Sally Shuttleworth
Sally Ann Shuttleworth, FBA (born 5 September 1952)[1] is a British academic specialising in Victorian literature. She is Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford and a Professorial Fellow of St Anne's College, Oxford. From 2006 to 2011, she was Head of the Humanities Division, University of Oxford.[2] From 2014-2019 she was a principle investigator on the Diseases of Modern Life project, a multidisciplinary research initiative exploring nineteenth century scientific and cultural ideas related to stress and information overload.[3]
She was educated at the University of York (BA English Literature and Sociology 1974), and Darwin College, Cambridge (PhD English Literature 1980).[1] She then lectured in English at Princeton University, the University of Leeds and the University of Sheffield.[4] She has appeared on Woman's Hour.[5]
On 16 July 2015, she was elected a Fellow of the British Academy (FBA).[6]
Books
Author
- George Eliot and Nineteenth-Century Science (1984)
- Charlotte Brontë and Victorian Psychology (1996)
- The Mind of the Child: Child Development in Literature, Science and Medicine, 1840–1900 (2010)
- Anxious Times: Medicine and Modernity in Nineteenth-Century Britain (2019) - coauthor[7]
Editor
- Embodied Selves: An Anthology of Psychological Texts 1830-1890
- Two on a Tower by Thomas Hardy (1999)
- The Lifted Veil and Brother Jacob by George Eliot (2004)
- Lorna Doone: A Romance of Exmoor by R. D. Blackmore (2008)
- Body/Politics: Women and the Discourses of Science co-edited with Mary Jacobus and Evelyn Fox Keller (2013)
References
- "Shuttleworth, Prof. Sally Ann". Who's Who 2018. Oxford University Press. 1 December 2017. Missing or empty
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(help) - "Professor Sally Shuttleworth". Academic Profile. St Anne's College, Oxford. Retrieved 17 July 2015.
- "Professor Sally Shuttleworth". diseasesofmodernlife.web.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
- http://www.humanities.ox.ac.uk/about_us/head_of_division
- http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00t89g4
- "British Academy Fellowship reaches 1,000 as 42 new UK Fellows are welcomed". British Academy. 16 July 2015. Retrieved 17 July 2015.
- upittpress.org https://upittpress.org/books/9780822945512/. Retrieved 2020-06-10. Missing or empty
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(help)