Editorial Volume 3 (1)
Introduction
It is with great pleasure that we
present the fifth issue of Exchanges: the
Warwick Research Journal. This issue forms the first part of the third
volume of the journal and continues to promote exciting articles and
interdisciplinary scholarship from researchers at all stages of their careers.
Every year Exchanges continues to grow in reputation as an open access,
peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal. This is evidenced by the large number
of high-quality submissions we continue to attract. This issue includes
articles from a range of disciplines, including English and Comparative
Literature, History, Politics and International Relations, Art History, Women’s
Studies, Chemistry, and Mathematics. All of the articles published in this
edition highlight the importance of breaking down traditional disciplinary
boundaries. We hope that the submissions in this edition of the journal will offer
productive exchanges between different academic disciplines.
Exchange, debate and dialogue
Researchers are increasingly looking
for opportunities to engage with new audiences and in academic exchange outside
their traditional disciplinary specialisms. This edition of the journal has
interviews with two academics who have gained great distinction within their
fields, whilst also devoting a huge amount of effort to transform how their
subjects are perceived to ‘outsiders’. They are the Winner of the 2013 Nobel
Prize in Chemistry, Professor Michael Levitt, and Professor Martin Hairer,
winner of the Fields Medal for Mathematics in 2014.
Dr Gemma-Louise Davies, who is
currently an early career fellow at the Institute of Advanced Study at the
University of Warwick, takes the opportunity to discuss the importance of
interdisciplinary research with Professor Michael Levitt, whose work spans the
biological sciences. He talks about his experiences of interdisciplinarity in
the different countries where he has worked (USA, UK and Israel) and how
sharing findings with colleagues in other disciplines has stimulated important
research contributions. Professor Levitt also talks about his academic
influences and role models and his plans for the future.
In our second ‘Conversations’ piece,
early career mathematicians at the University of Warwick, Dr Martine Barons and
Dr Paul Chleboun, talk to Professor Martin Hairer about how his interest in
mathematics developed and ask him to describe the awards ceremony where he
received the Fields Medal in 2014. In their conversation, they discuss the
overlap of physics and mathematics present in Professor Hairer’s research into
stochastic partial differential equations (SPDEs) and his strategies for
engaging a non-specialist, sometimes even sceptical, audience. They also
discuss the music software (Amadeus Pro) that he developed and continues to
maintain, as well as his future plans for research.
Featured section: ‘New Approaches to Performance and Theatre Studies’
This issue offers a featured section
by two PhD students in the department of English and Comparative Literature
Studies at Warwick—Madeleine Scherer and Emil Rybczak. Both authors offer
innovative approaches to interpreting theatre and performance.
Madeleine Scherer’s article ‘A
Troubling Double-Body: Roland Barthes’ Relationship with Ancient Greek
Mythology and Bunraku’ analyses the
views of the French literary theorist and philosopher Roland Barthes towards the
ideal acting body. Drawing upon a corpus of Barthes’ works on performance and
semiotics, it comparatively discusses his views on Greek tragedy and Japanese
puppet theatre (Bunraku). Scherer
suggests that the challenges posed by the process of ‘doubling’ in the
supposedly anonymous art of Ancient Greek masked tragedy, ultimately led Barthes to reject this form of theatre in
favour of Bunraku, where the actor’s
body was replaced by life-like puppets. This reading of Barthes’ theories
offers new insight into his views on the acting body and points towards the
significance of his works on semiotics for the future of performance studies.
Offering innovative re-readings of
well-known literary texts is also the focus of Emil Rybczak’s article ‘Hamlet,
Performance and Chaotic Cultural Networks’. Employing research methods from
science and mathematics, Rybczak demonstrates how the central tenets of chaos
theory can be used to reinterpret Shakepeare’s Hamlet, from both a textual and performative perspective. Chaos
theory, sometimes known as ‘the butterfly effect’, uses equations to predict
seemingly random events, and views systems and processes holistically rather
than dissecting their parts individually. Rybczak showcases the potential of
chaos theory as a set of instructions for the reader to enter Hamlet’s text and performance.
Implementing science’s alternative language as an idiom for cultural networks,
germane to a contemporary understanding of the modern world, the article is
both interdisciplinary and ambitious. For those undertaking similar
interdisciplinary challenges, the author’s methodology will provide ample inspiration
for moving beyond cognate disciplines, showing how scientific-based analytical
techniques can be employed to reinterpret established literary works.
