THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM Recruitment Role Profile Form Job Title: Assistant Professor in Early Modern Literature and Drama (1580-1680) School/Department: School of English Salary: £34,233 - £45,954 per annum, depending on skills and experience, salary progression beyond this scale is subject to performance Job Family and Level: Research & Teaching Extended Level 5 Contract Status: This is a permanent post from 1 January 2016 Hours of Work: Full-time Location: Trent Building, University Park Reporting to: Professor Josephine Guy, Head of School The Purpose of the Role: The person appointed will teach across the fields of early modern literature and drama within the School of English and will contribute more widely to the School’s teaching and research activities on both its UK and international campuses. The person appointed will cover undergraduate and postgraduate teaching on core and optional team-taught first, second, and final-year modules. These modules may include ‘Studying Literature’ and ‘Drama, Theatre, Performance’ for first-year students, and the complementary second-year modules ‘Shakespeare and Contemporaries on the Page’ and ‘Shakespeare and Contemporaries on the Stage’. The person appointed will also be expected to contribute to team-taught third-year modules that are structured around distinct research specialisms. Postgraduate teaching responsibilities will include contributions to the module ‘Early Performance Cultures’, as well as on distance-learning programmes. They will also be expected to participate fully in the research culture of the School through high-quality publications, research income generation, outreach activities and the recruitment of postgraduate research students. Main Responsibilities 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Undergraduate teaching on core, subsidiary, and optional modules in relevant areas, including School team-taught modules, and dissertation and project supervision. Masters teaching including team teaching on both live and distance learning programmes and collaborative Masters programmes in the University, including dissertation supervision. Contribute to the School’s programme of activities in relation to undergraduate and postgraduate taught recruitment, outreach and widening participation. Participate in the dissemination of research and the advancement of knowledge exchange through research outreach, impact and external engagement activities. Contribute fully to the recruitment, supervision and examination of doctoral students and postdoctoral appointments where applicable. Develop personal research and contribute to wider research culture and environment of the School and the University including generation of research grant income both as an individual and as a part of disciplinary and interdisciplinary teams. Contribute to the work of the School in relation to its international campuses in China (UNNC) and Malaysia (UNMC) including occasional working visits to UNNC and UNMC as well as development of strategies in relation to internationalisation in the School and University more generally. Carry out a full administrative role within the School (including completion of PGCHE if required; convening, moderation, and assessment of modules, and involvement in committee work and working parties). Knowledge, Skills, Qualifications & Experience Essential Qualifications/ PhD in a relevant area Education Specialism in early modern literature and drama Skills/Training Experience Ability to consistently develop own research area Flexibility to collaborate with colleagues Ability to teach at undergraduate and postgraduate levels The capacity to teach across a range of undergraduate and MA topics including literature and drama of the early modern period Teaching experience in relevant subjects at HE level Evidence of the ability to make a strong contribution to future REF, or other research assessment exercises Recent track record of publishing or otherwise disseminating work Desirable 30 credits of a Postgraduate Teaching Certificate or Education-related Masters, or equivalent Higher Education Academy Fellow status or equivalent Evidence of administrative skills Evidence of the ability to teach using multiple forms of delivery, including some practical, workshop-based teaching of drama Personal Attributes Other Expertise in extra-theatrical literary and performance cultures Experience of both writing and teaching MA distance learning materials Evidence of potential to generate research grant income and projects Participation in academic and associated professional networks Excellent verbal and written communication skills Excellent presentation skills Ability to work to deadlines and prioritise tasks Ability to develop own research area and flexibility to collaborate with colleagues Ability to work well in a team Agreement to undertake occasional working visits to overseas campuses as required by the School Please note that as part of its commitment to maintaining the highest academic standards in teaching and learning, the University expects all newly appointed or promoted Lecturers (unless exempt) to complete 30 credits of the Postgraduate Certificate in Higher Education (PGCHE) Course. Informal enquiries may be addressed to Dr Lucie Sutherland (Head of Drama and Performance) lucie.sutherland@nottingham.ac.uk or