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G.S. Rousseau

George Rousseau
George Rousseau lecturing in Oxford 2014.jpg
Born George Sebastian Rousseau
1941 (age 76–77)
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Residence Oxfordshire, UK
Nationality American, British
Alma mater Amherst College (AB)
Princeton University (PhD)
Occupation Emeritus Professor
Organization University of Oxford
Known for

Cultural and intellectual history and literature

Theories of interdisciplinarity Literature and Medicine
Partner(s) John Francis Sturley (landscape gardener)

Cultural and intellectual history and literature

Professor George Sebastian Rousseau (born February 23, 1941) is an American cultural historian resident in the United Kingdom.

He was educated at Amherst College and Princeton University where he obtained his doctorate.

From 1966 to 1968 he was a member of the English Faculty at Harvard University, before moving to a professorship at UCLA, and later to the Regius Chair of English at Aberdeen University in Aberdeen, Scotland. He is a frequent contributor to newspapers and magazines. Since then he has been attached to the History Faculty at Oxford University in Oxford, England where was the Co-Director of the Centre for the History of Childhood from 2003 - 2013. Although retired in Oxford he continues to probe diverse ways of configuring interpretations of the beginning and end of life – histories of childhood and histories of ageing - with diverse scholars in the Humanities and Social Sciences.

Rousseau is a cultural historian who works in the interface of literature and medicine, and emphasizes the relevance of imaginative materials - literature, especially diaries and biography, art and architecture, music - for the public understanding of medicine, past and present. Rousseau is an ongoing member of the Core Team of the Norwegian Research Group in Literature and Science funded by the Norwegian Research Council. This project, funded by a SAMKUL award at the Norwegian Research Council for the period 2016-2021, applies Rousseau's theories of interdisciplinarity to concepts of late style, societies in late development, late Western Capitalism and notions of lateness at large,. It endorses the historical and contextual methodologies Rousseau has advocated for decades in the study of literature and other disciplines. It also encourages an interdisciplinary approach to philosophical configurations of human ageing and the newly invigorated concept of the fourth stage of old age, feeding into contemporary ideas of what a good old age should entail. Rousseau is also an executive member of the Edinburgh History of Distributed Cognition project team, sponsored by the Edinburgh Centre for Epistemology, Mind and Normativity and funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council of the United Kingdom. The Edinburgh project brings together scholars in the humanities and sciences, especially literature and philosophy, medicine and the neurosciences, and is producing a multi-volume history of distributed cognition from the Greeks to the present time. Rousseau’s contribution lies primarily in the historical era of the Enlightenment, and follows on from his decades’ long commitment to interdisciplinary scholarship covering literature and the sciences, and literature and medicine especially as formulated in the current Medical Humanities. In 2010 - 2012 Rousseau was the presenter of the Wellcome Collection Event Series in London called 'Tell It To Your Doctor'.


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