HPS: Annual Report 2015-2016 - University Of Cambridge

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CONTENTSThe Department . 2Introduction . 2The John Forrester Case. 4Congratulations . 6Staff and Affiliates . 8Visitors and Students . 10Comings and Goings. 13Roles and Responsibilities . 15Prizes, Projects and Honours . 18Seminars and Special Lectures . 19Students . 21Student Statistics . 21Part II Essay and Dissertation Titles . 22MPhil and Part III Essay and Dissertation Titles . 28PhD Theses . 41The Library. 44The Museum . 54Individual Reports . 81Seminar Programmes . 126Michaelmas Term 2015. 126Lent Term 2016 . 141Easter Term 2016 . 159Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of CambridgeFree School Lane, Cambridge, CB2 3RHTelephone: 01223 334500 Fax: 01223 334554 www.hps.cam.ac.uk1

THE DEPARTMENTIntroductionThe Department of History and Philosophy’s annual report is a review of the 2015-16 academicyear and a celebration of the staff and students that make the HPS department a world-classinstitution. We would like to thank our exceptional students and talented staff for all of theirhard work this year to secure so many successes.We begin with hearty congratulations to Sachiko Kusukawa,a Fellow and Tutor in HPS at Trinity College who waspromoted to Professor this year, and who gave her inaugurallecture on Friday 24th June, 2016, with the title 'Worth athousand words? Early modern scientific images' at thePeterhouse Lecture Theatre. We also take this opportunity toextend our gratitude for her years of work with theDepartment and particularly her attention to ourundergraduate students, many of whom have been fortunateto be supervised in history of science by ProfessorKusukawa.Professor Sachiko KusukawaSeveral members of the Department also had a successful year, in particular Simon Schaffer,Hasok Chang and Jim Secord who all received prestigious awards recognising their excellence inHistory and Philosophy of Science. More information, as well as the rest of the long list ofcongratulations for the year, can be found on page 6.Praise was given to everyone involved in our teaching and learning review, which takes placeevery six years. It concluded by saying that our teaching staff had delighted students and that thequality of our teaching and learning was fantastic. Thank you to everybody who took part in thisimportant review, and to all those whose hard work is responsible for the Department's amazingreputation in this area.We welcomed several new members of staff thisyear, among them Dániel Margócsy as UniversityLecturer in Science, Technology and Medicine before1800 and Jacob Stegenga as University Lecturer inPhilosophy of Life Sciences. We also said goodbyeto some of our staff as they continue on in theircareers; we wish them every success.In-progress renovations on Rooms 20, 21, and 222

This academic year also saw the refurbishment of our top floor offices, where we divided tworooms in to three in order to make more space for our expanding academic community. Theproject is now complete and three of our University Teaching Officers are now based in the newrooms. Thanks to everyone who put up with the disruption caused by having a building site inthe department!The Library has, as ever, had a very busy year, and their full report begins on page 44. TheWhipple Museum's report also makes for informative reading on page 54.Sadly this year has also seen the passing ofseveral members and friends of the Department.In November 2015, Professor John Forrester,foremost historian of Freud and psychoanalysiswho was Head of the Department between 2007and 2013, passed away. His life and work werecommemorated by a day of talks andremembrance on Wednesday 16th May,appropriately titled ‘The John Forrester Case’,details of which are on pages 4 and 5. In April,we were saddened to learn of the death of AnitaMcConnell, an affiliated scholar in theDepartment who worked closely with theWhipple Museum. Lastly, in June, one of ourHPS alumni, Alison Winter, also passed away.John ForresterOn a happier note, we must mention that 2016 was a specialbirthday year for our Departmental Administrator, Tamara Hug. Itwas good to have a chance to celebrate after what had been adifficult start to the year.We end with thanks to everyone as they work hard to deliver theoutstanding achievements demonstrated in this annual report. Weconclude by paying tribute to the endeavour of all who play theirpart in our progress and we look forward to even greater successin the year to comeTamara Hug and Clare MatthewsMarch 20173

