Eminent Minds:
Stories of Genius and Impact
🎨 April Collection: Art & Humanities
“Art washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.” – Pablo Picasso
Arts and Humanities research is not only about preserving the knowledge of the past but enriching our understanding of the human condition and how we came to be in the present day. To be able to navigate the world with profound insight, empathy, and integrity. With creativity, innovation, ethics and moral reasoning, critical thinking and the ability to understand human culture and society, we can conquer the world.
Explore our curated collection of free archive journal articles, updated monthly with fresh content from various disciplines.
Modern Archives
Talking about pictures: A case for photo elicitation
Dougles Harper
Foucault, Governmentality and Critique
Thomas Lemke
Which Emotions Can be Induced by Music? What Are the Underlying Mechanisms? And How Can We Measure Them?
Klau R. Scherer
User experience – a research agenda
Marc Hassenzahl & Noam Tractinsky
Belonging and the politics of belonging
Nira Yuval-Davis
Post-feminism and popular culture
Angela McRobbie
Managing social norms for persuasive impact
Robert B. Cialdini, Linda J. Demaine, Brad J. Sagarin ,Daniel W. Barrett, Kelton Rhoads &Patricia L. Winter
Classic Archives
Black art and the burden of representation
Kobema Mercer
Discipline-Based Art Education: Approaching Art as a Subject of Study
W.Dwaine Greer
A perceptual approach to contemporary musical forms
Irène Deliège
Love and knowledge: Emotion in feminist epistemology
Alison M.Jaggar
Development of parasocial interaction relationships
Rebecca B. Rubin & Michael P.McHugh
Eighteenth‐century English society: Class struggle without class?
E.P.Thompson
Gatherer‐hunter to farmer: A social perspective
Barbara Bender
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Research with a lasting impact
It is important that we protect facts and formative research, now more than ever!
Research from our classic archives has been cited over 1,300,000 times in the past 5 years and has influenced over 11,000 government documents.
There are also more than 450 articles from Nobel Prize-winning authors featured in the classic archives.