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For a nation that brought the world Chartism, the Suffragettes, the
Tolpuddle Martyrs, and so many other grassroots social movements,
Britain rarely celebrates its long, great tradition of people
power. In this timely and evocative collection, twenty authors have
assembled to re-imagine key moments of British protest, from the
Peasants’ Revolt of 1381 to the anti-Iraq War demo of 2003.
Written in close consultation with historians, sociologists and
eyewitnesses – who also contribute afterwords – these stories
follow fictional characters caught up in real-life struggles,
offering a streetlevel perspective on the noble art of resistance.
In the age of fake news and post-truth politics this book fights
fiction with (well researched, historically accurate) fiction.
Science is always telling stories. Whether in the creation myths of
evolution or the Big Bang, or in the eureka moments of science
history, narrative – just as much as metaphor – is a key tool
in the scientist’s surprisingly literary toolkit. Perhaps the
most interesting use of story is the thought experiment, the
intuition pump, that draws on the most instinctive parts of the
imagination to crack otherwise perplexing problems. From Newton's
Bucket, to Maxwell’s Demon, from Einstein's Lift to
Schrödinger’s Cat – all are examples of 'fiction' being used
at the highest level, not just to explain, but to deduce, to prove.
In this unique anthology, authors have collaborated with leading
scientists, to bounce literary, human narratives against purely
theoretical ones, alloying together real stories with abstract
ones, to produce truly extraordinary results. Featuring leading
scientists acting as consultants on the stories, and writing
scientific afterwords, bringing the theory featured in the stories
to life, including Prof. Sarah Bridle (Jodrell Bank), Prof.
Jonathan Wolff and Prof. Frank Jackson (the inventor of the 'Mary's
Room' thought experiment).
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