Aileen Fyfe
@aileenfyfe.bsky.social
2.3K followers 110 following 130 posts
Historian of academic publishing, science and academia, Uni of St Andrews. Muses on technology, peer review, gender, finances, communities. she/her http://orcid.org/0000-0002-6794…
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Reposted by Aileen Fyfe
royalhistsoc.org
The RHS is a membership organisation of 6500+ historians. We welcome applications to join us at any time. Our next closing dates are 13 October and 15 December.

We offer categories for all kinds of historians and at all stages of research, from Postgraduate to Fellow: bit.ly/46V8WOQ #Skystorians
Closing dates for next application rounds:
Mondays 13 October and 15 December 2025
 

The Royal Historical Society represents the interests of historical researchers in universities, libraries, archives, museums, heritage and broadcasting, as well as those engaged in public, community and family history research.
aileenfyfe.bsky.social
If you'll take a science example... Royal Society journals: backlist 1665-1950 is free, but 1950-1996 is paywalled. The most recent stuff is either diamondOA or hybrid-moving-to-Subscribe-to-Open, depending on which journal. royalsocietypublishing.org/journal/rstl...
Journals Archive | Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London
royalsocietypublishing.org
aileenfyfe.bsky.social
You've got to love #openaccess for books (if you can fund it). Now ~19,000 downloads for A History of Scientific Journals: publishing at the Royal Society 1665-2015. Unbelievable figures, compared to traditional academic book publishing! From @uclpress.bsky.social or www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv...
Reposted by Aileen Fyfe
aileenfyfe.bsky.social
Exciting early-career fellowships with UK cultural institutions, funded by #AHRC, www.ukri.org/opportunity/... (look for the spreadsheet with the list of institutions!) Deadline for EoI: 10 December.
Early career fellowships in cultural and heritage institutions: 2025
Apply for funding to conduct research at participating cultural and heritage institutions.
www.ukri.org
Reposted by Aileen Fyfe
bshsnews.bsky.social
Congratulations to the shortlisted authors for the Hughes Prize 2025! Check out these four highly intriguing books from different corners of the history of STEM, all of them perfect reads for non-experts. Accessible to broader audiences, they will take you to unexpected places and times!
🧵
Banner with "shortlist" and the four book covers
aileenfyfe.bsky.social
I'm just starting a new student-led project focusing on St Andrews students 1898-1948 (including LLAs, and women degree graduates), so all info gratefully received!
aileenfyfe.bsky.social
Thank you! I'm particularly intrigued by the colonial connections of two of those names... One of my other projects was legacies-of-empire.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk - section 7 of the report examines students who came from or went to British colonies, but we struggled to get much career info for LLAs
St Andrews and the Legacies of Empire – St Andrews and the Legacies of Empire project
legacies-of-empire.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk
Reposted by Aileen Fyfe
rs4vp.org
Peterson Fellowships open today! Named for Yale professor and our dear friend, Linda H. Peterson, the Peterson Fellowship is designed to support one scholar for four full-time months conducting research focused on the British periodical press of long #19thC. Applications due Nov. 15!
The Linda H. Peterson Fellowship – RSVP
The Linda H. Peterson Fellowship was named after the widely influential Yale professor and longtime RSVP Board member and Vice President, Linda Peterson. The purpose of the Peterson Fellowship is to…
buff.ly
aileenfyfe.bsky.social
1889 Universities (Scotland) Act affected all the Scottish universities. Lots of clauses, implemented over the next few years, including the admission of women in 1892. (And new faculties and degree programmes, e.g. Honours degree in History)
aileenfyfe.bsky.social
Anybody wanting to trace students at St Andrews pre-1897 (but not LLA women, unless they later did a degree - sorry) can look them up here: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/biographical...
Biographical Register 1579-1897
arts.st-andrews.ac.uk
aileenfyfe.bsky.social
The Uni archives will have details of which subjects they took in their LLAs, and some basic details from when they registered (e.g. address). Whethere there is more info... It depends! Ask my archives colleagues on [email protected]
Reposted by Aileen Fyfe
standrewshist.bsky.social
The St Andrews Historian is our annual alumni magazine and we would love to hear from you! If any alumni want to share any professional, personal or academic milestones, please contact us at [email protected]!