The John Forrester CaseWednesday 18th May 2016On Wednesday 18th May 2016, The Department of History and Philosophy of Science, togetherwith John Forrester's family, held a day of talks in honour of the memory of Professor JohnForrester, who sadly died in November 2015.ProgrammeChaired by Simon Schaffer and Liba TaubTalks take place in the McCrum Lecture Theatre, Bene’t 5.4015.4516.1517.4520.00Arrival: Coffee and tea will be served in the Department of History andPhilosophy of ScienceWelcome: Liba Taub and Simon SchafferBoris Jardine: The master of the marginal annotationBonnie Evans: John’s insight and ability to raise new questionsAlexandra Bacopoulos-Viau: John Forrester, DoktorvaterEmm Johnstone: The supervisor as psychoanalystLeon Rocha: What does it have to do with my penis?BreakRichard AshcroftAmanda Rees: John as a supervisor and rugby fanJulia Borossa: John’s vision of psychoanalysis and his gift as a supervisorKatherine AngelMatt Drage: “Follow the money!” John’s supervision as libidinal cathexisBuffet lunch in the Department of History and Philosophy of ScienceAndreas Mayer: Thinking in cases and its ramifications for HPSMichael Molnar: Emails and the origins of psychoanalysisLaura Cameron: On generosityJim SecordNick Hopwood and colleagues: Generation to ReproductionRich McKay: Tiree Love SongFinal wordsMemorial and afternoon tea in King’s College HallDrinks reception in the Whipple MuseumFinish4

MemorialKing’s College Hall at 16.15Sam YetmanSchubert: Sonata in B flat major, D. 960, second movementProfessor Simon Goldhill (University of Cambridge)Professor Liba Taub (University of Cambridge)Ian Patterson (University of Cambridge)Professor Maud Elman (University of Chicago)Professor Peter de Bolla (University of Cambridge)Professor Sherry Turkle (MIT)Professor Daniel Pick (Birkbeck, University of London)Professor Michael Ignatieff (Harvard University)Lisa AppignanesiKryszia OsostowiczBach: Sarabande in D from Partita no 2Largo in F major from Sonata no 3Followed by a drinks reception in the Main Gallery of the Whipple Museum from 17.45.5

CongratulationsThe 2015-16 acaedemic year began with Helen Curryreceiving a Wellcome Trust Seed Award to work on‘Seeds for survival: A global history of seed banking’, aspart of a major new research initiative to investigate thehistory of seed banking as a conservation practice andhuman health imperative. In July 2016, she was selectedas a CRASSH ProFutura Scientia Fellow for 2017-2020,during which time she will spend one year at theSwedish Collegium of Advanced Study in Uppsala aswell as two years in Cambridge, researching the historyof agro-biodiversity conservation.In November 2015, it was announceed that Simon Helen CurrySchaffer would be awarded the Caird Medal of theNational Maritime Museum. He gave a lecture to mark the receipt of the medal, with the title,'The Ark and the Archive: Encounters, Expeditions and Equivocal Objects' on 1st December, at6pm in the Leopold Muller Lecture Theatre at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich.At the end of 2015, Martin Rudwick was given the Watson Davis and Helen Miles Davis Prizefor his book ‘Earth’s Deep History: how it was discovered and why it matters’. He also won the2016 Vladimir V. Tikhomirov history of geology award from the International Union ofGeological Sciences.January was a successful month with Jim Secord awarded the SHNH Founders’ Medal, given topersons who have made a substantial contribution to the study of the history or bibliography ofnatural history; Jenny Bangham won a Wellcome Trust Research Fellowship to work on aproject titled ‘FlyBase: Communicating Drosophilia Genetics on Paper and Online, 1970-2000’;Hasok Chang was awarded the 2015 Wilkins-Bernal-Medawar prize for excellence in thehistory, philosophy and social function of science by the Royal Society, and gave his prize lectureon 10th May 2016, titled ‘Who cares about the history of science?’In February Salim Al-Gailani, a teaching associate in the Department, was awarded a visitingresearch fellowship at the John Rylands Research Institute, University ofManchester.Also at the start of 2016, congratulations were given to Leah Astbury whowas appointed to a Research Associate position in the Generation toReproduction group for six months. Then in March she was awarded anEvelyn S. Nation Fellowship at the Huntingdon Library in San Marino,California, to be taken up in the next academic year.Leah Astbury6

