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  1. Rupert Sanderson. In one of our favourite examples of going back to the drawing board, in 1999, shoe designer Rupert Sanderson left a twelve-year career in advertising to study at East London’s renowned Cordwainers College, before going to Italy to work at Sergio Rossi and Bruno Magli. With a design philosophy of “less is more”, Sanderson ...

  2. Professor Rupert Stasch. I am a sociocultural and linguistic anthropologist with a strong commitment to anthropological theory and its elaboration through close dialogue with ethnography. My research focuses on how social relations are mediated by processes of representation, including particularly visual representations and visual acts.

  3. The American poet-soldier Alan Seeger, who joined the French Foreign Legion at the outbreak of the war, from 1915 until his death in 1916 published excerpts from his diary as well as occasional editorials urging American intervention. Writing from the trenches at Aisne, he presented his case on the grounds of the cultural and moral superiority ...

  4. Rupert Brooke: 100 years on. A century ago today – on 23rd April 1915 – died Rupert Brooke, lauded in his lifetime as one of the country’s finest poets. This post explores his short life and what remains of his personal library among our collections. His poetry – much of it concerned with the effects of the First World War – has come ...

  5. Explore the local area, from Granchester Meadows, to Cambridge, to Wimpole Farm.

  6. Rupert Till is Head of the Department of Music and Design Arts at the University of Huddersfield, UK. His main research interests are in popular music and sound archaeology; he directed Huddersfield activities within the EU funded European Music Archaeology Project, (2013-18), and has been Principal Investigator for two AHRC/EPSRC grants. He studied composition with Gavin Bryars, Christopher ...

  7. Rupert Sheldrake's (1994) popular book Seven Experiments That Could Change the World is more of a collection of seven deadly sins of science and, from a philosophy of science standpoint, a documentation of the reasons why parapsychology is regarded as pseudoscience.