Sleep and the Rhythms of Life

About
thumbnail logo  sleep and the rhythms of life

 

This network will run from 2022 to 2024.

In year three of the Covid-pandemic, we are living at a historical conjunction in which social rhythms are altered and their effects on sleep come to the fore every day. The pandemic has exposed the extent to which sleep is entwined with social conditions - sleep is highly dynamic and very little about sleep is unchangeable. For example, changed social conditions over the past 100 years appear to have had a marked impact upon key elements of sleep. Recent studies on circadian rhythms and sleep, along with historical insights, have shown that such changed societal conditions have resulted in a detachment of these key biological rhythms from the geophysical cycle of light and dark, with major deleterious effects upon human functioning, wellbeing, and creativity.
Rhythmicity is not only at the heart of sleep and chronobiology, but is also fundamental to the humanities. This shared term thus generates the questions at the heart of the proposed multidisciplinary network:

 

 

  • How has Western modernity made and unmade the nature of sleep?
  • To what extent can the human body and mind be trained to adapt to different rhythms of life, and at what cost?
  • Why is sleep so crucial to creativity and the production of art?
  • What would be the impact of studying rhythmicity as a key term of interdisciplinary analysis?

"Sleep and the Rhythms of Life" opens a dialogue between the humanities and the sciences and will contribute to shared knowledge production. Building on previous work in the medical humanities at the University of Oxford, it aims to bring together researchers with an interest in sleep across the academic divisions and to develop an innovative exchange that transcends traditional disciplinary boundaries and illuminates the importance of sleep from a diverse set of perspectives.

The network is led by Dr Sebastian Klinger (Modern Languages), Professor Sally Shuttleworth (English), Professor Russell Foster (Sleep and Circadian Neuroscience Institute) and Dr Alessandra Aloisi (Medieval and Modern Languages).  

 

Contact:

Professor Sally Shuttleworth - sally.shuttleworth@st-annes.ox.ac.uk

Dr Sebastian Klinger - sebastian.klinger@mod-langs.ox.ac.uk

People

Collaborators:

Colin A. Espie

Professor of Sleep Medicine

Medical Sciences Division

colin.espie@ndcn.ox.ac.uk

 

David Ray

Professor of Endocrinology

Medical Sciences Division

david.ray@ocdem.ox.ac.uk

 

Guy Goodwin

Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry

Medical Sciences Division

guy.goodwin@psych.ox.ac.uk

 

Haram Park

Postdoctoral Research Scientist

Medical Sciences Division

haram.park@dpag.ox.ac.uk

 

Eric Clarke

Heather Professor of Music; Fellow of Wadham College

Faculty of Music

eric.clarke@music.ox.ac.uk

Man Yee Kan

Professor of Sociology and Fellow of Linacre College

Department of Sociology

man-yee.kan@sociology.ox.ac.uk

 

Melinda Mills

Nuffield Professor of Sociology

Department of Sociology

melinda.mills@sociology.ox.ac.uk

 

Simon Kyle

Associate Professor

Medical Sciences Division

simon.kyle@ndcn.ox.ac.uk

 

Simon Kemp

Associate Professor in French

Faculty of Medieval & Modern Languages

Somerville College

simon.kemp@some.ox.ac.uk

Stuart Peirson

Professor of Circadian Neuroscience

Medical Sciences Division

stuart.peirson@eye.ox.ac.uk

 

Aarti Jagannath

Associate Professor in Circadian Biology

Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences

aarti.jagannath@ndcn.ox.ac.uk

 

Ben Morgan

Associate Professor in German and Fellow of Worcester College 

Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages

ben.morgan@worc.ox.ac.uk

 

Bernhard Staresina

Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience and Tutorial Fellow of Wadham College

Experimental Psychology

bernhard.staresina@psy.ox.ac.uk

 

 

 

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