Abstracts Archive

Despite extensive work on the history of medical instruments, the material turn has been slow to arrive in the history of medicine. Paradoxically, the materiality of medical objects and their practices is inseparable from their function. Designed to enact and control the violation of corporeal and p...

Medicine and Health
Organized Session

In 1828, the Edinburgh phrenologist George Combe (1788-1858) published his now famous work, The Constitution of Man. Over the course of the nineteenth century, this book sold more than 300,000 copies, and was translated into at least six different languages, including Bengali and Japanese. From Amer...

Aspects of Scientific Practice/Organization
Organized Session

The sixteenth and seventeenth century have long been seen as fundamentally important to an understanding of the changing study of nature. The changes in this period have been variously categorized by historians as philosophical, methodological, or mathematical, among other explanations. A move to th...

Mathematics
Organized Session

In 1851, the botanist and cell-theorist Matthias Schleiden wrote a remarkable essay. In part a book review of Karl Vogt’s German translation of Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, it ranged much further, to present an explanation of the contemporary vogue for popular science. Schleiden’...

Thematic Approaches to the Study of Science
Organized Session

My talk starts with some general definition of the term “replication” and remarks on the historiography about experimentation, recalling the discussion about this feature of scientific practice in the works of Shapin & Schaffer; Collins, Galison, etc. But in these works, no mention is made on ho...

Aspects of Scientific Practice/Organization
Contributed Paper

This paper aims to discuss the medical practices in the cocoa plantations of São Tomé, a Portuguese colony in the Gulf of Guinea. As in other contexts, São Tomé’s plantations were dependent on large contingents of displaced black laborers, framed by different institutions from slavery to inden...

Medicine and Health
Organized Session

In the postwar era scientific conferences became ubiquitous and increasingly very large. As a reaction to this development, the Nobel Foundation in 1965 instituted the self-consciously elitist Nobel Symposia, still a going concern with around 160 meetings organized so far. The areas covered by the N...

Aspects of Scientific Practice/Organization
Organized Session

The weather map has a crucial role in the history of meteorology. As Napier Shaw (1854-1945) noted in his History of Meteorology, the weather map had created a new generation of meteorologists after the first individual founders of the discipline in the early modern period. While historians have alr...

Earth and Environmental Sciences
Organized Session

In 1794, several persecuted scientists, most notably the chemist Joseph Priestley, fled England for asylum in the United States. Americans celebrated Priestley’s arrival as a victory for science, human rights, and freedom, while their leaders hoped refugee scientists would enhance national science...

Thematic Approaches to the Study of Science
Organized Session

The Dutch anatomist Willem Vrolik collected several hundred abnormal human fetuses over the first half of the nineteenth century. Vrolik was one of the early teratologists, scientific men who sought to classify types of bodily abnormality and, through classification, discern what caused them. Vrolik...

Biology
Organized Session

On April 27, 1790, the first natural history museum in New Spain—Spanish territory from California to Guatemala—opened its doors. Its founder, José Longinos Martínez, had arrived in the Americas in 1787 as the taxidermist for the Royal Botanical Expedition, one small part of an immense nationa...

Thematic Approaches to the Study of Science
Organized Session

Materials research has contributed to pervasive, profound, yet largely invisible changes to both society in general and the sciences in particular. From computers to nuclear reactors, many high technologies – including the technologies of theory and experiment – require advanced materials. Yet w...

Physical Sciences
Organized Session

The paper explores the richness of scientific and philosophical approaches to matter in the thirteenth century. The twelfth-century Arabic- and Greek-into-Latin translation movements provided, in a relatively short time, Latinate audience with different accounts of matter as epistemic object proper ...

Physical Sciences
Organized Session

We live amidst a “biometric revolution,” a moment of accelerated development of technologies that identify individuals and secure societies by measuring and surveilling bodies. Those technologies centered on the head and the face are advancing especially quickly, exemplified by the growing use o...

Technology
Organized Session

This paper explores the human-assisted transoceanic migration and resettlement of the African Palm Weevil in Malaysia and S.E. Asia, and the consequent environmental and social upheaval that emerged at the intersection of biological symbiosis, neocolonial labor policies, accelerating economic change...

