The next online talk of the British Society for the History of Pharmacy will take place on 26 April, 18:30BST.
More info can be found here.
The next online talk of the British Society for the History of Pharmacy will take place on 26 April, 18:30BST.
More info can be found here.
This Trinity Term, the Oxford Seminar in the History of Chemistry will be held online. The seminar is organised by Judith Rainhorn (Maison Française d’Oxford) and John Christie (Oxford), and is sponsored by SHAC and the Maison Française d’Oxford.
The programme focuses on 20th century chemistry and is available here.
June 3-4, 2021 Registration link
Please note that the schedule reflects U.S. Eastern Time.
THURSDAY, JUNE 3rd
9:30-10:00 | INTRODUCTIONS
10:00-10:50 | CONCEALING GENDERED KNOWLEDGE
Natacha Klein Käfer, Private Spaces, Secret Practices: Gender and Concealment in Alchemical Laboratories under Anna and August of Saxony
Lara Tessaro, Beauty secrets: uncovering the estrogenic roots of Canadian cosmetic labelling regulations, 1943-44
Grace Poudrier and Lauren Richter, PFAS Ubiquity as Corporate Accomplishment
[break: 20 min]
11:10-12:00 | ICONS AND CIPHERS
Sergei Zotov, The biggest secret of Newton: alchemical iconography of Coronatio naturae
Marlis Hinckley, Secrecy in Pseudo-Lull: The Use of Letter Codes
Megan Piorko and Sarah Lang, Sloane MS 1902 Alchemical Cipher
12:00-1:00 | KEYNOTE, Nancy Langston
FRIDAY, JUNE 4th
10:00-10:50 | PATENTS, PROFITS, AND INVENTIONS
Andrew Meade McGee, Open Labs Versus Proprietary Methods: Secrecy, Information Networks, and the Evolution of an Institutional Chemical Research Infrastructure in the First Five Decades of the Mellon Institute of Industrial Research
Vyta Pivo, The Alchemy of Concrete: The Making and Unmaking of Material History
Alison McManus, Who Invented Agent Orange?: Priority Disputes in the Aftermath of Wartime Secrecy
10:50-11:40 | RULES AND RESIDUES
Jayson Porter, As if: Furtive Arsenic (As) from Extraction to Exposure
Jack Klempay, Residues at the Limits of Chemical Knowledge: The Case of Chlordecone Contamination in Martinique and Guadeloupe
Colleen Lanier Christensen, Toxic Rules?: Standardized Chemical Knowledge and the Limits of Regulatory Action
[break: 20 min]
12:00-1:00 | KEYNOTE: Michelle Murphy
1:00-1:30 | CLOSING REMARKS
The SHAC Award Scheme for 2020 funded seven applicants.
Six Research Awards were made.
Georgiana Hedesan, Independent Scholar, research trip to the University of Glasgow to explore Alchemy in Antonio Neri’s manuscript Il Tesoro del Mondo (1598-1600).
Joris Mercelis, John Hopkins University, research trip to Rochester New York to study written and visual sources in the Kodak Historical Collection.
Luis Moreno-Martinez, University of Valencia, research trips for “A transnational approach to chemistry pedagogy through the biography of Antonio García-Banús (1888-1955).”
Silvia Perez Criado, PhD Student, University of Valencia, archival research for dissertation “DDT during Franco’s regime in Spain (1939-1977).”
Zoe Screti, PhD Student, University of Birmingham, archival research trip for dissertation “The Impact of the Reformation on the study of alchemy in Early Modern England.”
Robert Van Den Berg, Independent Scholar, image reproduction costs for biography of the Dutch Physical Chemist, J.H. van’t Hoff.
In addition, one Subject Development Award for conferences or the like was approved as follows:
Peter Forshaw, University of Amsterdam, workshop on Rosicrucian and Masonic Alchemy.
The next SHAC online Seminar Meeting will take place on 18 February, 2021. Megan Piorko will give a talk about “The Long Life of Fasciculus Chemicus: Early American Reception of Seventeenth-Century Alchemical Texts.” All are welcome to attend, but please sign up soon by sending an e-mail to: meetings [AT] ambix.org.
On 23 March, Simon Werrett will give a talk during the following SHAC Seminar Meeting.
The latest issue of Chemical Intelligence is out now! As always, it contains lots of information for SHAC’s members, including about upcoming Seminar Events, Mike Zuber’s Partington Prize winning essay, information about the Morris Award and SHAC Awards Scheme, the next Annual Postgraduate Workshop and much more!
Check it out here!
We are excited to kick off this year’s Society for the History of
Alchemy and Chemistry on-line seminar series, which we are running due
to the continuing Covid crisis, with a talk from Dr Georgiana ‘Jo’
Hedesan, University of Oxford, on ‘The Promise of an Alchemical
Panacea: Francis Anthony (1550-1623) and his English Potable Gold.’
The seminar will run live on Zoom on Thursday 21 January 2021 beginning
at 5.00pm GMT (6.00pm CET, 12 noon EST, 9.00am PST). The format will be
a talk of 20-30 minutes, followed by a moderated discussion of half an
hour. Anyone, member of SHAC or not, may register to attend the seminar
by e-mailing meetings [AT] ambix.org; a link to the seminar will be sent the
day before. (If having registered you do not receive a link please check
your junk folder).