Lan A. Li

Johns Hopkins University

Wednesday, March 12, 2025, 3:00 pm EDT

Hybrid event, Online and at:
Victoria College
91 Charles Street West
Toronto, ON M5S 1K7

This talk is based on my forthcoming book, Body Maps: Improvising Meridians and Nerves in Global Chinese Medicine, which reframes generic anatomical images by considering illustrations of invisible structures as maps. Body Maps offers a long global history of medicine through hand-drawn body maps and spans across the tenth to the twentieth centuries to re-think cultures of objectivity beyond normative geographies of science and medicine. In this talk, I focus on the graphic form of a tu 圖 as a historical category of technical images to understand how illustrations of lines guided diagnostic and therapeutic practice. Scholars often debated whether to discursively interpret these lines as meridians, channels, or tracts; practitioners often debated whether these lines merely visualized nerves to articulate needling and heating practices. Specifically, this talk offers a critical examination of a thirteenth century image of jingluo 經絡, or meridians, and considers it within the epistemological frameworks of global East Asian medicine. Drawing on analytical approaches from science studies and art history, it traces the aesthetic, conceptual, and political dimensions of these anatomical images across premodern, modern, and contemporary periods.

Professor Lan A. Li (Department of the History of Medicine at The Johns Hopkins University of School Medicine with a joint appointment in the East Asian Studies Program and the Department of History of Science and Technology)  is a historian of the body and filmmaker focusing on medicine and health in Global East Asia. To know more, visit Professor's Li website

Please note that this is a hybrid event, and you may choose to attend either in person or virtually via Zoom. To get the link please contact IHPST.info@utoronto.ca

Date
-