In August, College Fellow and HPS affiliate Simon Mitton was elected to a Fellowship at theRoyal Historical Society in recognition of his contributions to historical scholarship.The students of the Department have also excelled this year. In December, Josh Hunt, anMPhil student from the 2014-2015 cohort, was awarded the Hanneke Janssen Memorial Prize2015 by Radboud University, Nijmegenfor his MPhil dissertation, ‘Interpretingthe Wigner-Eckhart Theorem’. EdwinRose, also an MPhil student from lastyear and about to begin a PhD here inthe Department, won the CambridgeUniversity Library 2016 Rose BookCollecting Prize for his collection,‘Popular natural history and naturalphilosophy of the eighteenth century’.Of our finishing PhD students, RianaEdwin Rose and Dániel MargócsyBetzler was awarded a post-doctoralfellowship at the Konrad Lorenz Institute, in Vienna; Tillman Taape won a four-monthdoctoral fellowship at the Günther Findel Foundation to research the alchemical collections ofthe Herzog August Bibliothek in Wolfenbüttel; and Megan Barford became Curator ofCartography at the National Maritime Museum. Also, Satellites by Caitlín Doherty, PhDstudent and poet, received a glowing review by China Miéville in the Sunday edition of TheGuardian in February.7

Staff and AffiliatesAdministrative StaffTamara HugAgnieszka LanuchaLouisa RussellDavid ThompsonAgnieszka DoroszukToby BryantMaria IljuczonekComputing StaffMark RogersLibrary StaffAnna JonesAgnieszka LanuchaClare MatthewsDawn KinghamMuseum StaffLorena BushellRosanna EvansSteven KruseJenny MathiassonJoshua NallAlison SmithClaire WallaceTeaching OfficersAnna AlexandrovaMary BrazeltonHasok ChangHelen CurryMarta HalinaNick HopwoodStephen JohnLauren KassellTim LewensSimon SchafferJim SecordRichard StaleyLiba TaubResearch Fellows andTeaching AssociatesSalim Al-GailaniAdrian BoutelBoyd BroganSarah BullChris ClarkeDavid CrawfordJo EdgeClare GriffinMike HawkinsBoris JardineNatalie KaoukjiRichard McKayDaniel MitchellJesse Olszynko-GrynYvonne Martin-PortuguesSam MurisonValentina PuglianoRob RalleyEfram Sera-ShriarEran TalJohn YoungGabriella ZuccolinAffiliated Lecturers &CTOsPatricia FaraMarina Frasca-SpadaSachiko KusukawaRichard SerjeantsonDeborah ThomCollege FellowsJeremy ButterfieldPeter JonesMelanie KeeneSarah MarksSimon MittonJames PoskettAndreas SommerFrances WillmothEmeritus ProfessorsGerman BerriosAndrew CunninghamNick JardineGeoffrey LloydMichael RedheadOther UoC People whodo HPSSara BakerAlison BashfordMichael BravoAngela BreitenbachAdam CaultonTim CraneLukas EngelmannRebecca FlemingSarah FranklinSietske FransenRichard HoltonJoel IsaacMartin JohnsonTony LawsonKathy LiddellScott MandelbrotePeter MandlerAlexander MarrFrancis NearyBrian PittsHuw PriceKatherine Reinhart8

