lundi 11 juillet 2016

Pause estivale

Le réseau Historiens de la santé prend sa pause estivale. 
Il sera de retour de lundi 15 août 2016. 

Bon été. 

Profitez du soleil !  



dimanche 10 juillet 2016

Théorie des signatures végétales

Flore médicale des signatures XVIe - XVIIe siècles 

Guy Ducourthial

L'Harmattan
Juin 2016 • 672 pages
ISBN : 978-2-343-09472-4

On trouvera ici à la fois une histoire de l'élaboration de la théorie des signatures végétales et un exposé de son contenu à partir des principaux textes - généralement de Paracelse, mais aussi d'auteurs souvent tombés dans l'oubli, D. Sennert, J.P. Rhumelius, H.C. Agrippa, O. Crollius, G. B della Porta. Selon eux, la ressemblance entre la couleur, la morphologie ou encore la biologie de nombreuses plantes avec les parties du corps humain ou les diverses manifestations extérieures des maladies ne saurait être dû au hasard. Ces analogies doivent être interprétées comme des signatures de Dieu, afin d'informer les hommes des diverses vertus qu'elles contiennent.

La traduction dans la science

Translation in Science, Science in Translation

Call for Papers


International Conference
30-31 March 2017
Justus Liebig University Giessen

Deadline for applications: 31 July 2016


Invited speakers:
Dr Doris Bachmann-Medick (Giessen), Dr Maeve Olohan (Manchester), Dr Benedikt Perak (Rijeka)

In recent years, considerable scholarly attention has been drawn to interdisciplinary research between the fields of Translation Studies and History of Science, which has shed light on, for instance, the workings of scientific communities, the dissemination of knowledge across languages and cultures, and the transformation in the process of that knowledge and of the scientific communities involved. Translators are brought to the fore, and if they were once treated as anecdotal actors in scientific exchanges, they are now understood as key agents. The Translation in Science, Science in Translation conference precisely engages in all these questions suggested by the conversation between Translation Studies and History of Science, and understands language as a complex phenomenon that includes dialects, sociolects and disciplinary tongues, and science as encompassing the natural and the social sciences. The focus is from early modernity to the present, and the conference’s translational perspective also applies to movements across disciplines, and to communication between scholars and lays (Montgomery 2000, Elshakry 2013, Olohan 2014).

We particularly welcome proposals from scholars and PhD students working on regions and languages underrepresented in research on the following topics:

1. Scientific Translation over Time and Space

- Changes in the practice and norms of scientific translation over time, space and across disciplines.
- The role of translated texts in the appropriation of scientific knowledge.

- The impact of the language of science upon non-scientific language and everyday language on the language of science through translation (science communication).



2. Behind the Scenes: Actors and Strategies Involved in Scientific Translation

- Changes in translation policies: the role of scientific translators.

- The practice of individual and collective translation of scientific texts, spaces and networks of scientific translation (institutions, funding, freedom of research).


3. Scientific Translation as Epistemic Practice

- Scientific translation and epistemic change.

- Scientific translation and change within the scientific culture/community of the source text.

- Translating non-verbal material: images, illustrations, graphs and tables, photographs, etc.

- Scientific translation and the creation or reinforcement of cultural boundaries (Brisset 2000, Ramakrishnas 2010).


Proposals

Please submit an abstract of no more than 350 words along with a bio-bibliographical note (as a single PDF-file) by 31 July 2016 to translationinscience@gmail.com.

There are a limited number of grants to cover travel and accommodation expenses. Should you wish to be considered for one of these, please submit a short letter of motivation.


Organization

The conference is organized by Katharina Kühn (International Graduate Centre for the Study of Culture, University of Giessen), Dr Rocío G. Sumillera (Universidad de Granada), and Dr Jan Surman (Herder Institute, Marburg), in collaboration with the International Graduate Centre for the Study of Culture (GCSC), the Giessen Graduate School for Humanities (GGK), the Giessen Centre for East European Studies (GiZo), the Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe – Institute of the Leibniz Association, the Department for Cultural Studies at the University of Rijeka, and the University of Granada.


References

Bachmann-Medick, Doris. The Trans/National Study of Culture: A Translational Perspective. Berlin/Boston: De Gruyter, 2016.

Brisset, Annie. “The Search for a Native Language: Translation and Cultural Identity,” in The Translation Studies Reader, ed. Lawrence Venuti. London/New York: Routledge, 2000, 343-375.

Elshakry, Marwa. Reading Darwin in Arabic, 1860–1950. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2013.

Montgomery, Scott L. Science in Translation: Movements of Knowledge through Cultures and Time. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000.

