Leah Astbury, PhD student in the department of history and philosophy of science, University of Cambridge, is reading Jennifer Evans鈥 Aphrodisiacs, Fertility and Medicine in Early Modern England (Boydell & Brewer, 2014). 鈥淓vans asks how individuals understood procreation in the 17th and 18th centuries, long before IVF and other reproductive technologies. Demanding that historians integrate the literature on sex and pleasure with that on medical perceptions of fertility, she convincingly shows how aphrodisiacs were used by both men and women with the twofold intention of increasing both libido and the likelihood of conception.鈥
Stephen Halliday, panel tutor in history, Institute of Continuing Education, University of Cambridge, is reading Richard Davenport-Hines鈥 The Universal Man: The Seven Lives of John Maynard Keynes (HarperCollins, 2015). 鈥淓conomist, polemicist, art connoisseur, statesman, philanthropist: in the face of considerable odds, this book manages to cast fresh light on the many-sided achievements of an extraordinary man who was perhaps the most truly gifted of聽all the 鈥楤loomsberries鈥. One strange omission: I聽couldn鈥檛 find any reference to the fact that his degree was actually in mathematics 鈥 and a Wrangler (or first class) at that. But there鈥檚 plenty to compensate.鈥
Jane O鈥橤rady, visiting lecturer in the philosophy of psychology, City University London, is reading Jan Plamper鈥檚 The History of Emotions: An聽Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2015). 鈥淭his book throws a聽lifeline to anyone trying to navigate the present high tide of multidisciplinary material on the emotions. It lucidly analyses perspectives on emotion in philosophy, neuroscience, anthropology and sociology since the 19th century, weighing the competing claims of social constructionism versus universalism, and managing to be both scholarly and enjoyable.鈥
Jane Robertson, formerly lecturer in English at the University of Hong Kong, is reading David Learmont鈥檚 The Foster Factory (Andrews, 2015). 鈥淭his is an unusual, amusing, sometimes heart-rending memoir by Learmont, who, with his wife Marsha, decides to聽become a foster carer late in life. He offers a compendium of family breakdowns and other social problems, narrated in a style that ranges from 颁补迟肠丑鈥22 to Bertie Wooster. The pair are now enjoying 鈥榓 second retirement鈥 in Andorra, and after reading this book, you feel they deserve it.鈥
Uwe Sch眉tte, reader in German, Aston University, is聽reading Esther Kinsky鈥檚 Am Flu脽 (Matthes & Seitz, 2014). 鈥淩ejecting the conventions of a novel, this most remarkable book charts Kinsky鈥檚 elegiac rambles along the river Lea in London鈥檚 East End. Her聽haunting, meditative prose reflects the urban decay of a post-industrial landscape and empathises with people鈥檚 life on the social margins. Unrelentingly precise, while also truly poetic, this is without a doubt the best book on London in recent German literature.鈥
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