Honours List: Most Downloaded Articles of 2014

The new year honours for 2014’s most downloaded articles go to:

1) Rachel Crossland, ‘”Multitudinous and Minute”: Early Twentieth-Century Scientific, Literary and Psychological Representations of the Mass’ (Vol. 6, No. 2)
2) Josie Gill, ‘Science and Fiction in Zadie Smith’s White Teeth‘ (Vol. 6, No. 2)
3) Ruth Murphy, ‘Darwin and 1860s Children’s Literature: Belief, Myth or Detritus’ (Vol. 5, No. 2)

Most Downloaded

November – December 2014

Most Downloaded Articles (all issues):
1. Erika Behrisch Elce, ‘”One Remarkable Evening”: Redemptive Science in Wilkie Collins’s Heart and Science‘ (Vol. 7, No. 1)
2. Martin Willis, Keir Waddington and Richard Marsden, ‘Imaginary Investments: Illness Narratives Beyond the Gaze’ (Vol. 6, No 1)
3. Verity Hunt, ‘Electric Leisure: Late Nineteenth-Century Dreams of Remote Viewing by “Telectroscope”‘ (Vol. 7, No. 1)

Most Downloaded Reviews (all issues):
1. Hannah Brunning, Review of Michael Davis’s “Mind and Matter in The Picture of Dorian Gray” (Vol. 7, No. 1)
2. Leigh Wilson, Review of Rachel Crossland’s “What D.H. Lawrence Understood of ‘The Einstein Theory’: Relativity in Fantasia of the Unconscious and Kangaroo” (Vol. 7, No. 1)
3. Anne M. Thell, Review of Noelle Gallagher’s “Satire as Medicine in the Restoration and Early Eighteenth Century: The History of a Metaphor” (Vol. 7, No. 1)

Most Downloaded

September – October 2014

Most Downloaded Articles (all issues):
1. Erika Behrisch Elce, ‘”One Remarkable Evening”: Redemptive Science in Wilkie Collins’s Heart and Science‘ (Vol 7, No. 1)
2. Ruth Murphy, ‘Darwin and 1860s Children’s Literature: Belief, Myth or Detritus’ (Vol 5, No. 2)
3. Rachel Crossland, ‘”Multitudinous and Minute”: Early Twentieth-Century Scientific, Literary and Psychological Representations of the Mass’ (Vol 6, No. 2)

Most Downloaded Reviews (all issues):
1. Hannah Brunning, Review of Michael Davis’s “Mind and Matter in The Picture of Dorian Gray” (Vol 7, No. 1)
2. Martin Willis, Review of Ellen Burton Harrington’s ‘Nation, identity and the fascination with forensic science in Sherlock Holmes and CSI’ (Vol 1, No. 1)
3. Ben De Bruyn, Review of Jay Clayton’s “The Ridicule of Time: Science Fiction, Bioethics and the Posthuman” (Vol 6, No. 2)