James Raven
James Russell Raven LittD FBA FSA (born 13 April 1959) is a British scholar specialising in the history of the book. His published works include The English Novel 1770–1829 (2000), What is the History of the Book? (2018)[1] and The Oxford Illustrated History of the Book (2020).[2] As of 2024, he was Professor Emeritus of history at the University of Essex, a Life Fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge, and a Professor in the Humanities at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU).[3] Education and careerBorn in Colchester, James Raven attended The Gilberd School in the town.[4] He was the first in his family to go to university.[5] In 1985 he became a Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge. In 1989 he was named Munby Fellow in Bibliography (named for A. N. L. Munby) in the university.[6][7] In 1990, he moved to Magdalene College, Cambridge to be a Fellow and Director of Studies in History. In 1996 he was appointed university lecturer in the Modern History faculty at the University of Oxford and a fellow and tutor of Mansfield College, Oxford.[3] In 2000, he was appointed Reader in Social and Cultural History at Oxford. In 2004, he was appointed Professor of Modern History at the University of Essex.[3] In 2012, he returned to Magdalene College as Senior Research Fellow, where he also became a Life Fellow.[3] He was elected to the British Academy in 2019, and the Royal Historical Society in 2000.[3] ScholarshipRaven's scholarly work examines British cultural history, especially book history of the eighteenth century. Raven gave the Panizzi Lectures in 2010 on "London Booksites: Places of Printing and Publication before 1800". The lectures have been described as groundbreaking in their approach to various histories of place and space in publishing and book selling.[8] Selected publications
Organizational affiliationsRaven was President of the Bibliographical Society (2020–2022). He is currently Director of the Cambridge Project for the Book Trust and Director of the Centre for Bibliographical History and a member of the Human Rights Centre at the University of Essex.[16] He joined the English-Speaking Union in 1976. He has been president of the Colchester Branch of the ESU since 1990,[17] and has served as a national governor (2000–2006 and since 2012), deputy chairman, and since 2019, chairman in succession to Lord Paul Boateng. He chairs the Lindemann Trust which awards annual fellowships in the sciences for postdoctoral research in the US by British and Commonwealth citizens. He was a trustee of Marks Hall, Essex, from 2010 to 2020,[18] and of the Friends of St Andrew's Fingringhoe. He is a member of the Pilgrims and the Mid-Atlantic Club.[19] See alsoReferences
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