Cultural heritage after conflict
01 May 2010A collaborative study led by Cambridge is examining the impact on society of the destruction and reconstruction of cultural heritage.
Research
A collaborative study led by Cambridge is examining the impact on society of the destruction and reconstruction of cultural heritage.
Medieval culture pervaded Shakespeare's life and work. Professor Helen Cooper examines its influence on the work of the world's greatest playwright.
The most common cause of artificial joint failure is loosening of the prosthetic implant. Dr Athina Markaki is designing materials to anchor them securely.
A digital archive of 500-year-old 'filofaxes' offers extraordinary insight into early thought and writing practices.
Research in the Department of Architecture aims to reveal the creative potential of light in the design of contemporary libraries.
Using field experiments in Africa and a new computer model that gives them a bird's eye view of the world, Cambridge scientists have discovered how...
A Cambridge University-led project which investigated what it means to be a Muslim living in modern Britain has won high praise as a model for...
It's space, but is it art? Stunning images of the galaxy are fast becoming common currency thanks to technology like the Hubble Space Telescope, but...
A €1 million study will shed light on the role of cultural memory of the soviet era in Russia, Ukraine and Poland.
Researchers in Cambridge and Japan will be working together towards a more integrated understanding of how stem cells make decisions.