Dr Andrew Harrison (Head of Literature, 1500 to the present) andrew.harrison@nottingham.ac.uk. Please note that applications sent directly to this email address will not be accepted. Further information about the School is available at: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/english. Selection Process Long-listed candidates will be asked to provide items of research if available for consideration by the School. The interview process will include a presentation of teaching, research and a formal interview. Additional Information The appointment is intended to supplement the existing early modern teaching provision and research culture, within the School. The successful candidate will work across two sections within the School: Drama and Creative Writing, and Literature 1500 to the Present, and consequently, experience in teaching early modern drama through some practical work, as well as through close engagement with text, is highly desirable. Some expertise in extra-theatrical literary and performance cultures would also complement existing provision within the School. Contributions to core and optional team-taught undergraduate modules will be expected, with research-led teaching characterising contributions that are made to team-taught final year modules. Alongside teaching related to early modern literature and drama at undergraduate and postgraduate levels, the successful candidate will also teach Academic Community, a core module introducing first year students to the various aspects of studying English during their initial year at university. In addition, the successful candidate will be expected to contribute fully to the recruitment, supervision and examination of doctoral students. You will also be expected to contribute to outreach and knowledge exchange activities. The School of English has a vibrant teaching and research culture, with research focussed both in individual projects and through the work of our Centres and Institutes. We have an excellent track record in generating research income both within the School and the Faculty. We have received funding from a diverse range of sources, including AHRC, Leverhulme, ESRC, EPSRC, the Wellcome Institute, and the British Academy. We also have a large community of postgraduate research students who are funded through Research Council scholarships and project-linked scholarships. Information about Literature, 1500 to the Present teaching and research in the School of English The section has research strengths in early modern literature (including Shakespeare), the eighteenth-century, Romanticism, nineteenth-century literary and cultural studies, and in twentieth-century and contemporary literature, and film. Several colleagues have research interests in textual editing and many are involved in major editing projects (on early modern drama and poetry, the writings of Jonathan Swift and Oscar Wilde, and on the letters of Robert Southey, several of which are supported by major research council funding). The University has particularly rich resources – manuscripts and special collections – relating to the Cavendish family in the seventeenth century and eighteenth centuries (the Portland Papers) and to the study of DH Lawrence. Staff with Specialisms in Literature 1500 to the Present In the early modern period, Dr Jem Bloomfield, Dr Peter Kirwan and Dr Nicola Royan all have research interests encompassing prose, poetry, drama, and historiography. All have published in different areas of Shakespeare Studies. Nicola Royan has particular interests in late medieval and Scottish literature and history. The research interests of Dr Matt Green, Professor Lynda Pratt, and Dr Adam Rounce cover the long eighteenth century and Romanticism. Adam Rounce specialises in Restoration and 18th-century poetry and literature, particularly Dryden, Swift, Samuel Johnson and mid-century poetry. He is an editor on the Cambridge University Press edition of Swift. Lynda Pratt (who directs the Centre for Regional Literature and Culture) specialises in Robert Southey and directed a major AHRC-funded edition of his letters. She also has interests in ‘recovery’ research and in Romantic period manuscript and print cultures. Matt Green is an authority on Blake and works extensively in the field of adaptation studies, researching a range of genres under that heading including film, graphic novel, and music. Matt also has research interests in literary theory and the permeable boundaries between politics, philosophy and literature as disciplines. The research interests of Professor Josephine Guy and Dr Máire ní Fhlathúin centre on nineteenth-century literature. Josephine Guy studies the interconnections between Victorian literary and intellectual culture and is a specialist on Oscar Wilde. She also has an interest in the history of English as a discipline of knowledge. Máire ní Fhlathúin works on the literature of British India from the late eighteenth century to 1947, and also has research interests in the areas of Romanticism, travel-writing and crime fiction. Dr Rebekah Scott has research interests that bridge the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and her research focuses on English and American literature from the Victorian and Modernist periods; transatlantic literary and philosophical relations; music and literature. In the field of twentieth-century and