dimanche 3 juin 2012

Médecine de cour : personnel de santé et politiques sanitaires en Europe


François Chauvot médecin de Louis XIV
Musée Flaubert/ Rouen



Court Medicine Conference

Programme (21-22 June, 2012) 

La présence des praticiens médicaux dans les cours européennes a évolué entre la Renaissance et la période moderne: leur nombre s’est accru, leur métier et leur rôle diversifié; ils ont élargi leurs spécialités dans les soins du corps et participé à leur manière dans le gouvernement des Etats européens. La recherche collective explore les transformations, au sein des cours européennes, des politiques, des pratiques et des métiers, et de leurs conséquences, d’abord, sur la pensée et la pratique médicale, ainsi que l’administration sanitaire, ret sur les activités, l’administration et la construction des Etats modernes. 


June 21 – The London School of Economics (Graham Wallas Room)


13:00 Introduction Benoist Pierre & Christelle Rabier “Court Medicine in Early Modern Europe: Issues at Stake” 
13:30-15:15  Court Medical Personnel in Early Modern Europe 
 Tilmann Walter, “Court Medicine in the German Southwest (1400–1700): New Findings in the Archive of the County of Hohenlohe” (abstract) 
Michele Clouse, “ ‘Good Advice and Better Medicine’: The Role of Court Physicians in Shaping Early Modern Spanish Medical Practices and Professions” (abstract) 
Benoist Pierre “French Court Medical Practitioners in 17c France: versatility, innovation and health policies” (abstract)
Discussant: Silvia de Renzi

15:15-15:45 Coffee break –

15:45-17:15 Medicine as a Political Project: 
Britta Kägler “Prestigious Practitioners: Development of Court Medicine and its Personnel at Catholic Courts – Bavarian Case Studies During 16th/17th Century “ 
Christelle Rabier, “Court Practitioners, Medical Institutions and Sanitary Reforms, France-Britain, 18c”
Discussant: Denis Crouzet 
17:15-18:00: Poster session “Courtly Bodies, Health Care Politics” – presentation and final debate

June 22 – The London School of Economics (Graham Wallas Room)

9:00-10:45 Courts as Places of Innovation: 
  Clare Griffin, “The Production and Dissemination of Medical Knowledge at the Russian Court, 1630s-1710s” (abstract) 
Samir Boumediene, “The Accreditation of new drugs at court and the early “public health” policies at the end of the 17th century: the case of Peruvian bark and Ipecacuanha” (abstract) 
Anne-Marie Moulin, “Court Doctors in the Ottoman Empire in the 18th century: sharing medical knowledge between East and West” (abstract)
Discussant: Sheila Ryan Johannson

10:45-11:00 Coffee break – Poster session “Courtly Bodies, Healthcare Politics”
11:00-13:00 Court Practitioners and the Making of Healthcare Politics (1) 
 Sabine Kalff, “Changing Airs and Waters – Court Physicians and Their Impact on Health Policy in Late 16th Century Italy” (abstract) 
 Tim McHugh, “Negotiating Royal Medical Authority in Eighteenth-Century Brittany” (abstract) 
Lisa W. Smith, “Sir Hans Sloane, Patronage and Smallpox Inoculation” (abstract)
Discussant: Patrick Wallis
13:00-14:00 Lunch
14:00-15:15 Court Practitioners and the Making of Healthcare Politics (2) 
Mary Gayne; “Entre les mains de ceux qu’il préposera: Establishing Courtly Governance of EighteenthCentury French Wigmakers” (abstract) 
Hans-Uwe Lammel, “Pills, Corpses, Cattle Plague and Beauty. Medical Enlightenment as Literary Strategy at the Court of Mecklenburg-Schwerin” (abstract)
Discussant: Colin Jones
15:15-15:45 Coffee break – Poster session “Courtly Bodies, Healthcare Politics”
15:45-17:00 Roundtable “Courtly Patients, Healthcare Personnel, European Politics and the Shaping of Medicine, 15c-18c,” with the participation of Elena Bakaldina, Aurore Chery and Natalie Hawkes.

 Posters
Elena Bakaldina (University of St. Petersburg)“The medical practitioners in the household of the king of England Edward IV (1461-1483)” 
Aurore Chery (Université de Lyon-III) “Inventing a New Medical Royal Body: the cases of Louis XV and Louis XVI” 
Natalie Hawkes (University of Newcastle): “The Premier Médecin’s Haven: Antoine Vallot and the Jardin du Roi”

Là: une liste des participants au groupe de travail et le cas échéant, le résumé de leur intervention: http://courtmedicine.hypotheses.org/research-network
L'inscription est libre, mais obligatoire, car le nombre de places est strictement limité: http://courtmedicine.hypotheses.org/conference-registration

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire