Event 3 - Delegate List
Below is the list of delegates attending LitSciMed's Event 2
- William Abberley (University of Exeter), ‘Science and Philology 1850-1914’
- Wahida Amin (University of Salford/ Royal Institution), ‘Science and Poetry: The Case of Humphry Davy’
- Armida Azada (Roehampton University), ‘Reproduction and the Anxieties of Childbirth in the Writings of Female Novelists of the English Romantic Period, 1780-1830’
- Paul Craddock (London Consortium), ‘The Poetics of Bodily Transplantation, 1702-1902’
- Rebecca Crowley (Leeds Metropolitan University), 'Rewriting the Hosting of the Ghost: Reconfigurations of “Madness” in Contemporary Fiction’
- Charlotte Dale (University of Manchester), ‘An enquiry into Nursing care provision during the period of the Anglo-Boer war 1899-1902’
- Roo Gunzi (Courtauld Institute), ‘Constructing Place and Culture: Stanhope Forbes Newlyn, 1885-1918’
- Lina Hakim (London Consortium), ‘Scientific Playthings’
- Jessica Howell (KCL, Research Fellow)
- Victoria Le Fevre (Royal Holloway), 'Fringes and Feathers: Representations of the London Factory Girl, 1880-1910’
- Joanne Parsons (University of the West of England), ‘Men, Food and the Male body in the Victorian Novel’
- Lisa Ann Robertson (University of Alberta), ‘The Embodied Imagination: British Romantic Cognitive Science’
- Fanny Robles (University of Toulouse), ‘From Zoology to Ethnology: Taxonomies, Exhibition, and Mise en Scene in Victorian Literature and Iconography’
- Aaron Rosenberg (Cornell University), ‘An Art of the Nerves: Modernist Operations on the Lyric’
- Rachel Russell (University of Manchester), ‘Nausea and Vomiting: A History of Signs, Symptoms and Sickness in Nineteenth-Century Britain’
- Hazel Sheeky (University of Newcastle/ National Maritime Museum), ‘Children's Literature and the Culture of Exploration’
- William Tattersdill (King’s College, London), ‘Science, Fiction and the Late-Victorian Periodical’
- Darren Wagner (University of York), 'Human Generation: A Cultural History of Sexual Reproduction, Body Œeconomies, and Sensibility Literature in Britain, circa 1660-1780’
- Joanna Wargen (University of Westminster), ‘Subjugated Scientific Knowledges: Detecting the Nineteenth-Century Female Scientist’
- Daisy Hildyard (Queen Mary University), ‘Some of the Royal Society's “failed projects”, 1670-1700’
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