contemporary literature, we have several staff actively researching a range of areas, topics, and writers. Several focus on literary modernisms, both in regional and international contexts. Dr Leena Kore-Schröder’s research focus is on Virginia Woolf and other modernist artists and writers. Dr Sarah Davison’s research is in the field of James Joyce and genetic criticism, with a special interest in modernist forms of parody. Dr Andrew Harrison (who directs the D.H. Lawrence Research Centre) works on D.H. Lawrence, twentieth-century literature and biography. Dr Nathan Waddell’s research interests centre on twentieth-century literary modernism, with a particular emphasis on the writings of Ford Madox Ford and Wyndham Lewis. Dr Abigail Ward works on World Anglophone literatures and postcolonial studies. Dr Joe Jackson’s research focuses on postcolonial theory, and race, nationhood and citizenship in contemporary British fiction. Professor Dominic Head works on twentieth-century literature, and is currently researching the English rural novel and Dr Bridget Vincent works on civic authority in post-1950s poetry, literary memorialisation and apology in the lyric, and the category of the ecological warning in fiction and poetry. Several of the teaching and research team contribute to the multidisciplinary Landscape, Space, Place research group at the University. Research in Literature 1500 to the Present has generated successful grant applications to the AHRC, Leverhulme Trust and the British Academy in recent years. The taught Masters related to this area of our work comprise one generalist MA in English Studies (which has both a live and distance identity), and the highly successful MA in English Literature with pathways that currently enable students to specialize in the long nineteenth century, or in twentieth-century and contemporary literature and drama. There is also currently an MA in English and American Studies, offered jointly with the Department of American and Canadian Studies. Information about Drama in the School of English Although our teaching and research spans different periods and genres, a shared interest across the drama group lies in the relationships between performance, place and space. This work has received major research council funding in recent years and staff have been successful in securing a range of grants from the AHRC, Leverhulme, and the British Academy. Members of the research and teaching team make a substantial contribution to the work of the Centre for Regional Literature and Culture (CRLC) in the School and are part of wider university research groupings including the Landscape, Space, Place group which is co-directed by the Schools of English and Geography. Staff with Specialisms in Drama and Performance Staff currently teaching and/or researching in drama and related areas include Dr Joe Anderton, who specialises in twentieth century drama and prose, notably the work of Samuel Beckett; Dr Sarah Grandage, who works on the language and drama interface and on creativity and drama in the school’s curriculum; Dr Peter Kirwan who specialises in book history, editorial theory and the contemporary performance of early modern drama; Dr Mike Rodman Jones, whose work connects medieval and early Tudor theatre with the early modern context; Professor James Moran who specialises in twentieth-century British and Irish drama; Dr Gordon Ramsay, who writes plays and teaches creative writing, as well as researching into robotic theatre and the Italian Futurists; Dr Jo Robinson, who works on performance and audience in nineteenth century and contemporary theatre contexts, and theatre historiography; and Dr Lucie Sutherland whose research is based on the relationship between professional infrastructure and creativity within the theatre industry from the late nineteenth-century to the present day. Andrew Breakwell, a former Associate Director at the Nottingham Playhouse, has Honorary Lecturer status in the School as do local writers Stephen Lowe and William Ivory. All our honorary lecturers work with students on projects and events on a regular basis. Drama Teaching The Drama curriculum for Single Honours students currently requires them to follow a compulsory first-year module entitled Drama, Theatre, Performance (20 credits), that involves workshop practice alongside seminar discussion work. Students may then opt for one or two of three second-year modules: Twentieth-Century Plays, Shakespeare and Company on the Stage, and Performance Practices (each 20 credits). These modules aim to develop an understanding of drama as a performed medium in cultural space and time and to introduce students to some elements of performance theory. In the third year, students can choose from a range of options in drama, which reflect the research interests of staff. Drama teaching and research in the School of English at Nottingham emphasise drama as a performed medium. Most of our undergraduate modules are text-based, but there is a distinct practice-focused strand available to undergraduate students, and we encourage the exploration texts as performed events across all modules. The School benefits from the use of one equipped performing arts studio, where much of our teaching and performance takes place. The drama section has a long and successful history of collaboration with local theatres (including the