Staff and AffiliatesOther UoC people whodo HPS (contd.)Sujit SivasundaramJeff SkopekDavid SloanRichard SmithEmma SparySimon SzreterFrances WillmothAffiliated ScholarsRobert AndersonScott AntonyDebby BanhamJenny BanghamKaty BarrettChristina BenninghausMarie-Françoise BesnierSanjoy BhattacharyaPeter BowlerJanet BrowneRobert BudTatjana BuklijasSoraya de ChadarevianGloria CliftonSophie DefranceSilvia De RenziRobbie DuchinskyKatie EagletonKarin EkholmMartha FlemingZoe FritzRoger GaskellSusannah GibsonMarion GodmanJeremy GrayOle GrellPhilippa HardmanVanessa HeggieSonia HornShelley InnesRichard JenningsGerald KutcherElaine LeongChris LewisHelen MacdonaldAnita McConnellChristina McLeishJianjun MeiJim MooreAdam MosleyAyesha NathooJaume NavarroFrancis NearyHannah NewtonAlison PearnEmma PerkinsChristopher PrestonSadiah QureshiJennifer RamplingSally RiordanRohan Deb RoyMartin RudwickChristine SalazarAnne SecordNicholas TehAnke TimmermannMartin UnderwoodCharissa VarmaMarion VormsMilena WazekAndrew WearRick WelchPaul WhiteDaniel WilsonCatherine WilsonLouise WilsonLouisa Russell, Aga Lanucha and Tamara Hug9

Visitors and StudentsSarah BezanDorit BrixiusHui CaoStephen CasperXan ChackoAmy CoombsWillem van der DeijlAlan Heiblum RoblesEugene KangRemus ManoilaMerisa MartinezJiho MoonSerge ReubiRapael SchollJu Yeon SukSang Wook YiMark youngRafael VazMagali KrasnySebestian KroupaNatalie LawrenceNiels LinnemannKatrina MaydomEsther MomcilovicKaroliina PulkkinenEmma PyleTimothy Rees-JonesHardy SchilgenChristophe SchinkusSusanne SchmidtMinwoo SeoReuben ShielsTilmann TaapeAnn-Sophie ThwaiteElina VessonenChristopher WagnerMichelle WallisJack WrightPhD studentsMPhil studentsLeah AstburyFeraz AzharMegan BarfordClaudia BaisiniRiana BetzlerToby BryantJenny BulstrodeAndrew BuskellStijn ConixCharlotte ConnellyStephen CourtneyCaitlin DohertyMatthew DrageJames HallSebastian de HaroSeb FalkMeira GoldTimothy HylandStephen IrishAlissa AronAlex AylwardSean BigginsDannielle CagliusoAlfie CheesmanNathan CofnasClaudia DumitruHaris DurraniPedro FeijoEnno FischerAlexandra GurelFelicitas HolzerAva KofmanLewis KopmanChaka LaguerreVi LePaul MarettFiona MilwayNicholas MyerbergVisitorsGouray NandiDaniel OttEdwin RoseRebecca RothfeldSusannah RussellHenry SchmidtTobias SchoenwitzClemens SchwaningerWilliam SimpsonKatelyn SmithGeorg StarkeNathaniel TailleurJohn ThorntonJoseph WuPart III studentsSarah BinneyJames BristowSam BrooksEoin CarterHolly ClothierMary DaiKatharine GriffithsRobert HartRogelio Luque-LoraMikey LynamJoe PainterWilliam ScottPart II studentsJoe Bonham-CarterMahid ChoudhuryTheo ClarkRobert Corbyn-SmithJoanna DruryLouis Dwyer-HemmingsCassandra FairheadEmma FarmeryDaniel FarrawayStephanie FrowSkye Gostling10

Visitors and StudentsPart II students (contd.)Rachel Hartley YoungDavid HewettCharlotte IversFurqaan KajiRory McFadyenGeorge MooreEkaterina MorgunovaEmma O'HareRobin PoldingMark PozlepLydia PricePeter ReesNina SandsDanielle ShippRosanna SuppaCatherine TennysonJames WhitehouseAmy WilsonXuelin YeongBBS Paper 2Heather DorrellEimear LambeEmily ThorpeBBS Paper 5Chloe MarsdenMatthew PreeceSophie ProtheroeJoshua SwanwickOlwen WilsonDominila BogusiewiczBBS History and Ethicsof MedicineAnna HeylenIIJosh McQuailBogdan PetrisorChongin RaGeorgina ShepherdNiamh SpenceChun TamJames LiveseyRory PrescottLucy TwistletonPBS taking IB HoSNicole CreaseyKleopatra KyprianouDhara ShahKayleigh SkeneHSPS students taking IBHoSPBS taking IB PoSDavid BradburyJade HopeCharlotte LeachEmma NevilleLeah OrmeHSPS students taking IBPoSPBS students taking PartII Paper 5Jack AndrewsPBS students taking PartII Paper 10Katie BrownLeor ZmigrodHistory Students takingPaper 2 (P11)Shona WhatfordEve WallerWilliam FenbyThomas BeavenNatasha BoydOliver CottrellManveer BadeshaAteka Tarajia11

