Research output per year
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I study interactions and overlaps between literature and science, focusing on the long nineteenth century. Within this area my specialisms are the literature of the earth sciences, scientific writing for general readers, and turn-of-the-century adventure novels.
My doctoral research explored how and why ‘dinosaur’ became a household word in Britain and the United States at the end of the nineteenth century. Many fossil dinosaurs were excavated in the US during this period, and I argued that their transatlantic fame and cultural relevance were built up in the publications of various popular writers. Using modern literary forms, these opinionated authors incorporated dinosaurs into saleable narratives of romance, progress, and imperial expansion—often undermining the conclusions of established scientists. As such, I contested, British and American authors outside the scientific elite played a major and surprising role in making these prehistoric animals iconic. My book on this subject is currently in the works.
Currently I am examining transatlantic geoscience between the 1860s and the 1920s, focusing on one of the stranger sides of its print culture. This period was characterised by fierce disputes about the planet's deep history, at the centre and at the fringes of science and everywhere in between. What did evolution mean for religion? Were the continents mobile? Was Atlantis real? Was the earth hollow? There existed no standard model of geoscientific authorship during these decades, leaving issues like disciplinary authority, literary style, and the relevance of religion up for debate. I will clarify how contemporaries navigated this terrain by analysing three ‘borderline’ genres of literature: lost-world fiction, religious geohistories, and eccentric geological monographs.
I joined the Department in September 2020 as a Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellow. Previously, I took all my degrees at the University of Leicester, including an MA in Victorian Studies. As a PhD student I was also jointly part of the doctoral cohort of the Natural History Museum, London. During my undergraduate degree I studied on an Erasmus Programme year abroad at the University of Turin.
Doctor of Philosophy, Reshaping Dinosaurs: The Popularisation of Palaeontology in Anglo-American Culture, 1877-1921, University of Leicester
1 Sept 2015 → 12 Apr 2019
Award Date: 12 Apr 2019
Master of Arts, Victorian Studies, University of Leicester
1 Sept 2014 → 1 Sept 2015
Award Date: 1 Sept 2015
Bachelor of Arts, English with a Year Abroad
1 Sept 2010 → 18 Jul 2014
Award Date: 18 Jul 2014
University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
28 Oct 2020 → 28 Oct 2024
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Research output: Book/Report › Anthology
1/09/20 → 14/09/23
Project: Research