Conference Registration Open! / Health and the Environment in the Preindustrial World: Multidisciplinary Approaches

Convener

Guy Geltner, Monash University

Keynote Speaker

Pamela H. Smith, Columbia University

This international and interdisciplinary conference brings to a close the activities of the grant team “Pursuing Public Health in the Preindustrial World, 1100-1800.” Beyond the team itself, it involves a dozen scholars working across health history, history of science and technology, religion, archaeology and landscape in areas covering Europe, the Eastern Mediterranean and East and Southeast Asia.

The conference will be both remote and in-person. Attendance is free but requires registration. Please register at the following link: click here.

For the full program: click here.

About the Conference

Health was a goal pursued by numerous societies prior to industrialised modernity. While their definitions of health and disease could differ widely, earlier cultures organised themselves around promoting the former and fighting the latter with their available means. They did so, moreover, in diverse, changing and challenging locations around the world and in response to the specific risks these were thought to pose. This conference aims, not only to showcase the team’s research on public health history, but also to situate it within and assess its potential impact on several fields, including environmental history, the history of science and technology, bioarchaeology, landscape archaeology, mobility studies, religious studies and gender studies.

Over the past four years, the team has worked across the regions of Europe, the Eastern Mediterranean and Southeast Asia, reconstructing practices meant to fight disease and promote health at the community level. Specifically, team members examined (mobile) courts, pilgrims and miners, and how they intervened in their changing environments to improve health outcomes. The choice of regions and societies allowed us, first, to venture beyond the European, urban and sedentary focus of most revisionary work on premodern public health history in the recent past; and, secondly, to critically integrate methodologies from archaeology, religious studies and other fields. Collectively these have enriched the available toolkit for detecting healthscaping activities in the deeper past.

The concluding conference will bring together the original team as well as a keynote speaker and invited scholars across several fields, periods and career stages. Presentations will explore both traditional and more recent themes converging on public health history, including biopower, the public sphere and transitions into modernity; the mingling of spiritual and physical health; the gendering of community healthcare; and the spatial and material dimensions of health.

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Conference Announcement / Health and the Environment in the Preindustrial World: Multidisciplinary Approaches

Convener

Guy Geltner, Monash University

Keynote Speaker

Pamela H. Smith, Columbia University

Public health was a goal pursued by numerous societies prior to industrialised modernity. While their definitions of health and disease could differ widely, earlier communities organised themselves around promoting the former and fighting the latter with their available means. They did so, moreover, in diverse, changing and challenging locations around the world and in response to the specific risks these were thought to pose. This international and interdisciplinary conference caps off the activities of an Australian Research Council-funded project, “Pursuing Public Health in the Preindustrial World, 1100-1800” (2022-26). It aims, not only to showcase the team’s research on public health history, but also to situate it within and assess its potential impact on several fields, including environmental history, the history of science and technology, bioarchaeology, landscape archaeology, mobility studies, religious studies and gender studies.

Over the past four years, the team has worked across the regions of Europe, the Eastern Mediterranean and Southeast Asia, reconstructing practices meant to fight disease and promote health at the community level. Specifically, team members examined (mobile) courts, pilgrims and miners, and how they intervened in their changing environments to improve health outcomes. The choice of regions and societies allowed us, first, to venture beyond the European, urban and sedentary focus of most revisionary work on premodern public health history in the recent past; and, secondly, to critically integrate methodologies from archaeology, religious studies and other fields. Collectively these have enriched the available toolkit for detecting healthscaping activities in the deeper past.

The concluding conference will bring together the original team as well as two keynote speakers and invited scholars across several fields, periods and career stages. Presentations will explore both traditional and more recent themes converging on public health history, including biopower, the public sphere and transitions into modernity; the mingling of spiritual and physical health; the gendering of community healthcare; and the spatial and material dimensions of health.

To signify your interest, fill out following Google Form. You will be emailed once registration opens. Click here.

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Seminar / Lucifer’s Land: Entanglements with the Netherworld during Europe’s first mining boom, 1180-1550

Our G. Geltner is giving a talk on “Lucifer’s Land: Entanglements with the Netherworld during Europe’s first mining boom, 1180-1550” at the Institute of Historical Research in London on the 7th May. See details here. Come along!

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New Study: Black Death burials in Ta\rrega (Catalonia)

There is a new study on the Black Death burials in Ta\rrega (Catalonia) that offers the first genetic analysis of the victims

“Uncovering a Medieval Pogrom: Genetic History of a Jewish Community in Catalonia (Spain)” by by Laura Pallarés-Viña, Daniel R. Cuesta-Aguirre, M. Rosa Campoy-Caballero, Núria Armentano, Anna Colet, Assumpció Malgosa, andCristina Santos.

Find it here: https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4425/17/3/358

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Updates from The Consortium for History of Science, Technology and Medicine // new working group proposals, ethical questions, and Anatomy in Early-Modern Tibet

NEW WORKING GROUP PROPOSALS

The Consortium for History of Science, Technology and Medicine is opening proposals for a new working group. The call is for groups that will meet during the 2026-2027 academic year.Working groups foster a collegial and stimulating environment for scholars at all levels from around the world to work together in small groups, discussing works-in-progress and other literature of interest. 

For more information, click here.

MONTHLY WORKSHOP: OBJECTS, IMAGES, AND SPACES OF HEALTH

The Objects, Images, and Spaces of Health April 17th meeting hosts Briana Brightly, who has shared a chapter from their doctoral dissertation titled “How to Draw the Buddha and Dissect a Corpse: Iconometry and Anatomy in Early-Modern Tibet”.

For more information, click here.

ETHICAL QUESTIONS FOR HEALTH HISTORIANS

In Do Less Harm, editors Courtney E. Thompson and Kylie M. Smith bring together a group of leading historians and scholars to confront one of the most pressing questions in health history: How can we ethically approach stories of medicine and health without perpetuating harm? This thought-provoking collection invites readers into a crucial conversation about the responsibilities of historians when documenting the past.

Find the podcast by clicking here.

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Book Launch! / Public Health in the Premodern World

Please come along to our book launch of Public Health in the Premodern World: Dynamic Balances, edited by G. Geltner, Janna Coomans, and Ronit Yoeli-Tlalim, published by Oxford University Press. Find the book at this link. Three of its chapters are already available in Open Access through the link.

The launch will be held on Wednesday May 27 in the Mark Bedingham Room at St. John’s College, Oxford, from 5:30–7:00.

For virtual attendance, click the following Zoom link: here.

For those on the other side of the world, or unable to make it to Oxford, launching the book will be part of the focus of our hybrid July Conference in Melbourne, Australia. See more information of that by clicking here.

Poster about the book launch, the text is included in the post above the book.
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