Monsters, Science and Society - with Expert Panel

Published: April 29, 2019, 11 a.m.

b"Frankenstein\\u2019s creature is a classic example of a monster in popular culture. But what can fictional beings tell us about the hopes and fears of the society in which they were created?\\n\\nThis month, Phil Ball chairs a panel of experts discussing how monsters survive in our culture, how they reflect gender and power dynamics, and what happens in our brains when we see monsters on screen.\\n\\nLiz Gloyn is a lecturer in Classics at Royal Holloway. Her research focuses on the intersections between Latin literature, ancient philosophy and gender studies.\\n\\nEvan Hayles Gledhill is currently doing a PhD at the University of Reading. Their PhD thesis examines the liminal figures of the monster and the child in the Gothic imagination, and the 'deviant subjectivities' these representations make space for in otherwise seemingly conventional genre texts. \\n\\nJeremy Skipper is Director of the Language, Action, and Brain Lab (LAB Lab) at University College London. He studies the neurobiology of natural language use and oversees the Neurocinematics database.\\n\\nCheck out our website: www.rigb.org/\\nTwitter: twitter.com/Ri_Science\\nYouTube: www.youtube.com/user/TheRoyalInstitution\\nAnd Patreon: www.patreon.com/TheRoyalInstitution"