GENDER.ED Directory
Welcome to the GENDER.ED Directory. It brings together gender and sexualities studies researchers from across the University of Edinburgh, and gender and sexualities studies-related courses at undergraduate ordinary, honours, and postgraduate levels. With over 330 entries, the GENDER.ED Directory provides a comprehensive overview of the research and teaching being conducted at the University of Edinburgh. The Directory is designed to be used by prospective and current students and researchers, potential collaborators, and the wider community interested in gender and sexualities studies.
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Researchers found in the Directory range from our PhD and early career researchers to Professors. Within these profiles, you will find details of research interests, ongoing research projects, noteworthy gender and sexualities-related publications, and teaching activity. We hope these entries will enable researchers to connect with one another (across and beyond the institution), encouraging multidisciplinary collaboration.
Course entries on the Directory provide insight into the content taught in each course, the course’s credit level, and the year taken. Course entries provide a valuable resource to students at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels, assisting in navigating gender and sexualities studies pathways through their University programmes.
If you would like to be added to the Directory, please contact us at gender.ed@ed.ac.uk.
Directory entry type content
| Name | Details |
|---|---|
Feeling Tragic: Tragedy and Eighteenth-Century Histories of Emotion (PG) |
Why do we enjoy tragedy? What is pleasurable about watching suffering? Why are pity and fear good kinds of emotions to have? How should we relate to tragic heroes and punish villains? How should we feel in the theatre and what kinds of feelings do we take home? These are questions that plagued seventeenth- and eighteenth-century thinkers. The Restoration saw the reopening of the theatres and the revitalisation of the drama in England. |
Feminism Philosophy |
In this course we will examine philosophical approaches to feminism and feminist issues. Topics covered may include inequality in the work place and in family structures; global feminism; the relationships between lesbian and feminist philosophy; issues around sex and sexuality, including the objectification of the female body, pornography and prostitution. Credit Level: 10 Year taken: Year 3 Undergraduate SCQF credits: 20 Not running in 2025/26 |
Feminist Histories of Work from 1750 to WWII |
This course provides students with a comparative global history of feminist approaches to work, broadly defined, from 1750 to WWII. It starts from the premise that mainstream economic history has consistently failed to integrate gender into its conceptual frameworks and relied on male-centric, narrow definitions of value and skill. |
Fiction and Espionage (Postgraduate) |
The course addresses the modern history of contemporary concerns about secrecy and the surveillance state, terrorism and propaganda. Students will follow a broadly chronological survey from the end of the nineteenth century to the present day that explores how espionage fiction reflects the anxieties of modern society and how these anxieties change historically. The course will consider the relationship of fiction to history, and of 'popular' to 'literary' fiction. Specific issues will include gender, imperialism, technology and the role of political secrecy in everyday life. |
Fiction and Espionage (Undergraduate) |
The course addresses the modern history of contemporary concerns about secrecy and the surveillance state, terrorism and propaganda. Students will follow a broadly chronological survey from the end of the nineteenth century to the present day that explores how espionage fiction reflects the anxieties of modern society and how these anxieties change historically. The course will consider the relationship of fiction to history, and of 'popular' to 'literary' fiction. Specific issues will include gender, imperialism, technology and the role of political secrecy in everyday life. |
Fiction and the Gothic, 1840-1940 |
From Emily Brontė's Yorkshire to William Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha County, the Gothic, with its claustrophobic spaces, brooding landscapes, dark secrets, and ghostly visitations, is a privileged site for the negotiation of anxieties surrounding capitalism, class, gender, sexuality, nationality, race, imperialism, and crime. Looking mainly at novels and short stories from the British Isles, but also examining work from the United States, this course will consider what happened to Gothic fiction after the genre's first flowering in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. |
Filipa Melo Lopes |
Filipa Melo Lopes is a Lecturer in Social and Political Philosophy at the School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences. |
Film and Gender |
Film and Gender examines the ways in which gender is constructed and performed across a range of moving image forms and genres. The course will introduce students to a wide range of theoretical frameworks and help them to develop analytical approaches responsive to moving image texts. Teaching methods and assessment models are designed to work both for students with a background in film studies and gender studies; and for students without formal training in these fields who bring an interest in pursuing studies in gender and representation. |
Fiona Mackay |
Fiona Mackay's research addresses the extent to which global and local institutions of politics and governance may be designed, reformed, or challenged to address gender inequality, and to promote gender justice, equal participation, and women’s human rights. Her major research interests are: |
Fiona Mackintosh |
Fiona's general research interests are in 20th and 21st-century Latin American literature (prose and poetry), particularly of the Southern Cone. She also works on women’s writing, literary translation and comparative literature. |