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Simone Hutchinson
Works in Glasgow United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

BIO
Research interests

Twentieth and twenty-first century English literature
Work and technology in literature
The politics of aesthetics in art and literature
Interdisciplinary approaches to literature (particularly: art, architecture and medicine)

Education

Doctor of Philosophy Candidate, September 2014 (expected)
Department of English Literature, University of Glasgow, Scotland
Thesis: (Working title) Work, aesthetics and politics in post-war British novels
Supervisors: Doctor Bryony Randall, Doctor Helen Stoddart

Master of Letters (Distinction), September 2009
Department of English Literature, University of Glasgow, Scotland
Dissertation: "A rain of atoms": Plato's Symposium and Virginia Woolf's The Waves
Supervisor: Doctor Jane Goldman

Bachelor of Science (Hons 2nd Division Upper Class), July 2004
Multimedia Design and Technology, Brunel University, London
Dissertation: 'Creep in my flesh', short digital film with accompanying documentation
Subjects: Cybernetics, moving image, multimedia design, advertising and marketing, software programming, relational databases, digital video and audio technology, computer hardware.

Work history

Editorial Assistant (freelance)
Professor Emeritus Peter O Behan, 17 South Erskine Park, Bearsden, Glasgow, September 2008 to present

Peer Reviewer
For the postgraduate journal eSharp http://www.gla.ac.uk/esharp, January 2008 to present

Postgraduate Tutor
Widening Participation Top Up Programme, University of Glasgow, one season: December 2008 to May 2009
http://www.gla.ac.uk/services/wideningparticipation/top-upprogramme/

Lead Editor
eSharp, Issue 12 'Technology and Humanity', December 2008

Front-End Web Coder (freelance)
Various contracts, Glasgow, February 2006 to September 2007

Graphical Web Designer
Scottish Qualifications Authority, Glasgow, Maternity cover contract: November 2005 to February 2006

Web Designer
Sunsol (now Native Agency, in Edinburgh) November 2004 to November 2005

Conferences and other public events

BEHAN PO & HUTCHINSON S [Co-author & Presenter]. 'Sir Herbert Maxwell: A View'. Snowdrop Conference, Royal Botanical Gardens Edinburgh. February 2009.

MACKINTOSH A & HUTCHINSON S. 'eSharp the training vehicle'. Putting the Learning into SoTL: student experiences of learning and implications for practice. Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Symposium. University of Glasgow. October 2008.

Publications
BEHAN PO & HUTCHINSON S. 'Sir Herbert Maxwell: Life and works'. The Scottish Naturalist. Special Issue. [In Press]

HUTCHINSON S, KENNEDY A & MCSTRAVICK C. ‘(SAC) Ongoing Bodies: Le Syndrome de Paris Suite’. Multimedia installation at the Centre for Contemporary Arts, Glasgow, 2 – 18 February 2012.

HUTCHINSON S & MCSTRAVICK C. ‘Taking the biscuit’. Gnommero: Exactitude. Ed Sarah Tripp. Glasgow: Gnommero, 2011.

HUTCHINSON S et al. The Black Merkin. Eds Edbrook L & Hogg N. Edinburgh: New Society of Dilettanti, 2011.

HUTCHINSON S & MCSTRAVICK C. 'Venus fits pagina'. Gnommero: Quickness. Ed Sarah Tripp. Glasgow: Gnommero, 2010.

HUTCHINSON S & MCSTRAVICK C. 'Our street of the golden hand'. Gnommero: Lightness. Ed Sarah Tripp. Glasgow: Gnommero, 2010.

As editorial assistant:

BEHAN PO. Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis: postinfectious, postimmunization and variant forms. Expert Rev Neurother. 2009 Sep;9(9):1321-9

BEHAN PO. Futility of the autoimmune orthodoxy in multiple sclerosis research. Expert Rev Neurother. 2010 Jul;10(7):1023-5.

BEHAN PO, CHAUDHURI A. The sad plight of multiple sclerosis research (low on fact, high on fiction): critical data to support it being a neurocristopathy. Inflammopharmacology. 2010 Dec;18(6):265-90.
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OPPORTUNITY

Technology and Humanity


Deadline:
Fri Sep 12, 2008 00:00

Technology and Humanity

The following is a call for articles for a forthcoming themed issue of
eSharp, an established peer-reviewed journal publishing high-quality
research by postgraduate students. eSharp is pleased to support new
and early-career authors, and has actively encouraged emerging
academic talent since 2002.

The twelfth issue of eSharp will consider the cultural and personal
consequences of scientific and mechanistic innovation. We welcome
articles which examine and engage with the effects, influences or
application of technology in any area of the arts, humanities, social
sciences and education, and we encourage submissions from
postgraduate students at any stage of their research.

In keeping with the interdisciplinary nature of the journal the ideas
of technology, innovation and culture can be interpreted as broadly
as authors wish, and may consider, but are by no means limited to,
themes such as:

• cyberspace and identity
• politics, surveillance and privacy
• the history, art and literature of the industrial and digital revolutions
• digital media and technologies of exhibition
• new technologies and the law
• cybernetics, gender and the body
• the movable type revolution
• digital narratives and virtual worlds
• education and innovation
• dystopias, dyschronias and utopias
• forensic and corpus linguistics

Submissions must be based on original research and should be between
4,000 and 6,000 words in length. Please accompany your article with
an abstract of 200 to 250 words and a list of three to five keywords
to indicate the subject area of your article. For more information, a
full list of guidelines and our style sheet, please visit
www.glasgow.ac.uk/esharp.

Please email submissions and any enquiries you may have to
submissions@esharp.org.uk.

The deadline for submission of articles is Friday 12 September 2008.

............................
Simone Hutchinson

Board Member
eSharp,
University of Glasgow,
Scotland.



SAVED WORKS (1)