
Books that Changed Humanity is a book club with a difference. Each month, the Humanities Research Centre hosts an expert from one of a variety of disciplines, who will introduce and lead the discussion of a major historical text. All of these texts, which are drawn from a variety of cultural traditions, has had a formative influence on society and humanity. The series aims to highlight and revisit those books which have informed the way we understand ourselves, both individually and collectively, as human beings.
The series brings together readers from all backgrounds and vocations. Individuals from beyond and within the university community are warmly invited to come, listen, and share their thoughts about some great works of literature.
Past discussions are listed below.
Contact
- HAL Administration
Past Events
Books that Changed Humanity: “Govardhanram Tripathi’s Saraswatichandra”
Dr Meera Ashar
Published in serialised form between 1887 and 1901, Govardhanram Tripathi’s four-volume text was written during a transformative period in colonial…
Books that Changed Humanity: Dick Hebdige's Subculture: The Meaning of Style
Prof Chris McAuliffe
Youth culture, pop art, cultural studies, style – Dick Hebdige's Subculture: The Meaning of Style was an influential early text in the march…
Books that Changed Humanity: J. M. Coetzee's Disgrace
Dr Ibrahim Abraham (Humanities Research Centre)
Dr Ibrahim Abraham explores this controversial masterpiece of post-apartheid South Africa at the turn of the twenty-first century. Disgrace is the…