Staff and students at the Department of History and Philosophy of Science, 2015-201612

Comings and GoingsJenny Bangham took up the position of Wellcome Trust Fellow in September.Adrian Boutel left the Department in August.Toby Bryant joined the Administration team in June as the new receptionist.Lorena Bushell went to work full time as an Education and Outreach Assistant for the Museum ofArchaeology and Anthropology in March.Christopher Clarke left in April to become Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Philosophy at theErasmus University Rotterdam.Rosanna Evans left the Receptionist role in May to become the new Learning Co-ordinator for theMuseum.Boris Jardine returned to the Department in March as aLeverhulme Early Career Fellow.Dawn Kingham, our Library Assistant, returned from hermaternity leave in January.Agnieszka Lanucha became the new Senior Accounts Clerk inAugust.Rosanna Evans and Louisa RussellDániel Margócsy took up the position of University Lecturer inScience, Technology and Medicine before 1800 in September.Jenny Mathiasson left in May to take up the position of MuseumConservator at Clifton Park Museum.Sara Mano Ivo Peres joined the Department as a Research Associate inSeptember to work on Helen Curry’s Seeds for Survival: A Global Historyof Seed Banking project.Valentina Pugliano finished her fellowship in the Department in October.Efram Sera-Shriar left in December to join the University of Leeds.Dániel MargócsyJacob Stegenga started in September as a University Lecturer inPhilosophy of Life Sciences.David Crawford left the department in June 2016.13

Agnieszka Doroszuk also left the department administration team in 2016.Eran Tal left at the end of June. He went on to join the Philosophy Department at McGillUniversity.14

ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIESDepartmental PositionsHead of Department: Prof. Jim Secord (2015) and Prof. Liba Taub (2016)Administrative Officer: Ms. Tamara HugDirector of Graduate Studies: Prof. Simon Schaffer and Dr. Nick HopwoodMPhil Manager: Dr. Anna AlexandrovaPart III Manager: Prof. Hasok ChangPart II Manager: Dr. Lauren KassellPart IB Manager: Dr. Marta HalinaStaff Development Officer: Prof. Liba Taub (academic staff) and Ms. Tamara Hug (support staff)Dignity Officer: Prof. Hasok Chang and Prof. Liba TaubCollege Liaison Officer: Dr. Lauren KassellChair of the Monitoring Committee: Dr. Lauren KassellGraduate Training Officer: Dr. Marta HalinaHPS Board and Degree CommitteeChair of the HPS Board Committee: Prof. Simon SchafferChair of the HPS Degree Committee: Dr. Nick HopwoodProfessors and Readers: Professors Hasok Chang, Tim Lewens, Simon Schaffer (Chair), JimSecord, Liba Taub, and Drs Nick Hopwood and Lauren Kassell15

Curator and Director of the Whipple Museum: Prof. Liba TaubSecretary of the Board and Secretary of the Degree Committee: Ms. Tamara HugLibrarian: Ms. Anna JonesGeneral Board Members: Prof. Tim Crane and Dr. Emma SparyCo-options: Dr. Helen Curry, Dr Anna Alexandrova, Dr. Marta Halina, Dr. Richard StaleyElected Members: Dr. Sarah Marks, Dr. Daniel Mitchell, Dr. Mary BrazeltonJunior Members: Graduate: Alissa Aron (Darwin), Catherine Tennyson (Girton), Undergraduates:Ollie Webster (Clare)Philosophy Faculty BoardHPS Representative: Hasok ChangExaminersNST Part IB History and Philosophy of ScienceSenior Examiner: Prof. Hasok ChangExaminers: Prof. Simon Schaffer, Dr. Mary Brazelton, Dr. Helen Curry, Dr. Marta Halina, Dr.Adrien BoutelNST Part II History and Philosophy of Science including BBS History and Ethics ofMedicineSenior Examiner: Dr. Richard StaleyExternal Examiner: Dr. Jeff Hughes (University of Manchester)Examiners: Prof. Nick Jardine, Dr. Anna Alexandrova, Dr Nick Hopwood, Dr Marina FrascaSpada16

