Personal profile
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Office Hours:
Mondays, 15.00-17.00, or by appointment.
County South, D032
Profile
I work on the history of science, medicine, and health, focusing on the period 1650-1830. My research address a concern central to the humanities and sciences alike - how do our interactions with the world change how we experience and understand it? As a result, my research is highly interdisciplinary, bringing together histories of science, medicine, the body, the neurosciences, art, literature, and religion. In my teaching, and increasingly in my research projects, I use the key themes of my research to examine global issues. For instance, one of my most popular modules - A Global History of the Mind - compares a wide range of cultural and temporal contexts, enabling students to see how ideas about the mind have shaped approaches to health, disability, gender, race, and politics across the world.
My current research project addresses these themes through a project on the history of habit in the early modern period - a time when medics and their patients alike saw the human capacity to acuire and lose habits as central to their understanding not only of health and wellbeing, but also of how environment, culture, politics might give rise to distinctive forms of human nature. In collaboration with researchers at other institutions, I use this interest as the platform for exchanging ideas about habit across the world.
Such research interests mean that I engage broadly with the medical humanities, organizing research, podcasts, and events dealing with ideas about the human mind, bringing together scientists, artists, and humanities scholars. I see public engagement as central to my work as a historian, and I enjoy discussing the history of the arts and sciences with broader audiences, whether through writing, podcasts, or film. Moreover, I organize frequent public events and workshops, on themes ranging from history & creative writing to the role historical research can play in informing health and wellbeing practices today.
Research Interests
I work on the history of science, medicine, and health, focusing on the period 1650-1830. My research address a concern central to the humanities and sciences alike - how do our interactions with the world change our capacity to experience and understand it?
In my first book Aesthetic Science: Representing Nature in the Royal Society of London, 1650-1720 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2020), I addressed these themes by exploring the role of sensory pleasure and other forms of aesthetic experience in the models of empirical science promoted by members of the early Royal Society of London. This book argues that judgments of taste and the pleasures of aesthetic experience had a central role in the emergence of what we now understand as scientific objectivity. In turn, Aesthetic Sciences argues not only that the sciences of the 17th century had a far more significant role in the emergence of aesthetics and art criticism than has so far been recognized, but also that the conceptual resources of taste and aesthetic judgment can make a major contribution to our understanding of the formation of consensus in scientific communities.
Now, I am working on a project that examines the history of habit - the idea that repeated actions give us new dispositions, changing how we experience the world and the things we do in it. This project, leading to a book entitled The Century of Habit, will show that ideas about the loss and acquisition of habits - especially in fields of medicine and health - were fundamental to the key political and scientific debates of the 18th century. Focusing initially on health and medicine, this book will show that new neurological theories enabled medics and their patients to regard key bodily functions and diseases as products of habit - and thus also as dependent on changing cultures and customs. In turn, it will show that these medical ideas and practices informed key debates of the 18th century, ranging from debates about the effects of society on human nature to the emergence of theories of biological evolution at the turn of the 19th century. The book will thus propose a new disciplinary synthesis, revealing that we cannot understand the key intellectual concerns of the past without paying attention to fundamental debates about the workings of the body - such as the role of habit in shaping human dispositions.
Moreover, I have broad research interests linking the histories of science and medicine to the medical humanities, especially at the intersections between medicine and aesthetics. I am thus an active participant in the FHASS Health Hub at Lancaster University, a co-organiser of the Northern Network for Medical Humanities Research 2025 Congress, and currently working with colleagues to edit a landmark volume on the Global Medical Humanities.
I am also engaged in interdisciplinary projects that bridge the gap between research and pedagogy, as well as the gaps between the disciplines. With Lan A. Li at Rice University, I co-direct and sometimes present a series of podcasts, conferences, and public events examining scientific, medical, aesthetic, and scholarly perspectives on the human mind. I also promote the "chemical humanities," both by recreating historical experiments, and most recently by organizing events exploring the role of chemical compounds in human life.