Nottingham Playhouse, the Theatre Royal and the university's own Lakeside Theatre) on undergraduate and postgraduate work, thus opening up access to a further range of professional skills and technical resources. In 2012-13 we introduced Drama and Performance modules to our Distance Learning programmes, and in 2014-15 two new MA modules that include content relating to modern theatre and on early modern drama. We also accept candidates to study for both traditional and practice-based PhDs; we have recently been awarded our third Collaborative Doctoral Award for a project with the British Library following two collaborative projects with Nottingham Playhouse Roundabout and New Perspectives Theatre Company. Performance Resources The University's Hallward Library and new King’s Meadow Manuscript and Special Collections Library house significant resources for drama research, including collections such as the Cambridge Drama, Portland Literary and D H Lawrence collections, together with the Chekhov archive and theatrical books and ephemera bequeathed by Sir Hugh Willatt: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/mss/. We have recently been involved in the acquisition of several key regional theatre archives – the New Perspectives theatre company archives, Nottingham Playhouse Roundabout archives and the personal archive of local playwright Stephen Lowe – and are actively working with regional companies to expand this collection. Students are already working on practice-based projects with these holdings and we aim to expand this work in the future. The city of Nottingham itself provides a vibrant theatrical environment for research students in drama. The annual NOTT-Dance Festival brings internationally recognised artists to Nottingham. Performers such as Stelarc, Orlan, Gob Squad, Goat Island, Pilot and Blast Theory are also regular visitors to the city. In addition, the campus-based Lakeside Arts Centre hosts the award-winning Momentum Young Playwrights Festival and we have a close relationship with the New Theatre which stages student-led productions throughout the academic year. Creative Industries: The School of English has a longstanding commitment to research and teaching in the area of the creative industries and creative practice. Students and staff collaborate on a regular basis with local theatres including the Lakeside Pavilion, Nottingham Playhouse and the Theatre Royal and with theatre companies and practitioners, including New Perspectives, Reckless Sleepers, and Roundabout. Staff and students also collaborate on regular projects with a number of other partner institutions, including Nottingham Contemporary art gallery, BBC Radio Nottingham, the D.H. Lawrence Heritage Centre and Birthplace Museum, Spoken Word Studio, and a number of local schools including the Nottingham University Samworth Academy (NUSA). General Information The School of English The School of English was one of the first departments to be established when the University was formally opened in 1881 and is located on the ground floor of the Trent Building, University Park Campus. We have a first-rate, international reputation for outstanding teaching and research, as demonstrated by our School's current UK and world rankings: 7th for English in The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2016 9th for English in The Complete University Guide 2016 9th in the UK for 'research power' (REF 2014) We offer a unique combination of English disciplines, including literature from the Anglo-Saxon and medieval periods to the present day, English language from its origins to contemporary and applied contexts, drama and performance, and creative writing. At present, there are currently 46 lecturing staff in the School (with 4 more appointments to be made to start in January 2016), 5 Teaching Associates and 4 research staff. We offer both Single and Joint Honours courses at BA level, a range of taught postgraduate Masters courses (many through web-based Distance Learning) and research supervision in all areas. We have approximately 950 undergraduate students, 70 undertaking on-site Masters programmes and 200 on distance learning Masters programmes. There are approximately 90 full- and part-time research students working towards the higher degrees of PhD within a range of topics, with most full-time members of staff engaged in postgraduate supervision. These are students on our Nottingham campus. The School also has Schools of English at The University of Nottingham campus in Ningbo, China (UNNC) and at The University of Nottingham campus in Malaysia (UNMC). Research in the School The following research groupings in the School form a focus for lectures, conferences, seminars, grant applications and other collaborative activities: The Centre for Research in Applied Linguistics (CRAL) is an interdepartmental research unit comprised of scholars from the School of English, Computer Science, Mathematics, Psychology, and Education. The School also houses two of the largest corpora of spoken English and spoken business English in the world, both funded in co-operation with Cambridge University. Academic and research staff from the School also form part of a recently established professional communication research cluster and business unit, Linguistic Profiling for Professionals, based in the Centre for Research in Applied Linguistics to