CfP: Bodies Beyond Borders. The Circulation of Anatomical Knowledge
Call for
Papers: Bodies Beyond Borders. The Circulation of Anatomical Knowledge,
1750-1950 (Deadline: 1 June 2014)
Leuven, 7-9 January 2015
How does anatomical knowledge move from
one site to another? Between 1750 and 1950 the study of anatomy underwent great
changes, as a part of the development of scientific medicine, through public
anatomies, as well as in the interplay between the two. How did these changes
spread geographically? How did knowledge about newly discovered lesions travel
from one hospital to another? What was the role of anatomical models in the
spread of the public consciousness of syphilis, for example? Was the spread of
this knowledge hindered by national borders, or did anatomical knowledge cross
those borders easily? These questions are concerned with what James Secord
terms ‘knowledge in transit’. To seek an answer to these questions, a
conference focusing on the circulation of anatomical knowledge between 1750 and
1950 will be organized in Leuven from 7-9 January 2015. Confirmed speakers are
Sam Alberti, Sven Dupré, Rina Knoeff, Helen MacDonald, Anna Maerker, Chloé
Pirson, Natasha Ruiz-Gómez and Michael Sappol.
Knowledge does not move by itself – it has
to be carried. To better understand how anatomical knowledge moves from place
to place, we will seek to trace the trajectories of its bearers. Some of those
bearers were tied very specifically to the discipline of anatomy: wax models,
preserved bodies (or parts of them) or anatomical atlases, for example. These
objects are polysemic in nature, tending to have different meanings in
different contexts and for different audiences. It makes the question of how
anatomical knowledge travelled all the more pertinent if, for example, wax
models that went from a Florentine museum to a Viennese medical training
institution underwent a shift in meaning en route. But bearers of knowledge
less specifically tied to anatomy were equally important: articles, books and
individual persons to name but a few examples.
For our conference we welcome
contributions regarding the geographical movement of
anatomical knowledge between 1750 and 1950. We are equally interested in
‘scientific’ and ‘public’ anatomy – as well as in exchanges between the two
domains. Therefore, we encourage contributions about bearers of anatomical
knowledge as wide-ranging as persons (scientists, students, freaks), objects
(models, preparations, bodies or body parts), visual representations (films,
atlases, wall maps) and practices (dissections, travelling exhibitions), as
well as their (transnational and intranational) trajectories.
Paper proposals must be submitted by 1 June 2014.
Please send a 300-word abstract to pieter.huistra@arts.kuleuven.be
Notification of acceptance: early July,
2014.