Conference
Friday, 5 December 2025 (10:00 - 17:15) (UK)
Format
Online
Location
This is a free online event
Contact
a.jamieson@bham.ac.ukRegister for this event
In recent years, material culture has expanded its reach through the humanities and social sciences, allowing for new kinds of histories to be written. In the medical humanities, the study of objects is one methodology that has allowed historians to move away from heroic histories of medical innovators and narratives of ‘progress’. Objects offer insights into the histories left out of official medical records: the everyday and quotidian; the actual, rather than ideal; emotion rather than action; and critically, the patient rather than the practitioner.
This one-day online workshop aims to bring together scholars from across the medical humanities working with material objects in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. While work in the medical humanities is expanding rapidly, comparatively little has addressed earlier periods and contexts. Our focussing on the period 1700-1900 aims to address this dearth, as well as offering a longue-durée perspective that crosses conventional periodisations. In doing so, we will explore the rise of medical professionalism, proliferation of specialisms, growth of institutional care, and radically changing theories of the body and mind, within the context of lived experience of health and sickness.
We hope not only to share research but to enrich our practice in working with objects as primary sources. Together, we will explore the methodological pitfalls and possibilities of a material approach when dealing with historical periods, as well as historically marginalised groups. In doing so, the workshop hopes to develop and advance methods for creatively and ethically analysing histories of medicine and health.
The workshop is hosted by Dr Anna Jamieson (a.jamieson@bham.ac.uk) and Dr Rebecca Whiteley (r.k.whiteley@bham.ac.uk).
Programme
10.00-10.10: Welcome and introductions
10.10-11.10: Wearable objects
Helen Esfandiary, King’s College London. Straightening Childhood: The Le Vacher Machine and Maternal Regulation of the Body in Georgian England.
11.10-11.20: Break
11.20-12.40: Personal papers and domestic health
Grace Marshall, Birkbeck, University of London. "Old, odd things": Dis/ability and Materialities of Care in Eighteenth-Century England.
12.40-13.30: Lunch
13.30-14.30: Representing the body
Natasha Ruiz-Gómez, University of Essex. Seeing Patients, Identifying Illness: An Album from the Musée Charcot.
14.30-14.45: Break
14.45-15.45: Object biographies
Nouschka van der Meij, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen. Preserving Color: Materiality, and the Anatomical Afterlives of Camper’s skin Specimen A-0500.
16.05-16.15: Break
16.15-17.15: Summative discussion







