Catherine E. Karkov is professor of History of Art and head of the School of Fine Art, History of Art and Cultural Studies at the University of Leeds.
Her first concerns Anglo-Saxon art; the second one on the relation between text and image in Anglo-Saxon literature; and the third on how Anglo-Saxon writers imagined England as a place, how Anglo-Saxon England is understood by modern audiences, and the "fraught history of 'Anglo-Saxon' studies".
[1] Her second book focuses on MS Junius 11, she argues that a complete edition of the manuscript leaves out the many illustrations at its own peril; these illustrations occur at dramatic moments in the four poems and help elucidate the allegorical import of many passages.
[2] As editor of Slow Scholarship, Karkov highlighted the ways in which research quality is measured in the UK (via the Research Excellence Framework), over work, publishing models which reward research that aligns with the status quo, an increasingly precarious workforce in Higher Education all contribute to making new and innovative scholarship difficult.
[3] The collection developed theories from the Slow Food movement to propose ways of creating thoughtful, new scholarship.