Gendered approaches and feminist perspectives
Reflecting on the two remaining
articles published in this issue, the central theme that unites them is the
importance of gendered experience. Addressing gender dynamics has been an
important part of research since the second-wave feminist movement of the
1970s, which opened up important possibilities for re-examining societies and
cultures, both from a historical and contemporary perspective.
Such studies have drawn attention to
the need to reinterpret the gendered structures and values that underpin
specific societies and institutions. This forms the basis of Ann Houghton’s
article on ‘Myths of Male Same-Sex Love in the Art of the Italian Renaissance’.
Taking particular inspiration from Michael Rocke’s research into homosexuality
and male culture in Renaissance Florence, Houghton explores the depiction of
male same-sex erotic behaviour, specifically pederasty (male same-sex desire
between a youth and older man) in Italian Renaissance art. She argues that
adopting a combined approach to visual, literary and mythological sources
enables us to better understand how Renaissance society ‘codified’ expectations
of male sexual, gendered, social and cultural deportment.
The impact of Gender and Women’s
Studies can also be observed in recent attempts to investigate the inequalities
and barriers that affect contemporary social structures and institutions. Nof
Nasser Eddin’s article ‘Palestinian Refugees: A Gendered Perspective’ advocates
the need for researchers to pay more attention to the experiences of female
Palestinian refugees some sixty-seven years since their expulsion from their
homeland. This is achieved through a series of interviews with female Palestinian
refugees living in Jordan, Turkey and Europe. Eddin underscores the importance
of adopting a feminist approach to examining the unique experiences of these
often marginalised groups of women and calls for policy-makers to pay more
attention to their specific needs, which are very different from those of their
male counterparts.
Research, politics and activism
The two critical reflection pieces
published in this issue have much to tell us about the relationship between
research, politics and policy-making. Continuing the theme of gender scholarship,
Eleri Watson and Charlotte De Val reflect upon a conference they organised at
the University of Oxford in May 2015, which celebrated 20-years of the
interdisciplinary Women’s Studies programme at Oxford. Responding to and
overcoming gendered and sexual discrimination is an important aspect of both
teaching and research. This piece reflects upon the successes, challenges and
future of Women’s Studies as a discipline. One of Women’s Studies great
strengths, Watson and De Val argue, is that it is wholly interdisciplinary,
operating across departments at Oxford University. But this does not come
without its challenges. Reflecting upon some of the ideas raised by the keynote
presentations at the conference, the authors consider the future of Women’s
Studies, and question how its practitioners can continue to develop meaningful
relationships with female activist and social justice movements.
Achieving gender equality is an
ongoing concern for policy-makers and higher education employers. Likewise,
issues over climate change and environmental sustainability remain a crucial
issue for governments and politicians. John Morgan’s article reflects upon a
recent conference held at the University of Warwick on the topic of
‘Environmental Governmentality’. The conference aimed to discuss the theory and
practice of climate governance in the period 1500–1800, and Morgan’s article sets
out the historical underpinnings of the subject and outlines some of the key
arguments and ideas raised in each of the speaker’s papers. In summarising the
importance of historicising this theme—as many of the speakers argued—Morgan is
also able to contextualise and put into perspective recent reincarnations of
this topic, most notably on the subject of climate change. Researchers in every
discipline will be able to take something from this critical reflection,
whether on the importance of nuance in research, rethinking the historiography
of their research topics, or in reassessing the connection between research,
politics and the environment, a crucial issue in our times.
Thanks
Many thanks for your continued
support of the journal through your readership and engagement with our
articles. Readers play an important part in the life of the journal and we
encourage you to share, comment on, enter into discussion and ask questions
about our articles and critical reflections. We hope you find this issue as
stimulating and thought-provoking as we have, and hope that you enjoy reading
pieces outside of your research specialisms.
Finally, we want to thank all of the
peer-reviewers who generously volunteered their time to read each of our
submissions carefully and provided helpful, constructive feedback for our
authors. We also want to thank Yvonne Budden, Scholarly Communications Manager,
University of Warwick, for her continued support and assistance with the
development of the journal. Special thanks are reserved for former Senior
Editor Karen Simececk, who has
generously volunteered her time to this edition of the journal and offered
vital support and assistance along the way.
We look forward to the next issue,
which is due to be published in April 2015 and will feature an interview with
political theorist and activist Professor Alex Callinicos.
The Editors
Naomi Pullin (Senior Editor) / History
Harbir Bal / Centre for Education Studies
Ersin Hussein / Classics and Ancient History
Misato Matsuoka / Politics and International Studies
Daniel Silva / Politics and International Studies
Karen Simecek / Philosophy and Literature