Biology
Organized Session

At the turn of the twentieth century, hundreds of Christian Scientists, including their founder Mary Baker Eddy, were charged with insanity owing to their religion. As a new religion, Christian Science became part of the medically-sanctioned etiology of insanity at the time. Newspapers were swift to...

Medicine and Health
Contributed Paper

In 1784, Georg Forster traveled through mining-landscapes in Germany’s Harz and Ore Mountains--a journey long neglected in favor of his more glamorous globe-trotting with Captain Cook. But it was in these industrial landscapes that Forster encountered “a new and rejuvenated Nature." Descending s...

Earth and Environmental Sciences
Contributed Paper

Around 1550 Antwerp was a vibrant port. Its many schools catered for the many companies, its Beurs was one of the first stock markets of the world, its printers published books on all subjects. Ships travelled to all parts of Europe, the Baltic, Italy, Scotland, the Azores with merchants dreaming of...

Mathematics
Organized Session

Using case studies of nineteenth-century anatomical model making and use, this paper seeks to challenge/interrogate current historiography concerning the role of anatomical representations for modernity. Following particular readings of Foucault’s concept of power/knowledge, historians’ interpre...

Medicine and Health
Organized Session

My paper engages with a rather specific and yet understudied case of natural irregularity: the phenomenon of monstrous births within the Medieval Jewish tradition. How did Premodern Jewish scientists and philosophers consider bodily defects that were evidently disagreeing with the regularity of Natu...

Medicine and Health
Organized Session

This paper studies conceptions of Indigenous knowledge-based material practice in the trade, production and use of wild silk within a posthumanist theoretical framework (Barad 2007). By focusing on actual conceptions of its material and symbolic agency, affinities and affordances, it inquires about ...

Social Sciences
Contributed Paper

Sébastien Le Clerc (1637-1714), one of the most successful engravers of Louis XIV’s France, was born to a family of goldsmiths in Lorraine, and received classical artisanal training. Yet over the course of a highly successful career as an engraver, he also became a widely published scientific aut...

Aspects of Scientific Practice/Organization
Organized Session

The long eighteenth century saw changes in ideas of order not only in politics and society, but also in philosophy, the arts, and natural science. In the aftermath of the seventeenth-century Scientific Revolution, the Aristotelian two-sphere cosmology, which for millennia divided a geocentric univer...

Aspects of Scientific Practice/Organization
Organized Session

In 1935, Stanley Smith Stevens published two articles in which he urged for a revolution in psychology. Building on P.W. Bridgman’s methodological prescriptions for physicists, Stevens argued that all psychological concepts need to be strictly defined in terms of public operations. If psychology i...

Medicine and Health
Contributed Paper

The discovery of Burkitt’s lymphoma (BL), a childhood cancer that appeared to be limited to particular parts of Africa and caused by a virus, attracted a range of researchers with a stake in the field of cancer viruses to Uganda. Between 1962 and 1979, the East African Virus Research Institute (EA...

Medicine and Health
Organized Session

In this paper, I will address three related topics: (1) I will discuss Descartes' medical sources and aims when he was writing the long eighteenth chapter of Le Monde (The World), devoted to the study of L'Homme (Man) in the early 1630s.
(2) I will demonstrate the significant novelty introduced in...

Thematic Approaches to the Study of Science
Organized Session

The reception of the periodic system of elements in European countries has its specificity and differences. This paper will explore the first recognition of the periodic system of elements in Croatia after its publication (1869). Croatia was then a part of the Kingdom of Croatia, Slavonia, and Dalma...

Chemistry
Contributed Paper

In the historical memory of the twentieth century science the figure of the Soviet biologist Nikolai Vavilov looms large. Here, I tell a less familiar story, one that reveals how Vavilov’s genetic geography research has become entangled with the beginnings of the Annales school of historiography. ...

Biology
Organized Session

The public display of wax anatomical models in eighteenth-century Italy attracted Grand Tourists and was intended to contribute to the Enlightenment project of cultivating virtue and the public good. Not all anatomical models were destined for wide public consumption, however. This paper examines ob...

Medicine and Health
Organized Session

In this paper, I investigate conceptualizations of the moral agency and personhood of infants in nineteenth-century American medical and pedagogical texts to disentangle the interweaving of hegemonic religious, scientific, and philosophical conceptions of children and childhood during the nineteenth...

Medicine and Health
Contributed Paper