The Body on Display, from Renaissance to Enlightenment
An early-career symposium
6-7 July 2010
St Chad's College, Durham University
Keynote speaker: Dr. Peter Mitchell (University of Wales)
Provisional Programme
Monday 5 July
Informal meal and drinks
Tuesday 6 July
9.00
Registration and coffee
9.30
Opening comments
Dr. Lutz Sauerteig (Chair, SSHM)
Prof. Holger Maehle (Director, Centre for the History of Medicine and
Disease, Durham University)
9.45-11.00
Deviant Bodies
Filips Defoort (Leuven)
Jacob Boehme's (1575-1624) Depiction of Man's Hideous and Monstrous
Animal-Like Body
Claire Bowditch (Loughborough)
'Lies, Dreams, and Fond Fantasies': Corporeality,
Desire, and the Early-Modern Hermaphrodite
Harriet Plafreyman (Warwick)
Faces of Disease: Images and the Display of Knowledge about Venereal
Disease in the Late Eighteenth Century
Chair: James Russell
11.00
Coffee
11.20-13.00
Dead Bodies
Elena Taddia (independent scholar)
Infant Corpses Exposed: Experimentations on Children's Bodies in
Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century Europe
Armelle Sabatier (Paris, II)
Flesh v. Bones in Jacobean Drama: Displaying Human Corporeality in
Tourneur's The Atheist's Tragedy
David Packwood (Warwick)
Specular Visuality and Artistic Self-Reflexivity in Pietro de Cortona's
Drawings of the Tabulae Anatomicae of 1619
Richelle Munkhoff (Colorado)
Bodies into Text: Poor Women and the Reading of Corpses in Early Modern
London
Chair: Sebastian Pranghofer
13.00
Lunch (provided)
14.00-15.15
The Body Illustrated
Swarup Swaminathan (Harvard)
Anatomy, Art, and Aristotle: A Formal and Philosophical System of
Reference in the Title Page of Vesalius' De Humana Corporis Fabrica
Sebastian Pranghofer (Durham)
Nature, Beauty and Truth: Early Modern Anatomical Illustrations of the
Lymphatic System
Marieke Hendriksen (Leiden)
The Aesthetics of Eighteenth-Century Anatomy:
the Anatomical Illustrations of Petrus Camper (1722-1789) and the Hunter
brothers (1718-1793)
David Martin (Goldsmiths)
The Sacred Cut: Exploring the Iconography of Renaissance Anatomical Woodcuts
Chair: Dr. Matthew D. Eddy
15.15-16.30
Bodily Surfaces
George Newberry (Sheffield)
The Senses and Sensitivity as Expressions of 'Racial' Difference in
Eighteenth-Century Science and Anatomy
Lindsey Fitzharris (UCL)
'Beauty is only Skin-Deep': Fears Concerning Deformity and the Rising
Importance of Surgeons in Restoration London
Antoine Roullet (Paris IV)
Corporal Mortification as Iconoclasm
Chair: Dr. Stefano Cracolici
16.30
Coffee
17.15
Public Lecture, Dr. Peter Mitchell: "Shall I the Hearts un-equall sides
explain...? Or, shall I rip the Stomachs hollowness...?" Representation
and the literary associations of anatomy in the early seventeenth century.
19.70
Conference Dinner, Oldfields Restaurant
Wednesday 7 July
9.15
Coffee
9.30-10.45
Masculinity on Display
Darren Wagner (York)
Hung, Dried, and Blown-Up: Male Genitalia in Late Seventeenth- and
Early-Eighteenth-Century Anatomy and Physiology
Maya Corry (Oxford)
Ambiguously Gendered Bodies: Male Beauty and Self-Fashioning in Italian
Renaissance Art and Thought
Natalie Awais-Dean (Queen Mary's)
Communicating Ideals: The Male Body Adorned in the Early Modern Period
Chair: Dr. Cathy McClive (Durham)
10.45
Coffee
11.05-12.45
The Beautiful Body
Tom Blaen (Exeter)
'Not used to be worn as a jewel': Precious Stones - Ornament or Medicine?
Emma Markiewicz (National Archives)
Hair: The Appearance of Beauty and Well Being in Eighteenth-Century England
Elizabeth Upper (Cambridge)
Why is she Beautiful? Representations of Bodies and Garments in Albrecht
Altdorfer's Bautiful Virgin of Regensburg (ca. 1519/20)
Chair: Sara Read
12.45
Lunch (provided) and visit to the rare books exhibition (Palace Green
Library)
14.00-15.15
Public Bodies, Bodies and the Public
Vincent Van Roy (Antwerp)
Medical Sensation as an Advance in 'Public' Science? Representations of
Body Pathologies in Medical Illustrations, Preparations and
'rariteytenkabinetten' (Cabinets of Strange Things) During the Early
Modern Time (1500 - 1800)
Patrick Schmidt (Cambridge)
Advertising 'Disability': Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Freakshows
and their Promotion in Contemporary Printed Media
Emily O'Brien (Trinity)
The Murdered Body on Display: Exposing the Truth in Early Modern Murder
Pamphlets and Plays
Chair: Prof. Richard Maber
15.15
Coffee
15.35
Remarks and reflections: Dr. Peter Mitchell
15.50-16.40
Roundtable
16.40
Closing comments
With an exhibition of rare printed books (Palace Green Library, Durham
University)
For more information and registration forms, please see the website
www.bodyondisplay.org.uk<http://www.bodyondisplay.org.uk/> or email
body.ondisplay@durham.ac.uk
An interdisciplinary early-career symposium kindly supported by the
Society for the Social History of Medicine, the Royal Historical Society,
the Centre for Seventeenth-Century Studies at Durham University, and
Durham University Graduate School
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Looks awesome. Wish I could be there.
(h/t H-SCI-MED-TECH)