Event 2 - Delegate List
Below is the list of delegates attending LitSciMed's Event 2
- Wahida Amin (The Royal Institution and the University of Salford), ‘Science and Poetry: The Case of Humphry Davy’
- Katherine Angell (Queen Mary College, University of London), ‘The Concept of Monstrosity in Nineteenth-Century Medicine and Popular Novels’
- Colin Baker (University of Durham), ‘The Rise and Role of Medical Journalism in Victorian Britain’
- Samantha Briggs (University of Leicester), ‘Marriage and Sexual Selection in Hardy and Eliot’
- Stephen Byrne (Oxford Brookes University), ‘Pathological Childhood and the Creation of the "Normal" Child in Early-Twentieth Century Britain, 1907-1948’
- Paul Craddock (London Consortium), ‘The Poetics of Bodily Transplant, 1702 – 1902’
- Michael Finn (University of Leeds), ‘The West Riding Lunatic Asylum and the making of the modern brain sciences in the nineteenth century’
- Josie Gill (University of Cambridge), ‘Race and Genetics in Contemporary British Fiction’
- Louise Jenkins (University of Leeds), ‘Competing instruments in 19th Century Midwifery: the forceps/vectis rivalry and its resolution’
- Chisomo Kalinga (King’s College, London), ‘Representations of HIV/AIDS: A Cultural History’
- Chris Millard (Queen Mary, University of London), 'The Emergence of "Parasuicide" in British Psychiatry and Society 1945-1980'
- Joanne Parsons (University of the West of England), ‘Men, Food and the Male Body in the Victorian Novel’
- Julie Peacock (Durham University), Disability and traumatic brain injury (TBI) in Britain: AD 1066-AD1600'
- Fiona Pettit (University of Exeter), 'Freak Shows and Medicine in Britain: 1870-1900'
- Elsa Richardson (Queen Mary), 'The Performance of female madness and the spectacle of self in France and Britain, 1880-1910'
- Hannah Ridge (University of Leeds), 'Medicine and Medicality in Thomas Middleton'
- Sophie Rudland (University of Warwick), ‘The reception of David Hartley's “Observations on Man” in Late Eighteenth-Century Women's Writing’
- Rachael Russell (CHSTM, 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 & Global Contexts (1878-1919)’
- Will Tattersdill (King’s College, London), ‘Science, Fiction and the late-Victorian Periodical Press’
- Cristiano Turbil (University of Kent), ‘The Evolution of Technology in Literature’
- Darren Wagner (University of York), ‘Exquisite Sense: Sexual Reproduction, Nervous Physiology, and the Culture of Sensibility in Britain, circa 1660-1780’