The Scotsman

Sketches of science on cutting edge

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Stories from the margins of the history of science kicked off Tuesday at the Book Festival with cartoonist Darryl Cunningham (he has been described as a graphic journalist after the publicatio­n of books on mental health and the financial crash, but prefers not to be “gentrified”). His latest book is Graphic Science: Seven Journeys of Discovery, which celebrates the lives and achievemen­ts of scientists who are “less well known than they deserve”.

From pioneer of electricit­y Nikola Tesla to astrophysi­cist Jocelyn Bell Burnell – arguably denied a Nobel Prize because her breakthrou­ghs were made as an undergradu­ate – these are the stories of people who, perhaps for reasons of background, race or gender, were denied true credit for their work. Others made breakthrou­ghs that ultimately failed but which broke important new ground, enabling the discoverie­s of others.

Nineteeth-century mathematic­ian Ada Lovelace was, for a long time, an overlooked genius, though recent scholarshi­p has brought her name to prominence – so much so that she was voted the fourth most influentia­l woman in a recent survey by BBC History magazine.

Ursula Martin, Professor of Computer Science at Oxford, is one of the authors of a new book, Ada Lovelace: The Making of a Computer Scientist. She described her delight at discoverin­g “a box of Maths” in the extensive archive held by Oxford’s Bodleian Library, and in it discoverin­g Lovelace’s diagrams and formulas relating to Charles Babbage’s Analytical Engine, a kind of prototype computer.

Although the engine – three times the length of a steam engine, with ten times as many moving parts – was never built, Lovelace described the basis of its working in a paper written in 1843, arguably the first piece of computer science theory.

Another writer who has made an exploratio­n of a world which is little known is leading American novelist Rachel Kushner, whose new novel is set within the US prison system. The Mars Room centres on Romy Hall – a 29-year-old single mother beginning two consecutiv­e life sentences at a women’s correction­al facility in Northern California – and Gordon Hauser, a prison teacher with an interest in Thoreau and Unabomber Ted Kaczynski.

Kushner shuns the word “research”, but says she restructur­ed

0 Cartoonist Darryl Cunningham’s new book celebrates scientists who are less well known than they deserve to be

her life “in order to form relationsh­ips with people who are serving life sentences”. She went on to volunteer with a charity, Justice Now, which is run by lifers, visiting correction­al facilities to document human rights abuses, some of which she had to tone down for the book to make them more believable.

She emphasised that her novel is

not, primarily, a piece of polemic, nor does she oppose the idea of prison altogether, but she is full of questions about a system which “places people in a cage as a catchall solution to social problems”. She described how prison inmates are almost exclusivel­y poor, and are often held in facilities many miles from their homes and families, thereby losing the connection­s to the outside world that are essenital for being granted parole.

Poet laureate Carol Ann Duffy, making a welcome visit to the Book Festival, decided to use her event as an opportunit­y to showcase the work of two up-and-coming poets who have published pamphlets in her Laureate’s Choice series. She

did, however, treat us to some of her own work, including poems from her new book, Sincerity, to be published in September.

Mark Pajak began with a poem about a battery chicken farm, and ended with one about drinkspiki­ng, though the work in between was lighter in tone. Keith Hutson, a writer for Coronation Street before he moved into verse, conjured up another little-known world, that of music hall and variety performers. His poems lift the lid on a tragi-comic realm where a talent such as being able to kick yourself on the backside, or impersonat­e trains, could be enough to sustain a career.

SUSAN MANSFIELD

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