In Spring Term 2016 there will be two seminars in the Oxford University series on Science, Medicine and Culture in the Nineteenth Century at St Anne’s College. Drinks will be served after each seminar and all are welcome.
Wednesday 3 February 2016 (Week 3)
Dr Sam Alberti, Director of Museums and Archives, Royal College of Surgeons of England
Casting no doubt: Plaster Heads in Victorian/Edwardian Science and Medicine
Science and medicine rely on extra-textual objects. From within the array of instruments, models, specimens and other material culture this paper will focus on a specific medium (plaster of Paris casts) and a specific anatomy (the human head). Examples from medicine, anthropology and anatomy will illustrate the particularities of the process of casting, the relationships between interior and exterior, between life and death. Museum stores to this day hold thousands of these widely reproduced and circulated casts, their quantity bewildering, their status ambiguous. Unpacking their significance as clinical and scientific records in the decades around 1900 is revealing.
5.30 – 7.00, Seminar Room 3, St Anne’s College
Wednesday 17 February 2016 (Week 5)
Graeme Gooday, Professor of History of Science and Technology, University of Leeds
Medical and technological limits: exploiting, evaluating and alleviating adult hearing loss in Britain up to the Great War.
While early 19th century otologists claimed they could ‘cure’ most categories of deafness, by the early twentieth century such boasts were more characteristic of opportunist mail order advertisers. Victorian middle class people who experienced significant auditory loss in adulthood could thus not expect much assistance from physicians in attempting to sustain life among the hearing. Some followed Harriet Martineau’s example and declared their ‘deafness’ publicly by sporting a hearing trumpet to aid conversation. The more self-conscious opted for hearing assistance discreetly disguised in, for example, a ladies’ bonnet or a gentleman’s top hat. Those untroubled by myopia could instead learn lip-reading, or occasionally hand signing. These purported ‘solutions’ to hearing loss were much debated alongside many other aspects of deafness in the Deaf Chronicle founded in 1889, and in its successor periodicals.
5.30 – 7.00, Seminar Room 3, St Anne’s College
For more information, visit http://diseasesofmodernlife.org/category/events/