пʼятниця, 14 травня 2010 р.

The Body and the Mind in the History of Medicine and Health

"The Body and the Mind in the History of Medicine and Health"

EAHMH Conference 2010, Utrecht, 1-4 September 2011

The European Association for the History of Medicine and Health (EAHMH) will hold its bi-annual meeting in Utrecht (The Netherlands), 1-4 September 2011. The conference will consider the general theme: 'The Body and the Mind in the History of Medicine and Health'.  Further information on the conference please see www.eahmh.net

вівторок, 11 травня 2010 р.

Science/AAAS The Neandertal Genome

The Neandertal Genome

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      Neandertals (Homo neanderthalensis) are currently believed to be our closest evolutionary relatives.

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      “Fossil remains and anatomical reconstructions indicate that the typical Neandertal had a stocky muscular body with short forearms and legs, a large head with bony brow ridges and a brain slightly larger than ours, a jutting face with a large nose, and perhaps reddish hair and fair skin. Neandertals made and used a diverse set of sophisticated tools, controlled fire, organized their living spaces, hunted and fed on game of various sizes, and occasionally made symbolic or ornamental objects”.

For more Neandertal basics, see http://www.sciencemag.org/special/neandertal/feature/index.html

понеділок, 10 травня 2010 р.

Knowledge, Ethics and Representations of Medicine and Health: Historical Perspectives

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Society for the Social History of Medicine 2010 Annual Conference
"Knowledge, Ethics and Representations of Medicine and Health: Historical Perspectives"
Durham, UK. Thursday 8th to Sunday 11th July 2010

Organised by the Northern Centre for the History of Medicine and jointly hosted by Durham and Newcastle Universities.

Key-note speakers:

Dr Tim Boon (Science Museum, London, UK)
'On the Varieties of Medical Filmmaking: An Alternative Path to the Cultures of Bio-Medicine'

Professor Martha Few (University of Arizona, USA)
'The Fetus as Colonial Subject: Gender, Reproduction, and Medicine in the Eighteenth-Century Spanish Atlantic'

Professor Dr Thomas Lemke (Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany)
'Biosociality, health and citizenship'

Professor Heinrich von Staden (Institute for Advanced Studies, Princeton, USA)
'Experiments on Living Animals: Private and Public Science in Ancient Greece and Rome'

Session themes include:

What processes have generated knowledge about the body, illness and health that has become authoritative in different societies?
How have claims of medical expertise been justified vis à vis claims from other domains of social and cultural authority such as religion and law?
What did it mean for medical practitioners in different cultural and social contexts to claim to be ethical as well as knowledgeable?
How did they present themselves to the public?
What kind of material, visual and textual representations of body, mind, health and disease have gained ‘defining power’ exerting influence on medical practice and research until today?

For more information on the SSHM please see www.sshm.org.

Laurie Garrett on lessons from the 1918 flu