Jonathan Willis
@drjpw.bsky.social
800 followers 540 following 17 posts
Associate Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Birmingham: English Reformation; Church music; Decalogue; sin & salvation; puritans; parishes; mental illness; material culture. Husband; cat dad; choral singer; aspiring pianist; nerd.
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drjpw.bsky.social
Are you curious about the potential for archival practices to shape the study of emotion; why there are letters in the English State Papers labelled 'mad'; or how the culture & politics of Elizabethan England shaped people's experience of distress? Find out here! doi.org/10.1017/S008... #earlymodern
‘your poore distressed suppliant’: ‘Madness’, Emotion and the Archive in Early Modern England | Transactions of the Royal Historical Society | Cambridge Core
‘your poore distressed suppliant’: ‘Madness’, Emotion and the Archive in Early Modern England
doi.org
Reposted by Jonathan Willis
markhailwood.bsky.social
As you dig out your chunky knitwear from the back of the draw, I know you are wondering: 'How did people prepare for winter 400 years ago?'

Read today's post to find out (and whet your appetite for our new book The Experience of Work in Early Modern England)

manyheadedmonster.com/2025/10/07/t...
The Experience of Work in Early Modern England I: Winter is Coming
This post is part of a series that marks the publication of The Experience of Work in Early Modern England. The book is co-authored by monster head Mark Hailwood, along with Jane Whittle, Hannah Ro…
manyheadedmonster.com
Reposted by Jonathan Willis
lsangha.bsky.social
📢NEW MANY HEADED MONSTER POST📢

A series of posts to celebrate the publication of a really important new study of work in #EarlyModern England, by Jane Whittle, Mark Hailwood, Hannah Robb, Taylor Aucoin.

Just off to fetch a 'burden of wood'. 🪵🪵🪵🪵🪵 🗃️
markhailwood.bsky.social
As you dig out your chunky knitwear from the back of the draw, I know you are wondering: 'How did people prepare for winter 400 years ago?'

Read today's post to find out (and whet your appetite for our new book The Experience of Work in Early Modern England)

manyheadedmonster.com/2025/10/07/t...
The Experience of Work in Early Modern England I: Winter is Coming
This post is part of a series that marks the publication of The Experience of Work in Early Modern England. The book is co-authored by monster head Mark Hailwood, along with Jane Whittle, Hannah Ro…
manyheadedmonster.com
Reposted by Jonathan Willis
momoulton.bsky.social
Some big news: the University of Birmingham is launching a new MA in Gender & Sexuality. It's interdisciplinary, with a focus on combining theory & practice. It's going to be amazing. I'm convening it: message or email with questions. www.birmingham.ac.uk/study/postgr... @unibirmingham.bsky.social
Gender and Sexuality MA - University of Birmingham
Course information for prospective postgraduate students on our MA History taught masters degree programme at the University of Birmingham.
www.birmingham.ac.uk
Reposted by Jonathan Willis
ghilondon.bsky.social
#CallforApplications 📣

The GHIL awards a number of #scholarships to #postgraduate students, Habilitanden and #postdocs at German universities to enable them to carry out research in Britain. Scholarships are generally awarded for a period of up to three months. 📜
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drjpw.bsky.social
That sounds really interesting, I'd love to read more about it. It's so important to challenge the unspoken assumptions which often accompany the use of specific terminology, but finding new language or frameworks to use instead can be an even greater challenge.
drjpw.bsky.social
Thank you Guy, that's very kind of you! It's certainly taken a few twists and turns along the way so it's great to finally have it 'out there'!
drjpw.bsky.social
Brilliant, thanks Jamie, I hope it doesn't disappoint!
drjpw.bsky.social
Thank you Amalia! It was a really fascinating but challenging corpus of material to work with.
drjpw.bsky.social
Are you curious about the potential for archival practices to shape the study of emotion; why there are letters in the English State Papers labelled 'mad'; or how the culture & politics of Elizabethan England shaped people's experience of distress? Find out here! doi.org/10.1017/S008... #earlymodern
‘your poore distressed suppliant’: ‘Madness’, Emotion and the Archive in Early Modern England | Transactions of the Royal Historical Society | Cambridge Core
‘your poore distressed suppliant’: ‘Madness’, Emotion and the Archive in Early Modern England
doi.org
drjpw.bsky.social
Contrasting musical choices for Good Friday!
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/S002...
‘Strange Enthusiastical Exhortations’: Distress, Religious Identity and the English Reformation | The Journal of Ecclesiastical History | Cambridge Core
‘Strange Enthusiastical Exhortations’: Distress, Religious Identity and the English Reformation
doi.org
Reposted by Jonathan Willis
Reposted by Jonathan Willis
lsangha.bsky.social
📢NEW MANY-HEADED MONSTER SERIES📢

Today I introduce 'Visual Culture in #EarlyModern England', a series that celebrates the relaunch of the brilliant 'British Printed Images to 1700' database and showcases historians' use of printed images.

🗃️ #Skystorians

manyheadedmonster.com/2025/02/24/a...
Screenshot of the front page of British Printed Images to 1700. Printed images border the screen on both sides, in the centre is the website title and various links: About, Search, Resources, Research.
drjpw.bsky.social
Pevsner on Brum: 'There have been no dramatic events in the history of Birmingham, and only a few national heroes. But there has been the constant industry and ingenuity of many people, which has gradually gathered momentum to establish a great city.'
drjpw.bsky.social
The first in what's likely to become a series of occasional posts with (linguistic rather than architectural) gems from Pevsner's 'Buildings of England'. On Bedworth, Warks: 'A depressing small town. The church, though neutral, is architecturally too good and too solid for it.'!
drjpw.bsky.social
Merry Christmas everybody, I hope you have a lovely time, whatever you are doing, wherever you are, whoever you are spending it with!
drjpw.bsky.social
Thanks so much Rebecca, it's taken a long time to write, and so many people have helped and influenced the work that's gone into it, but it's great to finally see it out in the world!
drjpw.bsky.social
Thrilled that Tara Hamling's and my article 'From Rejection to Reconciliation: Protestantism and the Image in Early Modern England' is now available to view open access on the Journal of British Studies website!
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
drjpw.bsky.social
A rosy-fingered dawn in south east Birmingham this morning!
Reposted by Jonathan Willis
brodiewaddell.bsky.social
"The Rabble that Can Write"

*NEW* post from @markhailwood.bsky.social giving you a taste of the many, many different ways people left their mark (ha!) in #EarlyModern England: manyheadedmonster.com/2023/11/21/t...