Tom White Lecturer in English Sheffield College / CityLit Commons username: @tomwhite Twitter handle: ___TomWhite___ Following 8 members View ProfileActivitySites 1CORE deposits 10Following 8Followers 4Groups 10DiscussionsDocs Academic InterestsCritical theoryEarly modern literatureEnvironmental humanitiesManuscript studiesMedia archaeologyMedieval literature Commons GroupsHCAcademic Job Market Support NetworkMLACLCS MedievalCLCS Renaissance and Early ModernLLC ChaucerLLC Middle EnglishTC Digital HumanitiesTC Ecocriticism and Environmental HumanitiesTM Bibliography and Scholarly EditingTM Literary and Cultural TheoryTM Literary Criticism Recent Commons Activity deposited A Working History of Digital … deposited The Affordances of the Book: … deposited National Philology, Imperial … AboutMy research and teaching interests range broadly across medieval and early modern literature, critical theory, visual culture, and the history of media and technology. I was a postdoctoral fellow in the Faculty of English, University of Oxford (2017-21) and Lecturer in English at Mansfield College (2021-22). I currently work at Sheffield College and as a tutor for CityLit and the Workers’ Educational Association. I was contributing editor of the Glasgow Review of Books and have contributed to MAP Magazine, The Trouble, the LRB and the LRB Blog, the History Workshop Blog, and the British Library Discovering Literature resource. EducationPhD — Birkbeck, University of London. 2012-16 MPhil — University of Glasgow. 2010-12 MA — University of Glasgow. 2006-10 Work Shared in COREArticlesA Working History of Digital Zoom, Medieval to ModernThe Affordances of the Book: A Case Study of the Glastonbury Miscellany (Trinity College, Cambridge, MS O.9.38) and its Digital RemediationNational Philology, Imperial Hierarchies, and the ‘Defective’ Book of Sir John MandevilleClimate, Power, and Possible Futures, from the Banks of the Humber EstuaryConference papersClimate, Power and Possible Futures on the Banks of the Humber EstuaryThe Future Demands Work: William Morris’s utopian medievalism in an age of precarity, flexibility, and automationDust and the Digital ArchivePaper and Digital Ecologies in the Glastonbury Miscellany (Cambridge, Trinity College MS O.9.38) Written in Trees“Systems of Fabric” Blog Posts