provide bespoke consultancy and training. The Centre for Regional Literature and Culture (CRLC) involves a series of fresh initiatives relating to regional cultures at both local (i.e. East Midlands) and national levels. The Centre encompasses work on Byron, Southey, the interdisciplinary Landscape, Space, Place Research Group, and the D. H. Lawrence Research Centre. The Centre for the Study of the Viking Age (CSVA) fosters, develops and coordinates research into all aspects of the Viking Age, with special emphasis on Scandinavian contacts with the British Isles, and on literary and linguistic sources for the period. The Institute for Name-Studies (INS) was established in September 2002 as an umbrella for the various research activities of the English Place-Name Survey (founded 1923) and the Centre for English Name-Studies (established 1992). The Institute for Name-Studies houses the library and research resources of the English Place-Name Society. The Institute for Medieval Research (IMR) is University-wide and includes all the members of the Medieval Section within the School. This institute hosts inter-disciplinary seminars and conferences as well as convening an MA in Medieval Studies. The peer-reviewed journal Nottingham Medieval Studies is also edited and published by the Institute. Research Funding in the School The School has been successful in attracting substantial funding from The Leverhulme Trust, the AHRC, the British Academy, ESRC, EPSRC, the Wellcome Institute, JISC and other external bodies. The University has a number of internal research funding schemes and support for both internal and external funding applications is provided by the University’s Centre for Advanced Studies (CAS). Teaching in the School Undergraduate teaching English Language and Applied Linguistics Medieval Studies (including the history of the language) Literature from 1500 to the present day (including literary theory) Drama and Performance Creative Writing The curriculum emphasises a wide range of disciplines within the general areas of English, in which Year 1 operates as a foundation years introducing the students to these disciplines, while in Years 2 and 3 students progressively select a range of specialist modules. Masters Programmes The School offers a number of specialist taught Masters programmes including Applied Linguistics, Applied Linguistics and English Language Teaching; Literary Linguistics; Viking and Anglo-Saxon Studies; English Literature; and Creative Writing. In addition, the MA in English Studies allows students to combine modules from different areas, particularly language, literature and medieval studies. There are also joint Masters programmes with other Schools, including English and American Studies and Communication and Entrepreneurship. E-learning Over the last few years, the School has invested in the development of web-based e-learning materials not least on its flagship first year undergraduate module Academic Community which all full-time members of academic staff contribute to and participate in. Several Masters courses can be studied via the web (Applied Linguistics, Applied Linguistics and English Language Teaching, English Studies and Health Communication, Modern English Language, and Literary Linguistics), currently taken by students from around 40 countries. All undergraduate and many postgraduate (on-site) modules in the School are supported by the virtual learning environment Moodle. Careers and Employability In 2012-13 the School of English was awarded a prestigious Teaching Development Grant by the Higher Education Academy for our project, ‘Embedding Employability in English: work related learning in the creative industries’, to address two key challenges: How we can create opportunities for our students to develop vocational skills and experience work-related learning in the context of the particular skills and knowledges being developed through their subject-based study of English How we can ensure that such work-related activity is appropriately framed and supported to ensure ‘learning’ takes place, particularly as the numbers of students involved increases. The School now had a dedicated Placements and Employability Administrator to support our work to develop placements and employability opportunities for all students. The University of Nottingham The School is located on the 330-acre University Park campus just within the western boundary of the city. Nottingham is one of the most popular universities in the UK and consequently, the quality of students is very high. There are over 34,000 full-time and part-time students taught across five faculties on the UK campuses. The University is a global-leading, research-intensive university with campuses in the UK, Malaysia and China. The University is an ideal environment for scholarly, cultural and athletic activities, with an Arts Centre for music and art, a large Sports Centre and a swimming pool. Good quality housing and schools are available locally. There is easy access to the Peak District National Park and excellent rail connections to all parts of the country. The local airport is East Midlands airport. For further information about the University, see: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk For campus maps and other information, see: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/about/campuses/maps.php