Seminar with Victoria Munn (University of Auckland) on Early Modern Hair Dye Recipes
Working Groups
The Consortium invites scholars to join our topical working groups for challenging and collegial discussion of interesting publications in their fields and of each others’ works-in-progress.
Each group meets monthly. All interested scholars are welcome to participate via online video conferencing.
To join a group:
- Log in, or create an account
- Click on a group below
- Click on the "Request Membership" link
Upcoming Meetings
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Disability and the History of Astronomy
Astronomy has a long history of operating at, and even beyond, the limits of human ability. In the introduction to the 2024 Osiris volume on “Disability and the History of Science”, editors Mara Mills, Jaipreet Virdi and Sarah F.
We are excited that the work for our March discussion will be a chapter from a work in progress by Alex Golub (University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa), "Projects and Problematics: Marshall Sahlins in Paris, 1967-1969."
Commentators: David H. Price and Robert Hancock
Speaker: Tiziana Beltrame
Assistant Professor - History of Science, Department of Historical and Geographic Sciences and the Ancient World (DiSSGeA), University of Padua
Co-Editor with Yaël Kreplak of "Les réserves des musées – Écologies des collections" (2024) https://www.lespressesdureel.com/EN/ouvrage.php?id=11524
Session Title: Museum cohabitations: how to make room for objects and their digital avatars?
NOTE SPECIAL DATE
Yovanna Pineda, "Public Health and the Urban Waters of the Riachuelo in Dock Sud, Buenos Aires City"
Hello all, for the March meeting, we will read Moving Crops and the Scales of History written by Francesca Bray, Barbara Hahn, John Bosco Lourdusamy and Tiago Saraivathe. Professor Bray will be joining us for the discussion, which will cover the Introduction (Orientations, Cropscales and History), plus Chapters 3 (Sizes) and 4 (Actants). Hope to see many of you there!
Sarah Finn, Romance of Books: Sharing Library Collections through Social Media
In December 2017, Sarah Finn created the Instagram account @romanceofbooks with the intention of documenting her research into printed natural history illustrations found in rare books located in Special Collections libraries. The account has gained a global audience of over 136,000 followers from a wide variety of backgrounds including current scientific illustrators, tattoo artists, cultural heritage professionals, and people who just enjoy beautiful images of plants and animals.
Deren Ertas (Harvard University)
"From the Mine to the Market: A History of Silver in the Eighteenth-Century Ottoman Empire"
Robert Edwards (UC San Diego / Irvine)
"Anticolonial Methods in the History of Linguistic Anthropology "
A. Blum, D. Brill - "Tokyo Wheeler or the Epistemic Preconditions of the Renaissance of Relativity" (2020)
Primary Source: (Re)Translation of John Wheeler’s Tokyo Lecture "Discussion on the Problems of Elementary Particle Theory" (1954), which is part of the attachment of the above paper.
Guest: Alexander Blum
Leib Celnik, "Revisiting Goethe's Farbenlehre: English Translations, History, and Polemics"
Banji Chona (Lusaka): tbc
"Palatino 586: A medieval Occitan health manual"
Benedetta Mariani (UEA)
Commentator: TBC
Brian Leech, American Popular Coal-ture: Mining Movies and Sad Songs in the American Imagination
Divya Kumar-Dumas (University of Maryland)
Metal, Matter, and Meaning: Toward a Textual and Scientific History of the Sumhuram Yakṣī
Aijie Shi, University of Wisconsin-Madison, “The Life History of Laminaria japonica in the Northwest Pacific”
Speaker: Ryan A. Kashanipour, University of Arizona
Title: Epidemics and Epistemologies: Experiencing Illness in Colonial Yucatán
Alexander Silaen (University of Vienna)
Colonial Entomology and Labor Relations in Sumatra, 1880–1930 of the Gregorian Calendar
Kelcey Gibbons (History, Anthropology, Science, Technology, and Society, MIT)
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