CfP: Self-Fashioning Scientific Identities in the Long Nineteenth Century
University of Leicester, 15th June 2018
Keynote: Dr Patricia Fara, University of Cambridge
At the beginning of the nineteenth century, there was no such thing as a
scientist. While professional careers in science were gradually
formalised, many scientific practitioners aspired to none at all.
Lacking blueprints to guide their behaviour, practitioners of all
descriptions had to carve out their own identities to demonstrate
expertise, prestige, taste, authority. How did one comport oneself? How
should one write, and where? Who should be included in the community and
who excluded? Were you a natural philosopher, a savant, a man of
science, a scientist, or none of the above?
Scholars of nineteenth-century science and culture have revealed diverse
scientific identities, including romantic geologists, chemical-wielding
showmen, and poetic physicists, alongside artisan botanists, unpaid
draughtswomen, and husband-and-wife collaborations. Recent scholarship
complicates rigid distinctions between amateur and professional,
populariser and primary researcher, and scientific writing and
imaginative prose, producing increasingly nuanced studies of the ways in
which scientific practitioners sought to shape their own identities.
Stephen Greenblatt’s now-classic study of ‘self-fashioning’ demonstrated
how one might carve out for oneself ‘a distinctive personality, a
characteristic address to the world, a consistent mode of perceiving and
behaving’. Indeed, self-fashioning has been a valuable tool for
thinking about how complex changes in scientific culture were carried
out across the nineteenth century. Studying the shaping of
practitioners’ identities in these terms allows us to explore the
formation and negotiation of scientific communities in insightful ways.
This one-day workshop aims to bring together scholars interested in the
processes through which scientific practitioners constructed identities
for themselves and how these identities were, in turn, perceived by
their colleagues and wider society. Although the focus will
predominantly be upon the long nineteenth century, we are also happy to
consider papers that speak to these issues outside this timeframe. We
would particularly welcome papers that explore self-fashioning beyond
the exclusive circles of English men of science. Submissions are invited
on the following topics:
- Gender identity and science
- Class identity and science
- National identity and science
- Ethnicity and science
- Amateurs/amateurisation and professionals/ professionalisation
- Popularisers and primary researchers
- Self-fashioning through correspondence
- Self-fashioning through literary style
- The identities of scientific periodicals
- Key terms, such as ‘(gentle)man of science’, ‘savant’, and ‘scientist’
- Scientific practitioners in fiction, poetry, and cartoons
Papers will be 20 minutes in length, and the deadline for abstracts of up to 250 words is 9th April. We will inform accepted speakers by the 23rd April.
Please send abstracts and any other enquiries to: sciself2018@gmail.com
There will be no registration fee, and we are able to support the travel
costs of postgraduates and ECRs who are accepted to speak. Those who
receive this assistance may be asked to contribute a short blog post
regarding their experience of the event.
The venue is yet to be confirmed, but we will advise attendees regarding
accessibility as soon as this information becomes available. If you
would like to discuss your specific requirements, please do not hesitate
to contact us via the above email address.
Organised by Richard Fallon (Leicester), Matthew Wale (Leicester), and Alison Moulds (Oxford).