MPhil/Part III in History, Philosophy and Sociology of Science, Technology and MedicineSenior Examiners: Dr. Marta HalinaExaminers: Dr. Mary BrazeltonExternal Examiners: Dr. Emma Tobin (University College London)Staff and students at the Cabinet Garden party17

PRIZES, PROJECTS AND HONOURSStudent PrizesJoe Bonham-Carter was awarded both the Jacob Bronowski Prize for the best overall performancein the HPS Part II exams and the Frances Wilmoth Prize for the best performance in thedissertation component of the course.Holly Clothier was awarded the seventh Annual Peter Lipton Prize for the best overallperformance in the HPS Part III course.This year, the 19th Annual Jennifer Redhead Prize for the best overall performance on the essayportion of the MPhil in History, Philosophy and Sociology of Science, Technology and Medicinehad an unprecedented three winners: Alissa Aron, Claudia Dumitru and Henry Schmidt.Henry Schmidt also won the 13th Annual Hans Rausing Prize for the best MPhil dissertation.New Research ProjectsHelen Curry, one of our University Lecturers, gained a Wellcome Trust seed award to work on"Seeds for survival: A global history of seed banking". The grant supports a major new researchinitiative that will investigate the history of seed banking as a global conservation practice andhuman health imperative.18

SEMINARS AND SPECIAL LECTURESWellcome LectureMichael Stolburg from the University of Würzburg delivered the 11th Cambridge WellcomeLecture in the History of Medicine in the HPS Department on ‘Curing diseases and exchangingknowledge: sixteenth-century physicians and their female patients’.Rausing LectureProfessor Sherry Turkle from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology delivered the 21st AnnualHans Rausing Lecture in the McCrum Lecture Theatre, Bene’t Street on ‘Reclaiming ourconversation: our new silent spring in a digital age’.Seminars, Graduate Workshops, Reading andDiscussion Groups, and Language GroupsDepartmental Seminars organised by Mary Brazelton and Marta HalinaCabinet of Natural History organised by Katrina MaydomTwentieth Century Think Tank organised by Richard Staley, Jesse Olszynko-Gryn, and MaryBrazeltonEarly Medicine Seminars organised by Lauren Kassell, Valentina Pugliano, and GabriellaZuccolinHistory of Modern Medicine and Biology Seminars organised by Nick Hopwood, MaryBrazelton, and Salim Al-GailaniGeneration to Reproduction Seminars organised by Lauren Kassell, Nick Hopwood and JesseOlszynko-GrynHPS History Workshop organised by Andreas Sommer and Seb FalkCamPoS organised by Huw Price, Jeremy Butterfield, and Hasok Chang19

Coffee with Scientists organised by Hasok ChangNature and Culture Reading Group organised by Sam MurisonHistory and Theory Reading Group organised by Matthew DrageScience and Literature Reading Group organised by Melanie Keene and Charissa VarmaPhilosophy and History of Physics Reading Group organised by Jeremy Butterfield, HasokChang, and Daniel MitchellPhilosophy of Psychology Reading Group organised by Ali Boyle and Sarah MarksLatin Therapy organised by Tillmann Taape and Natalie LawrenceGreek Therapy organised by Liz SmithArabic Therapy organised by Seb Falk20

STUDENTSStudent StatisticsUndergraduatesGraduatesPart IBPart IIPart II BBS: History and Ethics of MedicinePart 3Fail12 (38.7%)17 (54.8%)2 (6.5%)003 (60%)2 (40%)0009 (20.45%)18 (40.91%)15 (34.09%)2 (4.55%)0MPhil degrees awardedPart III degrees awardedPhD degrees awarded28129Examination ResultsPart IIPart II BBS: Historyand Ethics of MedicinePart IBGraduate Degrees Awarded21

