Event 4 - Delegate List
Below is the list of delegates attending LitSciMed's Event 4
- 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’
- Mark Blacklock (Birkbeck College, London), ‘The Fairyland of Geometry: A Cultural History of Higher Space, 1869-1909’
- Alice Brumby (University of Huddersfield), ‘The influence of the modernist movement on mental health care, 1889- 1929, Focussing upon The West Riding Pauper Lunatic Asylums’
- Susie Christensen (King's College London), ‘An examination of modernist life-writing alongside late nineteenth and early twentieth century neurology and psychological medicine’
- Paul Craddock (London Consortium), ‘The Poetics of Bodily Transplantation, 1702-1902’
- Donald Gibson (University of St Andrews), ‘A Study of Science in Poetry in the Work of Five Poets: Hugh MacDiarmid, Judith Wright, Miroslav Holub, Edwin Morgan, and JH Prynne’
- Josie Gill (University of Cambridge), ‘Race and Genetics in Contemporary British Fiction’
- Lina Hakim (London Consortium), ‘Scientific Playthings’
-
Russell Jones (University of Edinburgh), 'The Science Fiction Poetry of EdwinMorgan'
- Barbara Kennedy (University of Sussex), 'Music and healing in the early modern period'
- Ruselle Meade (University of Manchester), 'Translation of a Doscipline: Rankine's 'engineering science' in Meiji-era Japan'
- Vicky Paine (University of St Andrews), ‘Contemporary Poets' Responses to Science’
- Jessica Roberts (University of Salford), ‘Vitality in the Early-Nineteenth Century Periodical Press’
- Rachel Russell (University of Manchester), ‘Nausea and Vomiting: A History of Signs, Symptoms and Sickness in Nineteenth-Century Britain’
- Jamie Stark (University of Leeds), ‘Industrial Illness in Cultural History: "la maladie de Bradford" in Local, National and Global Settings (1878-1919)’
- 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’
- Joanna Wharton (University of York), 'Women writers and the science of mind in the Romantic period’
