I am an associate researcher at the School of Arts, and lecturer in the Centre for Lifelong Learning, co-directing a series of cross-faculty projects in Embodiments Research Group at the University of Liverpool. I hold a Ph.D. in English literature with specialization in the long nineteenth-century poetry and Romantic fiction, focusing on aesthetics, phenomenology, gender/sexuality studies, religious and historical perspectives. I have organized interdisciplinary events and have presented diverse areas of the arts in national and international conferences. Together with colleagues in Merseyside and those working overseas, I am currently working on a series of edited volumes and on my own monographs. In my teaching and research, I strive to address Occidental/Oriental perspectives in comparison, aiming to bridge the gap between intellectual domains.
More broadly, my research examines the relationship between content and perception in literary modes. I am interested in narratives, drawing upon theoretical foundations in comparative literary studies and models of motivation in HE, reading content primarily by focusing on narratology and reception. I am interested and well-skilled in reading and writing in the field of Comparative Literary Studies. My literary approach is combined with my interest in educational theories and models of motivation in HE academic practice. I am also passionately fond of psychology, and I am reading different areas in cognitive science at the moment, including memory and language.
Another area which has taken a huge part of my research schedule, at the moment, is primary care management. I am currently co-editing a book, addressing various aspects from finances to HR and beyond, reading a whole range of diverse perspectives and narratives in healthcare. This work draws on my own professional experience in the healthcare system and expands on my further interest in health management.