A One-Day Colloquium: Friday, September 4, 2015
University of Roehampton, London.
Keynote Speakers: Professor David Amigoni (Keele University) Professor Tim Fulford (De Montfort University)
Plenary Speaker: Dr John Holmes (Reading University)
When the 28-year-old Charles Darwin first opened his ‘evolutionary’ notebook in 1837, he deployed the title of his grandfather Erasmus Darwin’s medical treatise, Zoonomia (1794-6). By then, Erasmus -- poet, doctor, inventor and leading light of the Birmingham Lunar Society -- had drifted into comparative obscurity; best remembered as the eccentric genius whose work The Loves of Plants (1789) had been notoriously parodied as The Loves of Triangles. Erasmus was never forgotten by his more famous grandson, however, and throughout Charles’s career, Erasmus’s writing and thinking acted as both catalyst and antagonist to Charles’s burgeoning evolutionary ideas, on such subjects as heredity, variation and sexual selection. Forty-two years later, Erasmus was also the subject of Charles’s own venture into non-scientific writing – a biography of his illustrious grandfather. In the first academic conference to formally consider the imaginative and scientific relationship between these two remarkable speculative thinkers, we ask, in what ways did Erasmus’s life and works facilitate and anticipate Charles’s ideas, and how did Charles mobilise the stated and unstated affinities with Erasmus to enrich his own thinking?
We invite papers of 20 minutes that consider the two writers in the following broad subject areas:
- poetry, aesthetics, and writing style
- scientific families & heredity
- evolution
- styles of observation
- humour and excess
- pleasure
- biography
- the relation between the arts and sciences
- the natural world
- variation and diversification
- geology
- family life
- experimentation
- scientific method
- public and private sphere
No comments:
Post a Comment