2-Day Conference: Medical Identities in Global History
Approaches to global history often attempt to address the role of nation-states in the construction of historical narratives, while deconstructing the Eurocentric assumptions in the expression of history. Historians have now moved away from understanding history in terms of binaries and accepted that transfer, spread, diffusion, understanding of knowledge is multi-directional. In the history of medicine, these translations often involve the generation, negotiation, and interaction of identities.
This conference seeks to bring together postgraduate students, early career researchers, and scholars in history for a two-day conference on the topic of medical identities in the past. Medical identities are grounded in the interactions between self, body, and health, with the social, political, cultural, and intellectual context of medical knowledge. Interrogations of these relationships in a global historical perspective reveal important narratives of identity creation and complex webs of power relations.
More information and complete programme here:
www.hsmt.ox.ac.uk/event/medical-identities-in-global-history-0
Type: Seminar Series
Series organisers:
Paula Larsson (University of Oxford),
Manikarnika Dutta (University of Oxford)
Web Address:
https://www.hsmt.ox.ac.uk/event/medical-identities-in-global-history-0
Organising department: Oxford Centre for the History of Science, Medicine and Technology
Talks:
No upcoming talks to display for this series.
Editor:
Belinda Clark