Network, c/o Christina
Stapley, Deepwell House, 205 Quemerford, Calne, Wilts SN11 8JY, UK.
I wish to book ____ place (s) at the Herbs and Garden
History Seminar. I enclose £ ____ payable to Herbal History Research Network.
Name……………………………………………………………
Organisation …………………………………………………..
Address …………………………………………………..........
………………………………………………………………….
……………………… Postcode ………………………………
Email ………………………………………………………….
Telephone …………………………………………. …………
Special dietary needs …………………………………………
Signed ……………………………….. Date …………………
Thursday, March 14, 2013
TRANSITIONS
Book, Text, and Place 1500–1750
4-5 July 2013
Research Centre, Bath Spa University
Plenary Speakers:
Professor Julie Sanders (University of Nottingham)
Professor Marcus Walsh (University of Liverpool)
Professor Henry Woudhuysen (Lincoln College, University of Oxford)
Transitions 1500-1750 aims to explore a wide range of transitions from a variety of critical and historical perspectives. We are particularly interested in papers that reflect on the impact that such transitions had on early modern subjects, institutions, material culture, habits of thought as well as literary, social and cultural practices. Different disciplinary perspectives are especially encouraged. Possible topics of study include:
Transitional years (eg, 1534, 1558, 1603, 1660, 1707)
Celebrating/marking/remembering transition
Continuity/discontinuity
Succession literature
From stage to page
From manuscript to print (and vice versa)
Generic shifts
Shifting author-patron, author-readership relations
Progression/relocation/translocation
Historical/literary historical constructions of transition
The intersection of the residual and the emergent
Please send proposals for papers (20mins) and any queries to transitionsatbathspa@gmail.com
Professor Marcus Walsh (University of Liverpool)
Professor Henry Woudhuysen (Lincoln College, University of Oxford)
Transitions 1500-1750 aims to explore a wide range of transitions from a variety of critical and historical perspectives. We are particularly interested in papers that reflect on the impact that such transitions had on early modern subjects, institutions, material culture, habits of thought as well as literary, social and cultural practices. Different disciplinary perspectives are especially encouraged. Possible topics of study include:
Transitional years (eg, 1534, 1558, 1603, 1660, 1707)
Celebrating/marking/remembering transition
Continuity/discontinuity
Succession literature
From stage to page
From manuscript to print (and vice versa)
Generic shifts
Shifting author-patron, author-readership relations
Progression/relocation/translocation
Historical/literary historical constructions of transition
The intersection of the residual and the emergent
Please send proposals for papers (20mins) and any queries to transitionsatbathspa@gmail.com
The deadline for proposals is 31 March.
Book, Text, and Place, 1500-1750 Research Centre: http://booktextandplace.wordpress.com/
Corsham Court, Bath Spa University: http://www2.bathspa.ac.uk/services/corsham-court-centre/
Working it Out: A Day of Numbers in Early Modern Writing
Saturday 18th May 2013
Birkbeck, University of London
Keynes Library, 43-46 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PD
Keynes Library, 43-46 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PD
Registration Open
Early modern books are full of numbers, representing both practicality and mystery. This multidisciplinary one-day conference explores numbers in British early modern literature and textual culture. How were numbers and numerical techniques used in drama, dance, and poetry? What were the practical issues arising from printing numerical texts? How were numbers represented on the page in mathematical and accounting texts – and elsewhere? How were the index and the cross-reference created and used? To what extent would an early modern audience recognize mathematical references in literary texts and performance? Who would buy an arithmetic book and how might they use it?
The conference will bring together researchers from the fields of literature, history of mathematics and of accounting, economic and cultural history, performance studies, and more to think in new ways about early modern numbers.
Speakers include:
- Stephen Clucas, Birkbeck.
- Natasha Glaisyer, York.
- Richard Macve and Basil Yamey, London School of Economics.
- Carla Mazzio, University at Buffalo, SUNY.
- Emma Smith, Hertford College, Oxford.
- Adam Smyth, Birkbeck.
Conference fee £10, including lunch. Register at: https://www2.bbk.ac.uk/english/workingitout.
Free for postgraduates, if registered in advance. Please contact us at numbersday@gmail.com if you are a postgraduate student and would like to attend.
General questions can be directed to the organisers, Rebecca Tomlin and Katherine Hunt, at numbersday@gmail.com; also check out the blog at http://numbersday.blogspot.co.uk.
The conference organisers are grateful for the generous support provided by the Society for Renaissance Studies, the Royal Historical Society, the London Renaissance Seminar, and ICAEW’s Charitable Trusts.
