Psychology and the Arts
The third annual history of psychology symposium
Tuesday 15 October 2013
Chancellor’s Hall, Senate House,
University of London, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU
10.30am-4pm (including buffet lunch)
Convened by Dr Alan Collins (Lancaster University)
This year’s theme will reflect some of the many ways that the arts (music, literature, visual arts) have influenced the development of psychological understanding and vice versa.
Speakers:
Dr Alexandra Lewis (University of Aberdeen)
‘Psychology and the novel: Trauma and memory in the 19th century’
Professor Nicholas Wade (University of Dundee)
‘Toying with perception: Philosophical toys and the simulation of motion in early 19th-century London’
Dr James Kennaway (University of Newcastle)
‘Musical mind control: The history of an idea’
Dr Greg Tate (University of Surrey)
‘John Keats’s principled feeling: Knowledge and emotion in Romantic poetry, medicine and psychology’
Dr Nick Lambert (Birkbeck, University of London)
‘The computer in the cave’
This is a public event and all are welcome. The programme has been designed to have general appeal as well as academic validity for historians of psychology.
Cost (including lunch): £12 (£10 BPS members)
To register click here
For more information, e-mail hopc@bps.org.uk or call Peter Dillon Hooper on 0116 252 9528.
This event is supported by Senate House Library, home of the British Psychological Society’s library collection.
10.30am-4pm (including buffet lunch)
Convened by Dr Alan Collins (Lancaster University)
This year’s theme will reflect some of the many ways that the arts (music, literature, visual arts) have influenced the development of psychological understanding and vice versa.
Speakers:
Dr Alexandra Lewis (University of Aberdeen)
‘Psychology and the novel: Trauma and memory in the 19th century’
Professor Nicholas Wade (University of Dundee)
‘Toying with perception: Philosophical toys and the simulation of motion in early 19th-century London’
Dr James Kennaway (University of Newcastle)
‘Musical mind control: The history of an idea’
Dr Greg Tate (University of Surrey)
‘John Keats’s principled feeling: Knowledge and emotion in Romantic poetry, medicine and psychology’
Dr Nick Lambert (Birkbeck, University of London)
‘The computer in the cave’
This is a public event and all are welcome. The programme has been designed to have general appeal as well as academic validity for historians of psychology.
Cost (including lunch): £12 (£10 BPS members)
To register click here
For more information, e-mail hopc@bps.org.uk or call Peter Dillon Hooper on 0116 252 9528.
This event is supported by Senate House Library, home of the British Psychological Society’s library collection.
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