Dr Will Abberley

University of Oxford

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BIOGRAPHY

Will read English at Pembroke College, Oxford, then worked as a print and broadcast journalist before returning to academia and attaining his PhD at the University of Exeter in 2012.

His thesis was entitled Language under the Microscope: Science and Philology in English Fiction, 1850-1914. It explored how popular fiction acted as a testing-ground for nineteenth-century theories of the evolution of language, imagining linguistic pasts and futures. His thesis suggested that such speculative thought experiments in fiction prefigured contemporary interest in instinctive signification and biosemiotics. This research is the subject of a forthcoming book.

He returned to Oxford in 2013 on a three-year research fellowship at Oxford’s English faculty funded by the Leverhulme Trust. The project is entitled Tricks of Nature: Biology, Mimicry and Disguise in Victorian Culture. The project explores concepts of natural deception in the period as natural historians such as Henry Walter Bates and Alfred Russel Wallace reconceptualised nature as a stage of tricks and impostures. He is interested in how literary genre engaged with the development of this scientific theory, such as in the naturalist's journal or scientific travel narrative. He is also examining how theories of natural mimicry influenced popular fiction by writers such as Grant Allen and H. G. Wells.

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SAMPLE LECTURE

Victorian Literature and Darwin's Origin of Species

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All courses by Dr Will Abberley