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The next conference of the British Society for Literature and Science will be held at the University of Reading from Friday 27 to Sunday 29 March, 2009.

Keynote speakers will include Dame Gillian Beer (King Edward VII Professor Emerita at Cambridge University), Patrick Parrinder (Professor of English Literature at Reading University), and Simon Conway Morris (Professor of Evolutionary Palaeobiology at Cambridge University).

The call for papers will be announced this autumn. If you have any preliminary enquiries about the conference, please email the conference organiser Dr. John Holmes.

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King’s College London and the British Museum are delighted to announce the launch in September 2008 of their new MA in Eighteenth-Century Studies.

This is an interdisciplinary degree drawing upon the skills of scholars from eight departments in King’s School of Humanities, alongside those of senior staff at the Museum.

Further information is available on the Kings College website. Inquiries may be made to the convener of the new MA, Dr Clare Brant.

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The draft programme for the conference has just been published. The conference runs Thursday to Saturday morning with three plenaries, dinner on Thursday evening and a banquet on Friday.

Delegates can register online now.

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We’re delighted to announce our new reviews section here on the BSLS site. To open with we have reviews of works by George Levine, Robert Crawford and Pamela Gossin. In the future we plan to add reviews of a range of texts and events concerned with science and literature provided by members of the society.

Look out for further details of works available for review soon.

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Third Annual ‘Science & the Public’ Conference, University of Manchester, 21st and 22nd, June 2008

The past twenty years of scholarly study has demonstrated that science communication is a much more complex process than merely publishing in scientific journals and attending scientific meetings. Today the sciences are linked to society through many different channels of communication. The public interfaces with science during controversies that involve scientists as well as journalists, politicians and the citizenry as a whole. This intersection of science and the public raises many questions about the motivations of, and constraints on, actors involved in producing information about science for non-professional audiences. It also raises some fascinating questions about the nature, contexts and goals of the public communication of science from both a contemporary and historic perspective. This conference aims to bring together the wide ranging strands of academia that consider science as it intersects with non-scientific cultures.

Possible topics may include:

  • Patients and publics in health services
  • Notions of expertise in the public
  • Public science and science policy
  • Technological development and the public
  • Science communication theory in practice
  • News and entertainment media
  • Science on the internet
  • Science, technology and medicine in museums
  • Public interest and ‘the public interest’

We would particularly like to encourage those taking a critical approach to studying the public communication of technology and/or medicine to submit abstracts. The conference organizers also encourage full panel submissions and roundtable sessions on all topics related to the social, cultural, political, and ethical issues surrounding science & the public.

Panel proposals should include a panel abstract and individual abstracts for each of the papers on the panel as well as contact information (name, affiliation, email) of the presider (moderator) and all panel members. Individual paper proposals for a 20-minute presentation should submit an abstract (no longer than 300 words). Roundtable proposals should be a single abstract with names and contact information for all presenters.

All submissions should be emailed to scienceandpublic@googlemail.com by 14th March 2008. Please send enquires to this address as well.

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Professor Dame Gillian Beer, Honorary President of the BSLS, will deliver the Romanes Lecture at 5.45 p.m. on Thursday, 8 November 2007 in the Sheldonian Theatre, Oxford. Her lecture is entitled ‘Darwin and the Consciousness of Others’. The lecture is free to attend and open to all.

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The call for papers for our annual conference is now available.

The conference will be held in Keele Hall, a mid-nineteenth century manor now part of Keele University, set in its own magnificent gardens and park.

Events planned for the conference include readings by two contemporary poets. Deryn Rees-Jones, recently voted one of the 20 best poets of the Next Generation by the Poetry Book Society. Deryn is also a Senior Lecturer at the University of Liverpool; she has published Quiver (Seren, 2004), has been anthologised in A Quark for Mr Mark: 101 Poems about Science (Faber) and A Wild Reckoning: Poems Provoked by Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring (Gulbenkian Foundation). She is the co-founder of LUPAS, a network which aims to bring together scientists and poets to discuss ways in which we can help each other to think creatively.

Helen Clare won the First Prize in the London Writers Competition 2002; began her career as a Biology teacher and now teaches Creative Writing at the University of Lancaster. She is the author of Mollusc (2004).

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BSLS member Alice Bell writes to say:

We’ve just put together a draft programme for the 2007 “Science and the Public�? conference (Imperial College London, 19th May). It’s going to be diverse and exciting day.

Registration is now open, registration details and the draft programme are available from the Science and Communication Group site at Imperial College.

Sessions include:
Read the rest of this entry »

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We are very glad to announce that Chris McCabe will be joining us to talk on Saturday. Chris is a research scientist, a geneticist and an author of several novels most recently Dirty Little Lies, under the name ‘John Macken’. He describes research he undertook for this novel in his recent Independent article ‘Hi-tech labs at the crime scene’.

Chris has lectured across the world for the British Council on connections between literature and science, and closer to home he spoke recently at the British Academy ‘Festival of Science’ at the University of East Anglia. A successful novelist Chris writes for the national press and has chaired panels at a range of conferences, including recently at the ICA in London.

All this and he’s a working scientist and teacher too.

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ACUME2 is an EU funded centre, based at the university of Bologna, with partners across Europe. Its broad aim is to co-ordinate and develop new university curricula across European universities, curricula which explore and work in the interfaces between the sciences and humanities. As such it seems like an interesting link and a creative challenge of sorts to the work that members of the BSLS pursue.

ACUME2 is organised into five “subprojects�?:

Future events are planned and we’ll be working to discover whether the BSLS can work with scholars and researchers from ACUME2

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