Where Entangled Empires and Early Modern Science Intertwine: An Iberoamerican Perspective

Neil Safier, Associate Professor of History, and Director of the John Carter Brown Library, Brown University

Center for Science & Society at Columbia University (New York, NY)

Wednesday, March 29, 2017 7:00 pm EDT

This talk explores the confluence, in the last two decades, between a new kind of imperial history that seeks to decenter and render more permeable the contours of individual empires in the early modern world and a similar phenomenon in the history of early modern science, where triumphalist narratives of individual geniuses have given way to a panorama of engagement with the natural world that includes a much more expansive range of actors. Arguing that this multi-polar and multi-actor scenario emerged organically from the concerns of Atlantic history, and also moved beyond them in important ways, the talk will highlight several recent examples from the Iberoamerican world, one of the proving grounds of this new approach merging the history of more permeable imperial and colonial spaces with a broader approach to science in what were formerly considered imperial peripheries.

This event is free and open to the public.
This event is part of the New York History of Science Lecture Series.