Image courtesy of the University of St Andrews Library, ID: ms38426/2
aileenfyfe.bsky.social
Lovely event in #StAndrews yesterday - the reopening of the Heritage Museum on North Street. Local history (toy shop!) blended with an awareness of the wider world (medieval European connections; the colonial trade in sugar; Italian, Polish and Ukrainian migrants...)
museumsgalleriesscotland.org.uk
St Andrews Heritage Museum is reopening today after a major redevelopment. Congrats to the museum team for all their work; the results are fantastic! 🎉
We're pleased to have supported the redevelopment by providing funding towards staff costs, object conservation and the refurbishment of their roof.
A group of 8 adults posing for a photo in front of a stone building. A group of 8 adults posing for a photo in front of a stone building. A museum gallery with white walls and a wooden first-floor balcony. Models of medieval stone buildings are displayed on a plinth in the middle of the gallery.
aileenfyfe.bsky.social
The story of one (Scottish) university: admission of women students, 1892; first women graduates in History, 1903; woman PhD in History, 1927; woman lecturer in History, 1935;.... first woman professor of History, 2009. We've been exploring the women before 2009: women-historians.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk
Women Historians of St Andrews
Women Historians in St Andrews research project
women-historians.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk
aileenfyfe.bsky.social
Done - though I'm not sure I understood some of the questions... I write as someone who has been using a certain well-known commerical reference management package for 25+ years, and is now totally locked-in.
Reposted by Aileen Fyfe
standrewshist.bsky.social
Orientation Week begins on Monday and we are really looking forward to welcoming our new students, and to seeing some familiar faces as well.

Pier Walk at St Andrews, c. 1940-5, Image Courtesy of the University of St Andrews Library, ID 1983-1-1
#EvertoExcel
aileenfyfe.bsky.social
It was fantastic to see #histsci friend @drsurekhadavies.bsky.social on stage at @edbookfest.bsky.social last week. I particularly love the images of the author hard at work signing books...
drsurekhadavies.bsky.social
Thrilling panel at @edbookfest.bsky.social with @nicolakellywrites.bsky.social! @yassmin.bsky.social was our chair & interlocutor.

For a 30% discount on HUMANS: A MONSTROUS HISTORY from @ucpress.bsky.social, 1/

💙📚 🗃 #medieval #earlymodern #histsci #histmed #politics #HAMH #edbookfest
Three women on a stage. Left to right, they are wearing: a red and patterned trouser; suit and cream sandals; a pale shirt and trousers, bright red shoes, and a black face mask; black top, white robe, and black and white patterened skirt, boots, and a headwrap. In the background is a pale purple screen with “Edinburgh International Book Festival” on the right, and the corner of a printed pamphlet and part of the auto-captioning visible at the top left. Two women (one in pale shirt, other in red and patterned trouser suit), one masked, in front of a blue screen. Projected on screen is a medieval world map and a zoomed-in detail of said map, partly overlaying the map. Dark-haired woman in a black face mask is engrossed in signing a pile of copies of a bright red book with a silvery mirror and black frame, entitled “Humans: A Monstrous History.” She sits at a desk covered in a black cloth. On the left is a brass-coloured desk lamp with a triangular shade. Dark-haired woman in a black face mask looks up quizzically while signing a pile of copies of “Humans: A Monstrous History.” She sits at a desk covered in a black cloth. On the left is a brass-coloured desk lamp with a triangular shade.
Reposted by Aileen Fyfe
drsurekhadavies.bsky.social
Thrilling panel at @edbookfest.bsky.social with @nicolakellywrites.bsky.social! @yassmin.bsky.social was our chair & interlocutor.

For a 30% discount on HUMANS: A MONSTROUS HISTORY from @ucpress.bsky.social, 1/

💙📚 🗃 #medieval #earlymodern #histsci #histmed #politics #HAMH #edbookfest
Three women on a stage. Left to right, they are wearing: a red and patterned trouser; suit and cream sandals; a pale shirt and trousers, bright red shoes, and a black face mask; black top, white robe, and black and white patterened skirt, boots, and a headwrap. In the background is a pale purple screen with “Edinburgh International Book Festival” on the right, and the corner of a printed pamphlet and part of the auto-captioning visible at the top left. Two women (one in pale shirt, other in red and patterned trouser suit), one masked, in front of a blue screen. Projected on screen is a medieval world map and a zoomed-in detail of said map, partly overlaying the map. Dark-haired woman in a black face mask is engrossed in signing a pile of copies of a bright red book with a silvery mirror and black frame, entitled “Humans: A Monstrous History.” She sits at a desk covered in a black cloth. On the left is a brass-coloured desk lamp with a triangular shade. Dark-haired woman in a black face mask looks up quizzically while signing a pile of copies of “Humans: A Monstrous History.” She sits at a desk covered in a black cloth. On the left is a brass-coloured desk lamp with a triangular shade.