Career Details
I have a PhD in the History and Philosophy of Science from the University of Cambridge. Before coming to Lancaster, I held positions at the University of Oxford, University College London, and New York University. Additionally, I held a Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellowship at University College London, and a postdoctoral fellowship jointly at the California Institute of Technology and The Huntington Library.
Web Links
External Roles
Along with Lan A. Li of Rice University, I co-direct a series of podcasts dealing with the history and culture of the human mind, entitled Metaphors of the Mind.
Lancaster University Keywords
- FASS Health Hub
Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years
Projects
- 2 Finished
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The Arts as Medicine? New Histories of the Arts and Health
Wragge-Morley, A. (Principal Investigator)
1/09/23 → 30/04/25
Project: Research
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Ben Franklin goes to Borrowdale: Scientific Adventures in the English Lakes
Donaldson, C. (Principal Investigator) & Wragge-Morley, A. (Co-Investigator)
6/06/22 → 22/11/22
Project: Research
Research output
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Habit, Medicine, and Society in 18th-Century Britain
Wragge-Morley, A., 1/01/2026, In: Medical History. 70, 1, p. 1-19 19 p.Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
Open AccessFile12 Downloads (Pure) -
Lovely colours: Colour and Affect in the Early Royal Society of London
Wragge-Morley, A., 1/08/2024, In: Lumieres. 43, p. 27-50 24 p.Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
Open AccessFile55 Downloads (Pure) -
Review: Michelle DiMeo. Lady Ranelagh: The Incomparable Life of Robert Boyle’s Sister.
Wragge-Morley, A., 1/12/2023, In: Isis. 114, 4, p. 874-875 2 p.Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Book/Film/Article review
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Robert Boyle (1627–1691) and the Aesthetics of Chemical Experimentation
Wragge-Morley, A., 16/06/2023, The Aesthetics of Scientific Experiments. Ivanova, M. & Murphy, A. (eds.). London: Routledge, (Routledge Studies in the Philosophy of Science).Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSN › Chapter (peer-reviewed) › peer-review
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Introduction: Science and connoisseurship in the European Enlightenment
Bycroft, M. & Wragge-Morley, A., 1/12/2022, In: History of Science. 60, 4, p. 439-457 19 p.Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
Open AccessFile70 Downloads (Pure)
Activities
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Histories of Touch at Lancaster City Museum
Wragge-Morley, A. (Organiser), Brown, M. (Organiser), Murray, H. V. (Organiser) & Cameron, R. (Organiser)
27/05/2026Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Participation in workshop, seminar, course
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FHASS Health Hub symposium 2026: ‘Generate: Prompting the New in the Medical and Health Humanities’
Dalton, B. (Organiser), Baker, C. (Organiser), Wright, S. (Organiser), Wragge-Morley, A. (Organiser) & Wasson, S. (Organiser)
11/05/2026 → 12/05/2026Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
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Conference: “Fever: Histories of (a) Disease, c. 1750-1840”
Wragge-Morley, A. (Speaker)
17/07/2025 → 18/07/2025Activity: Talk or presentation types › Invited talk
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Northern Network for Medical Humanities Research Congress 2025
Dalton, B. (Organiser), Wragge-Morley, A. (Organiser) & Wright, S. (Organiser)
21/05/2025 → 23/05/2025Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
File -
Grant Writing Workshop on the History of Habit
Wragge-Morley, A. (Participant)
19/05/2025 → 20/05/2025Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Symposium
Prizes
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Fellow of the Royal Historical Society
Wragge-Morley, A. (Recipient), 2021
Prize: Election to learned society
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José Vázquez Teaching Excellence Award
Wragge-Morley, A. (Recipient), 2020
Prize: Prize (including medals and awards)
Press/Media
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What happened when I walked into the world's quietest place
24/12/18
1 Media contribution
Press/Media: Newspaper Article
Impacts
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Exploring the Links Between Arts and Health - Escape2Make
Wragge-Morley, A. (Participant)
Impact: Societal Impacts, Health Impact
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Improving Public Accessibility of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh Library Collection
Wragge-Morley, A. (Participant)
Impact: Cultural Impacts