contemporary front doors leicester

contemporary front doors leicester

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Contemporary Front Doors Leicester

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Hallam Fields - Birstall Show Home open now, Daily, 11am - 5pm off Loughborough RoadBirstallLeicestershireLE4 3NF Call Christine Carr or Jill Gibson on 0116 267 7762 Plots complete and ready to viewThat’s Jelson thinkingClick here for more informationHallam Fields in Birstall, Leicestershire has created a new community in this North Leicester suburb with modern, stylish homes reflecting local architecture while successfully establishing its own unique identity. Innovative and offering a wide variety of property styles, Hallam Fields includes a thoughtfully designed road layout that enhances pedestrian safety, a network of cycle ways and it’s within walking distance to the Birstall Park and Ride service into Leicester. 4 bedroom mews homes 4 bedroom semi-detached homes 3 and 4 bedroom detached homes Handy for the A46, Birstall is well placed for commuting to Nottingham with the M1 and Leicester city centre just a few miles away. What’s more you’re never far away from Leicestershire’s beautiful rolling countryside that takes in the pretty villages of Queniborough, Hungarton and Great Dalby.




And as with all our homes you’ll find them great value for money with the following benefits: Carpets and floor coverings included Select kitchen appliances included Traditional build quality with solid internal walls Energy-efficient heating and double glazing You'll get all the latest from Jelson including: Access to download all of our development brochures Latest news on launches, open days and special offers Email alerts with new homes matching your requirements HALLAM FIELDS HAS A NEW SHOW HOME! Hot on the heels of its last show home, Jelson’s Hallam Fields development in Birstall is pleased to have opened its latest property…and it’s another show stopper! The brand-new Linnet home boasts impressive internal and external features to help new property owners picture themselves living at this popular address. Step foot through the front door and inside, the hallway leads into a spacious lounge and combined dining room which has been dressed in a contemporary olive, brown and gold colour scheme, and with two separate windows and French doors within this room there is an abundance of natural light, making it feel light and airy.




Our range of doors with modo features and glass elementsOur range of doors with contemporary features and glass elementsOur range of doors with traditional features and glass elements Our police-approved, 'secured by design' anti-bump, anti- drill, anti-pick and anti-snap Kite-marked cylinder lock barrels are fitted as standard to every Apeer door. Did you know that much like your washing machine or your fridge freezer, your front door can be energy rated too? Our low-maintenance, highly robust colour finish is designed to stay looking good year after year, both on the outside and on the Inside. Protecting what matters the most, there's no compromise with an Apeer composite.only in current section BA Hons (Sheffield), MA (Leeds), PhD (Leeds) Reader in Modern and Contemporary Literature T: +44 (0) 116 252 2634 Dr Stewart’s research interests include the twentieth-century and contemporary novel, war writing and life-writing. She has particular interests in the representation of the First and Second World Wars (including the Holocaust) in both fiction and autobiography.




Her book Women’s Autobiography: War and Trauma (Palgrave, 2003) considered the work of writers including Vera Brittain, Virginia Woolf and Anne Frank from the perspective of trauma theory. Narratives of Memory: British Writing of the 1940s (Palgrave, 2006) examined a range of novels and short fiction from this decade, by authors such as Elizabeth Bowen, Graham Greene and Patrick Hamilton, focusing in particular on their depiction of the processes of memory.The Second World War in Contemporary British Fiction: Secret Histories (Edinburgh University Press, 2011) explored the use of secrecy as both a trope and a narrative device in recent fictional treatments of the war. Her new book, Crime Writing in Interwar Britain: Fact and Fiction in the Golden Age, examines the relationship between true-crime narratives and detective fiction in the mid-twentieth century, with a focus on the writing of Dorothy L. Sayers, Marie Belloc Lowndes and F. Tennyson Jesse. It will be published in 2017 by Cambridge University Press.




Dr Stewart contributed to the Radio 3 documentary 'I Have Been Here Before', first broadcast in September 2014, about the legacy of the interwar time theorist JW Dunne, presented by Francis Spufford and produced by Mark Burman. You can download the podcast here Dr Stewart is an member of WAR-Net, a network on war and representation, and also of the Stanley Burton Centre for Holocaust Studies , at the University of Leicester. Her work on middlebrow writing has been fostered by her involvement in the AHRC Middlebrow Network and The Space Between Society. She also belongs to the Contemporary Women's Writing Association. She serves on the editorial board for the monograph series 'Literary Texts and the Popular Marketplace', published by Pickering & Chatto. Dr Stewart would welcome inquiries from prospective research students interested in working in the following areas: Writing from and about the First and Second World Wars Non-canonical Authors, the ‘Middlebrow’, and Detective Fiction




EN3030: Victorian to Modern: Literature 1870-1945 (convenor) EN3040: Post War to Postmodern: Literature 1945 - present day EN3141: Representing the Holocaust EN3169: Detective Fiction from Sherlock Holmes to the Second World War In 2016-17, Dr Stewart is convening the MA Modern Literature/MA Modern Literature with Creative Writing. 'Mid-Twentieth-Century Stories', in Ann-Marie Einhaus, ed, The Cambridge Companion to the English Short Story. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016, pp.115-27 ' "A bomb made of words": Letter-Writing in Fictions of the Second World War' in Petra Rau, ed, Long Shadows: The Second World War in British Fiction and Film. Illinois: Northwestern University Press, 2016, pp.221-240. 'The Second World War in Contemporary Women's Fiction: Revisiting the Home Front' , Contemporary Women's Writing, 9.3 (2015) 416-432 'Representing Nazi Crimes in post-Second World War life writing', Textual Practice, 29.7 (2015) 1131-1330




'Defining Detective Fiction in Interwar Britain', The Space Between: Literature and Culture, 1914-1945, 9.1 (2013) 101-18 'The Second World War in British Drama since 1968' in Adam Piette and Mark Rawlinson, eds, The Edinburgh Companion to Twentieth-Century British and American War Literature. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2012. 'The Woman Writer in Mid-Twentieth Century Middlebrow Fiction: Conceptualizing Creativity'. Journal of Modern Literature, 35.1 (2011) 21-36 'True-Crime Narratives and Detective Fiction in Interwar Britain'. Clues: A Journal of Detection 29.2 (2011) 16-29 The Second World War in Contemporary British Fiction: Secret Histories. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2011 Is this a new chapter for our literary economy? LGBT+ research seminar to explore medieval and military sexualities Celebrate work of research degree graduates at Doctoral Inaugural Lecutures New exhibition inspired by iconic Leicester playwright Joe Orton to open its doors

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