Elizabeth Rawlinson-Mills
- DMB - Room 3S4 Location
- emm48@cam.ac.uk Email
- +44 (0)1223 7 67525 Telephone
Qualifications
- MA English Clare College (University of Cambridge)
- PGCE Secondary English (University of Cambridge)
- MEd Researching Practice (University of Cambridge)
- MA English Literature (University of Bristol)
- PhD English (University College London)
Memberships/Professional Bodies
- NATE
- UKLA
- Chartered College of Teaching
Personal profile
My work is primarily around poetry and poetry education. My recent publications demonstrate the lasting impact of school poetry teaching on beginning English teachers, and the implications for their students, and my current project takes forward key themes from this work (creativity, playfulness, autonomy and community) as principles for both poetry pedagogy and research design. As well as having an immediate impact on classroom practice, this research proposes a framework for noticing, recording and evaluating qualities of the aesthetic/poetic encounter – a problem still unsolved by academic research, but vital for assessments of poetry pedagogy that go beyond what is easy to measure and instead capture the richness of a truly authentic classroom experience.
My work on poetry in education and society develops my ongoing literary scholarship, which is also concerned with poetry in the lives of ordinary people, its role in upholding as well as describing systems of oppression, and its use for and by those who would resist such systems. My forthcoming monograph, Poets, the Press, and the South African War: imperial masculinities at the fin-de-siecle (Edinburgh University Press, September 2026) centres the voices of poets usually hidden from scholarly scrutiny. The book draws on extensive international archive research into popular poetry of the South African War, with a particular focus on poems published in British newspapers. I present a wealth of new material which disrupts the traditional picture of literary endeavour at the turn of the century, making a case for the range and value of a form of poetry which one newspaper commentator at the time called ‘dismal twaddle’ – an assessment which has been too readily accepted by literary historians. Meanwhile the poems I have amassed constitute a rich and democratic historical source for complicating accounts of British responses to the South African War, to debates about imperial and military masculinities and British national character, and to imperial politics more generally. My doctoral thesis in which I began this work was awarded an honourable mention in the Research Society for Victorian Periodicals Sally Mitchell Dissertation Prize 2022<https://rs4vp.org/awards/mitchell-dissertation-prize/>.
My primary material is almost exclusively by white English-language poets working in a colonial context, but my work on it nonetheless exemplifies my commitment to anti-racist and decolonising scholarship. My 2025 article ‘This Racial War’ exposes the colonial construction of whiteness in poetry, showing how the formation and defence of the concept of race is fundamental to structures that continue to govern society, education and scholarship.
I am Academic Director of Pegasus Scholars, Robinson College’s bridging programme for incoming undergraduates from disadvantaged backgrounds. I am also the Faculty of Education's representative on the University Steering Group responsible for a partnership with the BBC on the National Short Story Award<https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0079gw3> and Young Writers' Award<https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/Tj4MhhtbzJC2Xf6pgpb09R/2021-bbc-young-writers-award-shortlist-announced>.
Academic Area/Links
- Curriculum, Pedagogy and Professional Learning
- Arts and Creativities
Undergraduate
- Education Tripos - Education English Drama and the Arts strand
- Part 1B International Literatures and Cultures
- Part 2 Shakespeare
- English Tripos
- College seminars in Practical Criticism and Critical Practice and Shakespeare
- Supervision of Part 1 and Part 2 dissertations
Postgraduate
- PGCE Secondary English
- PGCE Secondary Professional Studies
- MEd Researching Practice
- PhD / EdD supervision
Prospective doctoral applications
I welcome enquiries from prospective doctoral students in the following areas:
- Aspects of secondary English education
- Poetry (in teaching and learning and in the world)
- Literature society and popular cultures
Research Topics
- Poetry and education
- Literature, society and popular culture
- Colonial/postcolonial studies
- War literature
Current Research Project(s)
- Poets, the Press, and the South African War: imperial masculinities at the fin-de-siecle (monograph forthcoming, Edinburgh University Press, September 2026)
- Time for a Poem: taking playful pedagogies seriously in a stressed-out system: parallel projects running with English teachers and English ITE students.
Principal and Recent Publications
Rawlinson-Mills, E. (2025). ‘This Racial War’: Constructing Transnational Whiteness in the
Newspaper Poems of the South African War, 1899–1902. Journal of War & Culture Studies, 1–23. https://doi.org/10.1080/17526272.2025.2511489
Binney, A., and Rawlinson-Mills, E. (2025b). ‘Curating the line’: the impact on trainee English
teachers of belonging to a peer-run writing group during the pre-service year. English in Education 59(3), 235–253. https://doi.org/10.1080/04250494.2025.2514848
Binney, A. and Rawlinson-Mills, E. (2025a). ‘Reluctantly connected’: beginning teachers’ identities as teacher-writers. Teaching English 37 (Spring 2025), 24-28.
Rawlinson-Mills, E., and Binney, A. (2024). ‘Inhabit the poem first’: authentic encounters with
poetry in the English ITE year. Teacher Development 29(4), 710–726. https://doi.org/10.1080/13664530.2024.2440105
Rawlinson-Mills E. (2022). Written with their blood: Contemplating death in the newspaper poems of 1899-1902. Review of English Studies 73 (311) pp. 762-781. DOI:10.1093/res/hgab105 This essay was runner up in the Review of English Studies postgraduate essay prize 2021.
Rawlinson-Mills E. (2018) Soldiers of the Queen: Reading newspaper fiction of the South African War (1899-1902). Journal of Victorian Culture 23 (3) pp. 381-404.
Rawlinson-Mills E. (2018). “That far-off Southern tomb”: visions and versions of South Africa in British newspaper poetry of the South African War (1899-1902). In Franchi B. and Mutlu E. (Eds.). Crossing Borders in Victorian Travel: spaces nations and empires. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars.