Profile
Research
Research Interests:
Publications
Journal Articles
- ‘Interpreting “Mind-Cure”: William James and “the Chief Task of the Science of Human Nature’ (link is external), Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, Spring 2012, Vol. 48, No. 2, pp. 115-133.
- ‘When Misery and Metaphysics Collide: William James on ‘the Problem of Evil’’ (link is external), Medical History, July 2011, Vol. 55, No. 3, pp. 389-392.
- ‘Marcus Aurelius, William James and “the Science of Religions (link is external)”’, William James Studies, Dec. 2009, Vol. 4, No. 1, pp. 70-89.
Book reviews
- Francesca Bordogna, William James at the Boundaries: Philosophy, Science, and the Geography of Knowledge (link is external), History of the Human Sciences, Sep. 2010, Vol. 23, No. 4, pp. 121-124.
- Lee-Ann Monk, Attending Madness: at work in the Australian colonial asylum (link is external), Medical History, Oct. 2010, Vol. 54, No. 4, pp. 560-561.
Public Engagement
Co-developer of 'Developing Emotions': a schools outreach project initiated by the Living with Feeling project, which employs a multi-disciplinary approach to enriching children’s emotional literacy and wellbeing.
Medical humanities consultant on Planet Divoc-91: a comic series exploring the socio-political consequences of the coronavirus pandemic, co-produced with a young adult cohort.
Historical consultant and co-developer of 'The Walking Dead Immersive Experience' (Nov. 2019) on the emotion of fear at Thought Bubble comic conference.
Co-convener of 'The Museum of the Normal' (Nov. 2016), a large-scale public event challenging audience assumptions about ideas of normality and health. (Listed in Time Out magazine and shortlisted for the category of 'influence' at the Queen Mary University of London Engagement and Enterprise Awards).
Medical humanities producer on Image Comics' Surgeon X, a comic series set in near-future Britain in a world where antibiotic resistance has reached crisis point, prompting social unrest, political controversy and medico-ethical dilemmas for the central characters.