Monday, March 11, 2013
TEXTUALITY TECHNOLOGY MATERIALITY
In the Medieval and Early Modern World
Call for Abstracts
28-30 November 2013, University of Western Australia, Perth
Confirmed plenary speakers:
* Professor Alexandra Gillespie (University of Toronto)
* Professor Tim Fitzpatrick (University of Sydney)
The convenors of the 19th Annual Conference of the Perth
Medieval and Renaissance Group, co-sponsored by the UWA Centre for Medieval and
Early Modern Studies, welcome abstracts (c.200 words) for 20-minute papers
exploring medieval and early modern cultures of technology, textuality, and
materiality, c.600 to 1800 CE. We welcome proposals for papers (or panels of 3
papers) which consider:
* The social and cultural lives and afterlives of
medieval and early modern material objects
* Manuscripts, inscriptions, illustrations, letters, the
printing press and other medieval and early modern communication technologies
* The production, transmission, and mediation of medieval
and early modern texts
* The application and/or impact of modern technologies to
medieval and early modern materials
Abstracts and panel proposals (along with titles and
brief bios for
speakers) should be emailed to <conference@pmrg.org.au> addressed
to the convenors — Professor Andrew Lynch, Dr Anne M. Scott, and Dr Brett D.
Hirsch — by no later than 1 September 2013.
Further details about the conference programme,
registration, and postgraduate travel assistance will be made available on <http://conference.pmrg.org.au/>
Wednesday, March 06, 2013
The Mutilated Body
Call for Papers
Durham University, Medieval and Early Modern
Student Association
Seventh Annual Postgraduate
Conference, 8-9 July 2013
Durham University’s annual
MEMSA conference is an interdisciplinary forum for postgraduates and early
career researchers to present
and discuss their research. This year, the conference theme will focus on
aspects of destruction,
disability, and personhood in the medieval and early modern periods. Paper
proposals may reflect the
current trends in medical humanities and hagiography, but could also draw
upon inventive interpretations
of mutilated corporeality, typified by books, architecture, kingdoms and
kingship, or Christendom. We
welcome abstracts from postgraduates and early career researchers on all
aspects of this topic in
medieval and early modern archaeology, history, literature, theology, art,
music,
and culture. Presentation
topics may include, but are not limited to:
- Catholic, Protestant, and
Jewish martyrdom
- Iconoclasm
- Mutilation of manuscripts,
book burning, and destruction of libraries
- Attitudes towards and
treatment of physical and mental disability
- Religious rupture: monastic
dissolution, Eucharist desecration, the Reformation, and the breaking
of Christendom
- Torture, execution, surgery,
wounds, and disease
- Disruption and schism in the
body politic
- Gendered bodies: domestic
abuse and sexual violence
- Healing of wounds:
reconstruction, conservation, miracles
In addition to the panels, the
conference will include keynote addresses by Professor Faith Wallis of
McGill University and
Professor Charlotte Roberts of Durham University. We are also pleased to
announce a visit to the the
Lindisfarne Gospels exhibition and discussion led by Professor Richard
Gameson of Durham University.
Papers may also be submitted for publication in a special conference
proceedings edition of
Hortulus.
Please contact imrs.memsa@durham.ac.uk with
abstracts of 200-300 words, for papers lasting 20
minutes, no later than 15
April, 2013. For more information, please see our blog,
durhammemsa.wordpress.com or our
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/
DurhamMEMSA
Lecturer in Renaissance English Literature, - Ref:1311267
UCL Department / Division
English Language & Literature
Grades 7-8
Hours Full Time
Salary (inclusive of London allowance) Grade 7: £36,064 - £39,132; Grade 8: £40,216 - £47,441
Duties and Responsibilities
The successful candidate will be required to teach courses covering
the Renaissance English period at undergraduate level, including the
compulsory Shakespeare course and the Renaissance option course, and to
contribute to the MA Shakespeare in History and the Early Modern Studies
MA. In addition, the successful candidate will give one-to-one
tutorials to undergraduate students and undertake the normal duties of
teaching administration. It is expected that the successful candidate
will make a full contribution to maintaining and enhancing the
Department's research profile through publication at international
standard and through the supervision of PhD students.
Key Requirements
Candidates must have a PhD. A proven research record in some field of
Renaissance English literature is essential, as is a proven teaching
record in the period at both undergraduate and postgraduate level. An
ability to teach selectively outside the period is also required.
Candidates must also demonstrate research achievement at a high level
appropriate to their stage of career.
Further Details
A job description and person specification can be accessed at the bottom
of this page.
To apply for the vacancy, please click on 'Apply Now'.
