Speaker: JJ R. Strange, PhD Candidate at University of Wisconsin-Madison
Title: Crisis in the Garden: How War and Environmental Loss Transformed Chinese Pharmaceutical Research (1935-1955)
Format: Presentation followed by Q&A
The Consortium invites scholars to join our topical working groups for challenging and collegial discussion of interesting publications in their fields and of each others’ works-in-progress.
Propose a New Working Group for 2026-2027
Each group meets monthly. All interested scholars are welcome to participate via online video conferencing.
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Speaker: JJ R. Strange, PhD Candidate at University of Wisconsin-Madison
Title: Crisis in the Garden: How War and Environmental Loss Transformed Chinese Pharmaceutical Research (1935-1955)
Format: Presentation followed by Q&A
Can Gümüş: "Dirt, Disease and the Making of Urban Hygiene in Late Ottoman Istanbul"
*Note Special Date*
"How to Draw the Buddha and Dissect a Corpse: Iconometry and Anatomy in Early-Modern Tibet"
Briana Brightly (Harvard University)
Commentator: Ronit Yoeli-Tlalim
At this meeting, we will be discussing the ethical challenges of Generative AI for historians. We will discuss selections from the 2023 AHR forum on AI, as well as these articles:
https://www.historyworkshop.org.uk/practice-history/artificial-intelligence-a-warning-for-history/
Jan Gerris (University of Ghent)
Tandulaveyāliya - An ancient Jain philosophical reflection on life
Please read the three texts below:
Daniella McCahey (Texas Tech University) and Sam Robinson (University of York), "Research and Development in the Dependencies of the Falkland
Islands’: The Discovery Committee and the Early Politics of the Discovery Investigations"
Mackenzie Cooley (Hamilton College)
Sourcing Dragon’s Blood: Forging an Early Modern Global Pharmaceutical Supply Chain
A discussion with Edward Beatty and Israel G. Solares, the co-editors of the open-access An Engineered World: The Role of Engineers in Global Modernity (MIT Press, 2025).
Rohan Deb Roy, (Associate Professor in South Asian History, University of Reading) ‘Nobody here… will look at a mosquito’: Entomo-political surveillance in late colonial India
Chloé Laplatine (Histoire des théories linguistiques, CNRS et Université Paris Cité)
Linguistic archives for research on North American languages and their revitalization
Yulia Frumer (Johns Hopkins) and Lee Vinsel (Virginia Tech): Technology in Motion: Relaunching a book series with The Johns Hopkins University Press.
Edgar Alejandro Hernández presents, “The Autochromes of the Mexican Alfredo Saldívar.”
Henry Schmidt (University of California, Berkeley), "Invention and Federal Ethnology in the US"
In the final third of the nineteenth century, ethnologists engaged in new ways with the matter of how and why human culture develops. In the United States, a community of ethnologists based in Washington, DC articulated their answers to those questions by drawing on the concept of ‘invention.’
Guy Erez, "Catching and Curing the Plague in the Multispecies City"
"Medicine at the Mines in Seventeenth-Century Sumatra"
Brief abstract:
In the late seventeenth century, the Dutch East India Company launched intensive mining operations on the west coast of Sumatra. Medical practitioners played crucial roles at the mining sites. This paper examines how these European practitioners understood diseases, managed the health of the labor force, and experimented with mineral medicine at the mines.
Wenrui Zhao (University of Utah)
Commentator: Tina Asmussen (Ruhr University Bochum)
Community Care and Environmental Health in the Early Extractocene by Guy Geltner (Monash University)
Amanda Harris (Sydney)
Triangulating the relationships between diaspora speaker communities, dispersed cultural heritage, and modern digital archives of Oceania
Oral history interviews.
Guest experts: Luisa Bonolis and William Thomas
.
Suzanne Karr Schmidt on 'Color, Cloth, Collation: Previewing "Premodern Printing on Fabric"'
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