Arnaud Zimmern had a piece on Margaret Cavendish's panaceas accepted without revision at a flagship journal in English literature. The piece is entitled "Silkworms and Panaceas: Margaret Cavendish, Infinite Nature, and the Progress of Utopia," and the journal is called English Literary History. Arnaud also adapted his presentation on King James's medical sovereignty for CHSTM and it has been accepted for the International Health Humanities Conference in March. And lastly, Arnaud is an alternate for the Wisconsin-Madison Solmsen Fellowship (hopefully following in Katherine Reinhart's footsteps).
Arnaud Zimmern
Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Notre Dame
Touching Kings, Drinking Gold: Crises of Sovereignty in Jacobean Medicine
My project investigates the interplay between political legitimacy and therapeutic competence in the reign of King James I of England, in order to better theorize the role of sovereignty in the history of pharmaceutics. In the course of a twenty-year tenure, the same king who inaugurated his reign by “counterblasting” the panacean claims of Spanish tobacco and rejecting the ceremony of the king’s touch as Catholic superstition ended his reign by healing thousands of cases of king’s evil and endorsing the controversial panacean claims of potable gold (aurum potabile). Jacobean medical policy reveals how political beliefs about natural sovereignty (of kings as well as gold) undergirded medical beliefs about “sovereign remedies,” in ways historians seldom examine seriously. It casts light, in another respect, on how therapeutic incompetence and placebo practices can undermine the political and moral legitimacy of sovereigns – an interplay the covid-19 pandemic has raised for renewed attention.