If you have any enquiries regarding the vacancy or the application
process, please contact the Departmental Administrator, Stephen
Cadywold, s.cadywold@ucl.ac.uk <mailto:s.cadywold@ucl.ac.uk>
Further information about the Department is available on
www.ucl.ac.uk/english <http://www.ucl.ac.uk/english>
UCL Taking Action for Equality
Closing Date
15 Mar 2013
Latest time for the submission of applications
5.00 p.m.
Interview date
Week commencing 29 April, 2013
This appointment is subject to UCL Terms and Conditions of Service for
Academic Staff.
Please use these links to find out more about the UCL Terms and
Conditions <http://www.ucl.ac.uk/hr/salary_scales/academic_tcs.php>
related to this job, employee benefits
<http://www.ucl.ac.uk/hr/benefits/employee_benefits.php> that we offer
and further information about UCL
<http://www.ucl.ac.uk/hr/docs/download_forms/recruitment_selection_N.doc>.
Job Description and Person Specification
<https://filesv7.wcn.co.uk/admin/fairs/apptrack/download.cgi?SID=b3duZXI9NTA0MTE3OCZvd25lcnR5cGU9ZmFpciZkb2NfdHlwZT12YWMmZG9jX2lkPTIwODAyNCZ2ZXJpZnk9YTJiYTA3ZjlhMjJlNGY4NzBhOGE0YWY5MTg4OTVlMGE=>
*
Apply Now
<https://atsv7.wcn.co.uk/search_engine/jobs.cgi?SID=b3duZXI9NTA0MTE3OCZvd25lcnR5cGU9ZmFpciZqY29kZT0xMzExMjY3JnBvc3RpbmdfY29kZT0mYnJhbmRfaWQ9MCZhcHBseV9ub3c9MSZhcHBseV91cmw9L3NhZi9sb2dpbi5jZ2k=>
English Language & Literature
Grades 7-8
Hours Full Time
Salary (inclusive of London allowance) Grade 7: £36,064 - £39,132; Grade 8: £40,216 - £47,441
Duties and Responsibilities
The successful candidate will be required to teach courses covering
the Renaissance English period at undergraduate level, including the
compulsory Shakespeare course and the Renaissance option course, and to
contribute to the MA Shakespeare in History and the Early Modern Studies
MA. In addition, the successful candidate will give one-to-one
tutorials to undergraduate students and undertake the normal duties of
teaching administration. It is expected that the successful candidate
will make a full contribution to maintaining and enhancing the
Department's research profile through publication at international
standard and through the supervision of PhD students.
Key Requirements
Candidates must have a PhD. A proven research record in some field of
Renaissance English literature is essential, as is a proven teaching
record in the period at both undergraduate and postgraduate level. An
ability to teach selectively outside the period is also required.
Candidates must also demonstrate research achievement at a high level
appropriate to their stage of career.
Further Details
A job description and person specification can be accessed at the bottom
of this page.
To apply for the vacancy, please click on 'Apply Now'.
If you have any enquiries regarding the vacancy or the application
process, please contact the Departmental Administrator, Stephen
Cadywold, s.cadywold@ucl.ac.uk <mailto:s.cadywold@ucl.ac.uk>
Further information about the Department is available on
www.ucl.ac.uk/english <http://www.ucl.ac.uk/english>
UCL Taking Action for Equality
Closing Date
15 Mar 2013
Latest time for the submission of applications
5.00 p.m.
Interview date
Week commencing 29 April, 2013
This appointment is subject to UCL Terms and Conditions of Service for
Academic Staff.
Please use these links to find out more about the UCL Terms and
Conditions <http://www.ucl.ac.uk/hr/salary_scales/academic_tcs.php>
related to this job, employee benefits
<http://www.ucl.ac.uk/hr/benefits/employee_benefits.php> that we offer
and further information about UCL
<http://www.ucl.ac.uk/hr/docs/download_forms/recruitment_selection_N.doc>.
Job Description and Person Specification
<https://filesv7.wcn.co.uk/admin/fairs/apptrack/download.cgi?SID=b3duZXI9NTA0MTE3OCZvd25lcnR5cGU9ZmFpciZkb2NfdHlwZT12YWMmZG9jX2lkPTIwODAyNCZ2ZXJpZnk9YTJiYTA3ZjlhMjJlNGY4NzBhOGE0YWY5MTg4OTVlMGE=>
*
Apply Now
<https://atsv7.wcn.co.uk/search_engine/jobs.cgi?SID=b3duZXI9NTA0MTE3OCZvd25lcnR5cGU9ZmFpciZqY29kZT0xMzExMjY3JnBvc3RpbmdfY29kZT0mYnJhbmRfaWQ9MCZhcHBseV9ub3c9MSZhcHBseV91cmw9L3NhZi9sb2dpbi5jZ2k=>