Month: January 2009

  • CFP: Cultivating Empire: Exploration, Science and Literature

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    Cultivating Empire: Exploration, Science and Literature An Interdisciplinary Conference featuring the work and influence of Sir Joseph Banks Lincoln, UK, 17-18 April 2009 Featured speakers: Richard Holmes (biographer of Shelley and Coleridge and author of The Age of Wonder); G.S. Rousseau (historian of medicine: co-author of Gout: the Patrician Malady); Stephen Daniels (geographer: biographer of…

  • BSLS 2009 programme now available

    A provisional programme for our March 2009 conference at the University of Reading is now available along with information for delegates to register and book accommodation.

  • Jacyna, L. S., Medicine and Modernism

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    L. S. Jacyna, Medicine and Modernism: A Biography of Sir Henry Head, Science and Culture in the Nineteenth Century series, 6 (London: Pickering and Chatto, 2008) 368 pp. £60 hb. ISBN 13: 978-1-85-196907-4 Students of the humanities and the sciences (and those who dare to cross the boundaries) are very familiar with the arguments regarding…

  • Glendening, John, The Evolutionary Imagination in Late-Victorian Novels

    John Glendening, The Evolutionary Imagination in Late-Victorian Novels: An Entangled Bank (Aldershot, Ashgate, 2007), 225pp, £55.00 hb, ISBN 9780754658214 (BSLS members receive a discount on all Ashgate titles) In his exploration of late-Victorian fiction’s engagement with the complexities and confusions produced by Darwinism, John Glendening focuses on novels which critics have long acknowledged to be influenced…

  • Sleigh, Charlotte, Six Legs Better

    Charlotte Sleigh, Six Legs Better: A Cultural History of Myrmecology (Baltimore, Johns Hopkins UP, 2007). 302 pp.  £36.50 hb. ISBN 0-8018-8445-4. We might be surprised to discover how many of our beliefs about the mind, society, economics and communication are indebted to research on ants, through the field of myrmecology. Charlotte Sleigh’s Six Legs Better:…

  • Armstrong, Philip, What Animals Mean in the Fiction of Modernity

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    Philip Armstrong, What Animals Mean in the Fiction of Modernity (London: Routledge, 2007). 256 pp. £ 60 hb, £18.99 pb. ISBN 978-0415358385 (hb)/978-0415358392 (pb) A book using the terms ‘animal’ and ‘modernity’ in its title almost intrinsically assumes the burden of evolution. In What Animals Mean in the Fiction of Modernity, Philip Armstrong suggests that…

  • Darwin in the Literary World (public lecture)

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    Rebecca Stott Darwin in the Literary World – one of six of the annual Cambridge Darwin Lecture Series Lady Mitchell Hall, West Road, at 5.30-6.30 on Friday 6th Feb Within months of Darwin’s publication of The Origin of Species, novelists, poets and artists began to turn Darwin’s ideas into art. That they have continued to…

  • George, Samantha, Botany, Sexuality and Women’s Writing

    Samantha George, Botany, Sexuality and Women’s Writing, 1760-1830: From Modest Shoot to Forward Plant (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2007). 288 pp. £55 hb. ISBN 978-0719076978. Sam George’s Botany, Sexuality and Women’s Writing 1760-1830 picks up where the work of science and gender pioneers like Barbara T. Gates, Anne Shteir and Londa Schiebinger left off; but rather…

  • Mahood, M. M., The Poet as Botanist

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    M. M. Mahood, The Poet as Botanist (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008). xi + 269 pp; 8 illustrations. £50.00 hb.  ISBN 978-0521862363. This eminently readable labour of love offers some of the serendipity of an anthology,  but with a structured critical focus.  The author is Emeritus Professor of English Literature at the University of Kent but…

  • Roberts, Adam, The History of Science Fiction

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    Adam Roberts, The History of Science Fiction (Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007). xvii + 368 pp. £15.99 pb. ISBN 978-0230546912. Ever since the definitive Clute and Nicholls Encyclopedia of Science Fiction appeared some fifteen years ago, there has been a need—now amply supplied by Adam Roberts—for a new narrative history of the genre…

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