Workshop 1: "Civic Science: Oliver Lodge, Physics, and the Modern University"
University of Birmingham,
Saturday November 9, 2013
Deadline September 13, 2013
Deadline September 13, 2013
The physicist Oliver Lodge spent most of
his scientific career at the newly founded University College Liverpool before
joining the University of Birmingham as its first Principal in 1900, retiring
in 1919. This workshop, the first
in a series of four organized by James Mussell and Graeme Gooday’s AHRC
Research Network ‘Making Waves, Oliver Lodge and the Cultures
of Science, 1875-1940’, will investigate both the place of science within the
university and the place of the university in the city. Hosted by the Centre for the Study of
Cultural Modernity at the University of Birmingham, we invite papers that
consider Lodge’s legacy for the University and Birmingham, as well as those
that consider the place of science in the civic university at the end of the nineteenth
century and the first decades of the twentieth.
Proposals are invited for papers of 40
minutes that explore any of the following themes:
Oliver Lodge’s career at the University of
Birmingham
The creation of the civic university
The place of science in the civic
university
The relationship between pure and applied
science within the university
Oliver Lodge’s influence on the city of
Birmingham
University science education in the late 19th
/ early 20th century
The creation of the University of
Birmingham at Edgbaston
Oliver Lodge’s complementary careers within
and beyond the university
Science communication and popular science
in the late 19th / early 20th century
Oliver Lodge’s wife and family and their
respective lives, careers, and legacies
Please send proposals (500 words) to
by September 13, 2013
This project is funded by an AHRC Research
Networking Grant. Further details,
including forthcoming symposia about Lodge, can be found here: <http://www.oliverlodge.org>. Follow us on Twitter @oliverjlodge