I’m pleased to say The Conversation have published my article on “Alice’s Adventures in Cyberspace” in which I briefly reflect on American McGee’s Alice: Madness Returns and its most recent sequel Alice: Otherlands. Give it a read! It includes a video snippet of McGee’s new work.
EDIT: The Lecture is now available online – click here!
As it’s (almost!) Halloween Ashmolean LIVEFriday turns into DEADFriday this week – with all sorts of Halloween themed shenanigans in store. Next to wandering ghosts, face painting and a bar there will also be a series of public lectures & gallery pop up talks, organised by TORCH (The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities).
– I will be speaking about the, slightly unusual, topic of ‘Death and Victorian Children’s Literature.
Arthur Hughes, ‘At The Back of the North-Wind’
From Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol, Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Victorian Children’s Literature was, perhaps surprisingly, filled with scenes of dying and suffering children, a reality many readers had to face in their own environment. However, searching for a sense in this, authors often gave those children fantastic dreams and visions, filled with mythological creatures which embodied ideas of death and dying, but also of nature, and for hope for rebirth eternal life. Thus stories like Charles Kingsley’s The Water-Babies or George MacDonald’s At the back of the North Wind give amazing insights into the Victorian search for the meaning of life, the nature of the soul and man’s place in creation.
To find out more about these fantastical Victorian journeys into the inner workings of nature and life itself – come to the Ashmolean Lecture Theatre (Level -1) at 7.45 pm! The event is ticketed. A full list of speakers and more info can be found here.
Registration for ECR Workshop at Bodleian Libraries Ada Lovelace Symposium now open. Keynote speech by Prof Sharon Ruston, expert panel with Graphic Novelist Sydney Padua and historian Prof Richard Holmes, and paper on Ada Lovelace in Programming, Teaching, Philosophy, Literature and Lego!
The programme for Michaelmas Term 2015 is now announced with three seminars taking place at St Anne’s College. Drinks will be served after each seminar and all are welcome.
Wednesday 28 October 201 5 (Week 3): Dr Madeleine Wood, Queen Mary University of London
“A ‘heart hard as a nether millstone’: The relational dynamics of Victorian ‘addiction’”
5.30 – 7.00, Seminar Room 3, St Anne’s College
Wednesday 11 November 201 5 (Week 5): Dr Claire Jones, King’s College London
“Septic Subjects: Infection and Occupational Risk in British Hospitals, 1870-1970”
5.30 – 7.00, Seminar Room 3, St Anne’s College
Wednesday 25 November 201 5 (Week 7) Professor Karen Sayer, Leeds Trinity University
“Radical Requiems: the return of the past in British agriculture, 1850-1950”
5.30 – 7.00, Seminar Room 3, St Anne’s College
I will be giving a pair of talks on Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and it’s place in Victorian Children’s Literature and Illustration this November, one at Christ Church’s Wonderday and the other at a Lewis Carroll Study Day at the Surrey History Centre. Christ Church’s Wonderday will give attendees the unique opportunity to hear Carroll experts like Edward Wakeling, Kiera Vaclavic and Melanie Keene speak about both Carroll’s connection with Christ Church as well as the most recent interdisciplinary research into the subject – and moreover, visitors can explore the stunning surroundings of Christ Church, and the place where it all began (Alice’s Nursery, the Deanery Garden, the (mock) turtle shells in the kitchen, or the long-necked ladies in Christ Church dining hall) in exclusive guided tours. At Woking’s Study Day insight will be provided into rarely seen documents from the Dodgson family archives by Will Brooker, other aspects of the collections will be illuminated by Edward Wakeling and myself. Both events require pre-booking and should be real highlights in this anniversary year!
Lewis Carroll Study Day, Surrey History Centre, Woking
I was very excited to see my work on this year’s Alice sesquicentenary celebrations featured on my college’s website. The college has been substantial in in facilitating a crucial part of ‘Alice’s Day‘ – the re-enactment of Alice’s Dream in the opening chapter of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. This was performed with giant puppets of the Alice and the White Rabbit by the Spanish company Teatre Nu – give it a read here!
Giant Alice on Oxford’s Radcliffe Square in front of Brasenose College on Alice’s Day. Follow Alice celebrations around the world using the hashtag #alice150
To celebrate the 150th anniversary of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland the Public Domain Review & Medium came up with the fantastic idea to release a digital “Annotated Alice” – each of the 12 chapters annotated by a different Lewis Carroll scholar, with funky illustrations. So far, this has resulted in a wonderfully illuminating, kaleidoscopic journey into the cultural history & impact of Carroll’s most famous novel, which has reached 12,000 views so far, nearly 5,000 reads, as well as retweets from The British Council, The University of Oxford Humanities Division & Bodleian Library, Brainpickings and many other fantastic organisations.
I am particularly pleased that I was able to share some of the links between literature and science in “my” chapter, the “Mad Tea-Party” (you will hopefully be able to read more of this soon in article form!). For now – enjoy the free online text, share, and spread the word!
John Tenniel, “A Mad Tea-Party” from Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865)
It’s that time of year again, and as it is the 150th anniversary of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland – this Alice’s Day (under the slogan “Pictures & Conversations”) is going to be bigger and better than ever – have a look at theprogramme! The twelve chapters of the book will be re-enacted in many creative ways all around town; the Caterpillar will be giving advice at the Bodleian Library (Weston Library), and there will be a huge Lobster Quadrille at the Natural History Museum from 12:30 – which you can actually join (instructions here – will you, won’t you join the dance?).
A particular highlight will be the free anniversary lectures at the Old Fire Station – this year by Brian Sibley, broadcaster, writer and president of the Lewis Carroll Society – and media-expert Prof Will Brooker from the University of Kingston – and I am very honoured to be speaking alongside those two fantastic speakers!
Don’t miss out – join the dance on the 4th of July in Oxford!
Alice’s Day Anniversary Lectures 2015, Old Fire Station
The Literature and Science Early Career Researchers’ Forum will convene four times during this Trinity term. The meetings will be in rooms in the Radcliffe Humanities Building and each will be based around one researcher discussing their current work. See times, rooms and speakers below. All are welcome.
05/05/2015 13:45-15:30, Colin Matthew Room
Rey Lawson-Conquer (Somerville) – Linguistics & Anthropology
19/05/2015 13:45-15:30, Seminar Room (RH07)
Alison Moulds (St Anne’s) – The (Medical) Woman Question in Nineteenth-Century Medical Journals
02/06/2015 13:45-15:30, Seminar Room (RH07)
Robert Daly (New)– ‘From Poetry to Algebra: Russian Formalism and the “Language of Science”’
16/06/2015 14:15-16:00 – Seminar Room (RH07B)
Lloyd Houston (Brasenose) – ‘Their Syphilisation You Mean’: James Joyce and the Politics of Venereal Disease
The Wade Center owns over 2,400 volumes from the personal library of C.S. Lewis. Most of the books were acquired from Wroxton College in 1986, and others have been added from time to time from other donors or purchases. The books offer a unique look into the reading habits, imagination, and mind of Lewis himself, and many of them contain his handwritten notes and markings. Such annotations are a big research draw for Lewis scholars who are able to discern significant aspects of Lewis’s response to his reading; a valuable step beyond simply knowing which titles were on his shelf. Besides the markings, however, are the books themselves as physical artifacts. Observing the different bindings, seeing which ones are worn or barely touched, adds to the stories the volumes tell. In some cases Lewis mentions specific books in his writings, and it is always a thrill for Wade patrons…