Event 6 - Delegate List
Below is the list of delegates who attended LitSciMed's Event 6
- Will Abberley (Exeter), ‘Language Under the Microscope: Science and Philology in English Fiction, 1850-1914’
- Wahida Amin (Salford/Royal Institution), ‘Humphry Davy, Poetry and Romanticism’
- Katherine Angell (Queen Mary, London), ‘The Concept of Monstrosity in Nineteenth-Century Medicine and Popular Novels’
- Armida Azada (Roehampton), ‘Reproduction and the Anxieties of Childbirth in the Writings of Female Novelists of the English Romantic Period, 1780-1830’
- Fran Bigman (Cambridge), ‘Abortion in British Literature and Film’
- Susie Christensen (King’s College, London), ‘Self Representation in Modernist Literature and late nineteenth and early twentieth century neurology and psychological medicine’
- Paul Craddock (London Consortium), ‘The Poetics of Bodily Transplant, 1702 – 1902’
- Michael Finn (Leeds), ‘The West Riding Lunatic Asylum and the making of the modern brain sciences in the nineteenth century’
- Josie Gill (Cambridge), ‘Race and Genetics in Contemporary British Fiction’
- Lina Hakim (London Consortium), ‘Scientific Playthings’
- Cassandra McLuckie (Leeds), ‘The role of pleasure(s) and other affects in 'unsafe' and safer sex practices’
- Joanne Parsons (University of the West of England), ‘Men, Food and the Male Body in the Victorian Novel’
- Jessica Roberts (Salford), ‘Vitalism in the Early Nineteenth Century Periodical Press’
- Rachel Russell (Manchester), ‘Nausea and Vomiting: A History of Signs, Symptoms and Sickness in Nineteenth-Century Britain’
- Will Tattersdill (King’s College London), ‘Science, Fiction and the late-Victorian Periodical Press’
- Richard Thomas (Manchester Metropolitan University), ‘“The Limits of Imagination” - William Godwin and Mary Shelley, post-revolutionary revision or retreat?’
- Darren Wagner (York), ‘Exquisite Sense: Sexual Reproduction, Nervous Physiology, and the Culture of Sensibility in Britain, circa 1660-1780’
- Joanna Wargen (Westminster), ‘‘Subjugated Scientific Knowledges: Detecting the Nineteenth-Century Female Scientist’
- Joanna Wharton (York), ‘Women writers and theories of mind in the Romantic period’
