Bringing together postgraduates from various disciplines, this year's conference focuses on bodies as sites of meaning-making & connection.About this Event
Ferguson Room, University of Glasgow | 3rd June 2026 | 9am-5pm
Bodies define how we understand our world. They are the collective - our organiser and counter of objects, individuals, ideas, or phenomena. Yet our bodies are also the first means by which we understand our difference from the world; our existence as a separate entity. How can bodies act as sites of meaning-making, connection, or mis/understanding? How do we use bodies to define?
Welcome (9:00- 9:15)
Panel 1: The Body throughout History (9:15-10:45)
- Matthew Farren (University of the Highlands and Islands): EMERGENT BODIES: A cognitive model for understanding the body in Viking-Age legal customs
- Hope Moore (University of Glasgow): A game of thrones and eyeballs: blinding in the medieval Irish annals
- Roslyn Potter (University of Glasgow): Blood and wine: managing period pain in early modern Scotland
- Shujia Fan (University of Glasgow) Performing the Past: Embodied Historical Imagination in Contemporary Chinese Costume Drama
Coffee Break 1 (10:45-11:00)
Panel 2: Bodies in Performance and Space (11:00-12:15)
- Sourabh Phadke (University of Edinburgh): Bodies of Work: On Labour, Knowledge, and Architectural Practice
- Finn Townsley (University of Glasgow) : Chairs that hate you: How hostile design utilises discomfort to control public behaviours
- Emma Ettinger (University of Glasgow): ‘Court Her in My Borrowed Shape’: Bodily Difference, Desirability, and Dissembling in The Fair Maid of the Exchange and Cyrano de Bergerac
Keynote: Dr Gina Lyle, University of York: Where Bodies Become Meat in Contemporary Literature (12:15-13:15)
Lunch (13:15-14:10)
Panel 3: Gendered and Sexualised Bodies (14:10-15:40)
- Patrick Jamieson (University of Glasgow): ‘There shall mither naked mak you’: Eighteenth-Century Discipline and Initiation in ‘The Fornicators’ Court'
- Amritash Sankhyan (University of Glasgow): Policing the Visible Body: Prostitution, Gender, and Official Knowledge in Interwar Bombay
- Kate Kane (University of Glasgow): 'I am Scotland': Gendered Violence and the Nation in Twentieth- and Twenty-First Century Literary Depictions of Mary, Queen of Scots
- Elle Nash (University of Glasgow): Charlene Elsby’s ‘Poor Damned Souls’: Violence as mirror and portal in Femgorefiction
Coffee Break 2 (15:40-16:00)
Panel 4: Mediated Bodies (16:00-16:50)
- Natascha Ewert (University of Glasgow): The Archetypal Self: Healing mind, body through creativity from a female perspective
- Rhoda Ellis (University of Dundee): All The Bodies That Once Were Mine
Closing Remarks (16:50-17:00)
Event Venue
Gilbert Scott Building, University Of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom
GBP 0.00












