Lisa Downing

Lisa Downing

Lisa Downing (/ˈdnɪŋ/; born 1974) is an author and academic. She is Professor of French Discourses of Sexuality at the University of Birmingham.[1]

Downing's work is innovative in its dialogue between the critical humanities and the sciences, especially psychiatry. Her published work focuses principally on theories of sexual perversion and queer theory; the work of Michel Foucault; ethical philosophy and film; and, most recently, the cultural meanings of criminality.

Background and career

Downing trained in Modern European Languages and Literatures at the Universities of London and Oxford. She took up a Lectureship at Queen Mary, University of London in 1999, where she was promoted to Reader in 2005. She was appointed to a Chair at the University of Exeter in 2006, at the age of 31.[2] In 2012, Downing moved to an established Chair at the University of Birmingham.

She is one of co-organisers of the interdisciplinary seminar series "Critical Sexology".

Awards

Downing received a 2009 Philip Leverhulme Prize, a prize "awarded to outstanding scholars under the age of 36 who have made a substantial contribution to their field of study, are recognised at an international level, and whose future contributions are held to be of correspondingly high promise."[3]

Works

Books as author:

Books as editor:

References

  1. "Professor Lisa Downing". University of Birmingham. Retrieved 26 April 2014.
  2. "Lisa Downing". Retrieved 2011-09-25.
  3. "Leverhulme Prize for work on French Sexuality". 2009-11-03. Retrieved 2012-12-25.
  4. "Professor Lisa Downing". Retrieved 2012-08-23.
  5. 1 2 Downing, Lisa; Morland, Iain; Sullivan, Nikki (December 2014). Fuckology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226186757. Retrieved 2014-12-26.
  6. "Is sexology just too human to study?". New Scientist. 16 December 2014. Retrieved 2014-12-26.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.