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TALKS FOR 2005-06
The
Klopsteg seminar series in
SCIENCE IN HUMAN CULTURE
The SHC seminar series is funded by a generous grant from the Klopsteg
Fund to encourage scholarship and teaching in the domain of the
two cultures. The seminar generally meets on Fridays at noon to
hear speakers discuss science, medicine, and technology in their
social, philosophical, or historical context. We send out regular
bulletins to remind our audience of up-coming talks. If you wish
to be added to our electronic mailing list, please contact Barbara
Phelan.
The location for the talks, unless otherwise indicated, is the
Hagstrum Room, 201 University Hall, Evanston Campus. All talks begin
at 12:00 noon.
September
30
Kenneth Albala
"The Use and Abuse of Chocolate in 17th Century Medical
Theory"
[CANCELLED: Ed Jurkowitz (October 14): "Of Minds and Methods: Images of Mental Action and the Politics of Ernst Machs Perspectival Scientific Methodology Within the German-Speaking Academy"]
October 28
Bruno Latour
"Making Things Public"
November 18
Joel Snyder
"The Look of Silence: Visualizing Echoes"
January 20
Sokhieng Au
"Making the Modern Bubonic Plague in Colonial Cambodia"
University Hall, Room 122
February 10
Patrick Singy
"The Case of 'Sade': Constructing the Sadistic Individual in the Nineteenth Century"
February 24
Jan Golinski
"Scientific Conversations in the Enlightenment Public Sphere"
March 3
Jamie Cohen-Cole
"The Science and Politics of Autonomous Thought in Cold War America"
Crowe Hall, 1860 Campus Drive, Room 125
April 21
Elizabeth Williams
April 28
Jessica Riskin
Department of History, Stanford University
"Mechanical Christs, Hydraulic Brutes and the Invention of Consciousness."
May 5
Judith Schloegel
Argonne National Laboratory
"Disciplinary Identity and the Origins of Environmental Research at Argonne National Laboratory, 1955-1975"
May 12
Jan Goldstein
Department of History, University of Chicago
"Neutralizing Freud: Some Thoughts on the Implications of the Lycee Philosophy Class for the Reception of Psychoanalysis in France"
May 26
Elizabeth Williams
Department of History, Oklahoma State University
"Did the Enlightenment Recognize Eating Disorders? Digestion and Neurosis in Vitalist Medicine of the Late Eighteenth Century"
Noon, Sociology Seminar Room (1808 Chicago Ave) |