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Grant winners ¨C 20 October 2016

<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ class="standfirst">A round-up of recent recipients of research council cash
October 20, 2016
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<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>Economic and Social Research Council

Research grants

Fair shares and families: children¡¯s perceptions of material resource distributions and decision-making within families


Global power shifts and the changing dynamics of export finance


Taking back control: fractioning the homunculus to improve our understanding of the role of ¡°inhibitory control¡± in heavy drinking


<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>National Institute for Health Research

Health Services and Delivery Research programme

Innovation to enhance health in care homes: rapid evidence synthesis

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Accounting for multimorbidity, competing risk and direct treatment disutility in risk prediction tools and model-based cost-effectiveness analysis for the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease and osteoporotic fracture


Learning about and learning from GP federations in the English NHS: a qualitative investigation

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<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>Arts and Humanities Research Council

Research grants

Showcasing socialist flower power: the world of Soviet hippies


Can we rebuild the Kasthamandap? Promoting post-disaster rescue excavations, salvage and subsurface heritage protection protocols in Kathmandu


Fiji¡¯s artistic heritage: impact and engagement in Fiji


<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>In detail

Award winner: Sara Lyons
Institution: University of Kent
Value: ?194,863

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This project will explore how UK and US novelists understood, represented and problematised the concept of human intelligence between 1880 and 1920. This period saw intense discussions about the mechanisms of biological heredity and also the beginning of mass compulsory education. These developments inspired campaigns to establish the innate and measurable nature of mental ability. Intelligence testing and the concept of IQ gained significant support, encouraging a?tendency to conceptualise intelligence in statistical terms, as a phenomenon distributed predictably around a norm in a population. The study will compare how the Bildungsroman form ¨C novels that deal with a?protagonist¡¯s personal development and education ¨C was used to consider the implications of the drive to render intelligence objectively knowable: what it meant, how it felt to be ranked as of high or low intelligence. The project will also consider the extent to which novelists endorsed the IQ model and, perhaps, explored alternatives. Other aspects to be looked at include how shifting ideas about the nature of mental ability affected literary criticism and the IQ concept¡¯s impact on modern ideas of talent, creativity and aesthetic value.

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