About Jenny
By day: cell biologist at UCL. By night: novelist, broadcaster, science writer, sci-lit-art pundit, blogger and Editor of LabLit.com. I blog about my life in science, not the facts and figures.
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- rpg on In which we struggle: mental health in higher education
- Jennifer Rohn on In which no scientist is an island – but that’s what we signed up for
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Author Archives: Jennifer Rohn
In which I dream of the catwalk
Some of you may already have heard through the London grapevine about the plans Wynn Abbott (as director of SciCult) and I (as editor of LabLit) have cooked up to hold a competition entitled Stripping Off the White Coat. We … Continue reading
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In which I bask in the lucky glow
Tomorrow marks the end of my first month in the lab. You might expect me to report that the time has flown. But in truth, I have lived through each minute in painstaking real-time, and not all of it has … Continue reading
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In which I am humbled by the evolution of science
I have often thought about what it might have been like to have lived through pivotal years when scientific thinking or practice was undergoing a period of intense change. To have been a scientist in 1859 when Darwin’s Origin of … Continue reading
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In which I rejoice in muscle memory
On Friday, I began my first experiment in over four years. Now, my normal inclination when planning an experiment is to squeeze in as many samples as humanly possible. And this, to be layered on top of a week’s worth … Continue reading
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In which I lift my finger from the ‘pause’ button
This past Friday, my interrupted career as a scientist resumed. My first day in the lab came equipped with its own intrinsic shock absorber, coinciding as it did with the entire lab moving into a new institute – all of … Continue reading
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In which the focus stubbornly resists narrowing
No, I can’t believe it either: exactly one week remains before I re-start my career as a bench scientist. In two day’s time I pack up my desk, bid a tearful, even maternal farewell to my lovely team of young … Continue reading
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In which I fail to suspend disbelief
Those of you who reside in Britain and are staunch Guardian readers will be familiar with the DVDs that come free with the Saturday edition. The films on offer are never interesting enough to entice you buy the paper when … Continue reading
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In which I leap into the Void
All scientists joke about going ‘over to the Dark Side’ – in other words, leaving academic research for an alternative career. And these days the transit is pretty common. After all, far more scientists are produced than there are permanent … Continue reading
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In which I contemplate the unsung scientific record
In this week’s Nature, Sydney Brenner and Richard Roberts lament the ephemeral nature of online information storage, which may lead to irreparable gaps in the anthropological side of the scientific record. In passionate language, they urge scientists to save their … Continue reading
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In which I indulge in a muse about age, science, dance and drink
Sometimes I find myself feeling a bit old. Last night one of our American editorial interns turned 21. Now, this landmark is a bigger deal over the Pond than here, as 21 ushers in the legal drinking age. The choice … Continue reading
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