Harry mulisch biography kortnie

So on Instagram I’ve been asking questions about what you’d like to know about me or what you’d like to read on the blog. Well, here’s topic number two: literature.

The original question topic suggested for the blog: “Literature and what it means to you.”

When I was a young kid…

So I have a funny relationship with literature. When I was a little kid, around the age of 4, I was making up my own stories, but because I couldn’t write yet, my dad had to write down what I told him. So I made little books that I’d staple together, with little paintings about the story. Then I’d leave empty spaced in the book where my dad had to write the text down.

Then I primary school, I started writing my own stories and drama plays, mostly by hand. But it were the 90s so computers were also on its way. I didn’t know how to type on computers until I was 12 I guess, so I told my friends to type down the stories I’ve made up. Yes, I have to admit, I’ve been always very strong willed and as I child I was kinda bossy, but hey, every kid has to learn, right?

BSLS 2012 Programme

This is the programme for the seventh annual BSLS conference, University of Oxford, 12-14 April 2012.

Thursday 12 April 2012

1300 Registration: St Cross Building, Manor Road, Oxford.
Refreshments (tea/coffee) available; please make your own arrangements for lunch.

1345 Opening Address

1400–1530 Session 1

(1A) Medicine and the Victorians (Chair: Tony Harris)

Willis, Martin ‘Silas Marner’s Catalepsy.’

Ifill, Helena. ‘Victorian Depictions of Monomania in Medical, Popular and Sensation Literature.’

(1B) Versions of Mathematics (Chair: TBC).

Bayley, Melanie. ‘“The recent draughts of Truth”: nineteenth-century science, progressive Christianity and Edwin Abbott’s Flatland.’

Engelhardt, Nina. ‘The “New Method of Thought itself”: Mathematics in Robert Musil’s The Man without Qualities.

Marcó del Pont, Xavier. ‘One and the Infinite: Mathematical Paradox in The Crying of Lot 49.’

(1C) Opportunities For The Study Of Science And Literature In Secondary Education

Kevin Mosedale (Radley College, Oxfordshire).

1530-1600 Coffee Break

1600

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