PART II ESSAY AND DISSERTATIONTITLESPrimary Source EssaysPrimary Source 2: Astrological CasebooksWas Simon Forman an expert in women's medicine?Simon Forman's use of his casebooks as a personal diary'The 12. house is the house of witchcrafte': the complexities of witchcraft as a disease category andits astrological diagnosis in Simon Forman's casebooks'Something of a specialist in women's health care': an analysis of Simon Forman as an expert inwomen's health using his casebooksPrimary Source 3: The Board of Longitude: Materials and DocumentsWhat role does rank play in the Harrison and Maskelyne debates?George Airy's collection and a comparison of the religious sentiments expressed in the longitudepamphletsWhy did William Whiston defend his longitude proposals differently in 1715 and 1738?Jane Squire: the only woman to openly pursue the rewards offered by the Board of LongitudeA comparative study of women and the Board of LongitudePrimary Source 4: Science and Print in Colonial India'On cooling wines': James D. Herbert's vision of a domestic scientific culture in colonial IndiaWhy were measurements of longitude published in Gleanings in Science?Was the concept of race among British colonists in early nineteenth century India unified?The concept of race in colonial Burma, 1829-183122

The conceptualisation of race in Gleanings in ScienceAdvertising India: Bengal agricultural industry in Gleanings of SciencePerceptions of the Burmese landscape and people in Gleanings in Science (1829-1831)'A very considerable service to the opium trade'; colonialism and drug packaging in Gleanings inScience, 1830How and why the British learned about elephants in colonial India in Gleanings in ScienceHow does Arthur Conolly discuss race in his travelogue Overland Journey to India?Primary Source 5: The Population BombThe Population Bomb: the dangers of population control and panic based reasoningThe Population Bomb, ZPG and feminist movements: complex and dynamic relationsEhlich v Hartmann: feminist responses to The Population Bomb and its legacy in the era of climatechangeThe global politics of The Population Bomb: feminist responses since 1968How has The Population Bomb shaped 21st century ideas about population control and theenvironment?The Population Bomb and abortion in AmericaMaking a movement; constructing activism in text and beyond (The Population Bomb and Womenand their Bodies: A Course)Birth control, American Catholics, and The Population BombEhrlich as a scientific activist: using The Population Bomb to define his activismDiminishing support for Ehrlich: a comparison of American opinion of the ideas presented in ThePopulation Bomb and The Population Explosion, with reference to China's one-child policy andIndia's compulsory sterilisation programme'Family planning and other failures' – with a focus on India and the IUDThe relationship between the mass media, Paul Ehrlich, and The Population Bomb23

Primary Source 7: Doha Declaration and Novartis RulingEvergreening, Indian patent law, and utilitarian principles: the case of India v NovartisLessons about intellectual property rights in the developing world from the Novartis v. India caseDid the Doha Declaration do more harm than good for access to medicines?The legal battles of pharmaceutical globalisation: what are the current and future globalconsequences of the Novartis v. Union of India and Others case and the evolution of India's patentlaws for developing countries?What similarities can be drawn between the recent Novartis v Union of India & Others ruling andthe case of Diamond v Chakrabarty?To what extent has India's history of patent law shaped interpretations of innovation and inventionregarding the Indian pharmaceutical industry?Evergreening, Indian patent law, and utilitarian principles: the case of India v NovartisChanging understandings of the global commons in Novartis v. IndiaThe influence of India’s international position on the case of Novartis vs the Union of IndiaThe Doha Declaration of 2001 shows that intellectual property rights are incompatible with solvingissues related to public health in developing nationsConflicts between access to medicine and intellectual property rights: should Novartis receive apatent for Glivec based o

5 Memorial King's College Hall at 16.15 Sam Yetman Schubert: Sonata in B flat major, D. 960, second movement Professor Simon Goldhill (University of Cambridge) Professor Liba Taub (University of Cambridge) Ian Patterson (University of Cambridge) Professor Maud Elman (University of Chicago) Professor Peter de Bolla (University of Cambridge) Professor Sherry Turkle (MIT)

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