Olohan, Maeve. “History of Science and History of Translation: Disciplinary Commensurability?”, The Translator, 20.1 (2014): 9-25.

Ramakrishnas, Shanta. “Translation and the Quest of Identity: Democratization of Knowledge in 19th-Century India”, in Translation and Culture: Indian Perspectives, ed. G. J. V. Prasad. New Delhi: Pencraft, 2010, 19-35.

samedi 9 juillet 2016

Le conflit, les blessés et le soin

Wounded: Conflict, Casualties and Care
Exhibition




The Science Museum
Exhibition Road
South Kensington
SW7 2DD 
London


On 1 July 1916, the first day of the Battle of the Somme, British forces sustained 57,000 casualties, creating a medical emergency of unprecedented scale and severity.

On 29 June 2016 a new exhibition will open at the Science Museum, commemorating the centenary of this momentous battle and the huge medical and human impact of wounding during and beyond the First World War.

Wounded: Conflict, Casualties and Care will draw on the Science Museum’s extensive First World War medical collections as well as the words of the wounded and those who cared for them to explore the remarkable medical responses and innovations catalysed by this conflict.

Beyond the battlefields, the exhibition will also focus on the longer-term impact of the war on the soldiers who were left physically and mentally affected, and show how the medical lessons learnt still carry relevance today.

La peau à la Renaissance

"Renaissance Skin" - Senior Postdoctoral Research Fellow or Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Call for applications

Reference: THW/16/059639/000818
Salary Details: Grade 6: £32,600 - £38,896 per annum
Allowances: £2,323 London Living Allowance Contract Type: Temporary/Fixed term Contract Term: Full time

The Department of History is seeking to appoint two Postdoctoral Research Fellows to undertake the research project as described in the Wellcome Trust funded research grant proposal ‘Renaissance Skin’, led by Professor Evelyn Welch (PI). This is a five year Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award studying the wide range of ways in which skin, both animal and human, was conceptualised and used in Europe between 1450 and 1700, a period of enormous change in terms of global contacts and connections and scientific innovation. There will be a team of three postdoctoral fellows (one five-year senior position and two three-year junior positions which will rotate over the five years) and an administrator who will support Professor Welch in producing the research outputs, events and activities associated with this project. The Senior Postdoctoral Research Fellow and one of the Junior Research Fellows will begin work in September 2016 (the second Junior Fellow will be appointed in 2018).

The project is European-wide and to assist Professor Welch in her work, the postdoctoral fellows will collectively provide linguistic competencies in either Latin, Spanish, German, Dutch or Portuguese or other languages apart from French and Italian which would be of particular benefit to the Renaissance Skin objectives. In addition to supporting Professor Welch’s work, the Fellow will also undertake their own associated research. They will be expected to undertake approximately three research trips per year (within Europe), and undertake any other reasonable duties associated with the project as required by the PI, or within the Department as required by the Head of Department. There will be opportunities to contribute to teaching, particularly at MA level.

Applicants may apply for either or both positions – if you have a preference, please specify in your application.

The selection process will include a panel interview, including a 10 minute presentation to the panel. Candidates selected for interview will be asked to supply two writing samples.

Interviews are scheduled to be held on 09 August 2016 PM (TBC)

For an informal discussion to find out more about the role please contact Professor Evelyn Welch via evelyn.welch@kcl.ac.uk.

vendredi 8 juillet 2016

Angelo Mariani et le vin de coca

Angelo Mariani 1838-1914 : Le vin de coca et la naissance de la publicité moderne 

Aymon de Lestrange

Préface de François Monti


Broché: 192 pages
Editeur : Intervalles (17 juin 2016)
Langue : Français
ISBN-10: 2369560355
ISBN-13: 978-2369560357

Angelo Mariani, le vin de coca et la naissance de la publicité moderne est la première biographieillustrée d'Angelo Mariani (1838-1914), génial pharmacien corse qui atteignit une renomméemondiale grâce à son vin de coca et à ses méthodes publicitaires révolutionnaires qui en font,à maints égards, le père de la publicité moderne.Le vin tonique Mariani à la coca du Pérou a connu un succès fulgurant à La Belle Époque. Ilconsistait en l'infusion de feuilles de coca dans du vin de Bordeaux. Devenu le médicament leplus en vogue à la fin du xixe siècle, il est également le précurseur du Coca-Cola. Car Marianiet ses produits atteignirent peu à peu aux États-Unis une notoriété encore plus forte qu'enEurope. Mais la Prohibition et des concurrents redoutables devaient bientôt porter un coupfatal aux ambitions transatlantiques de Mariani.Angelo Mariani, le vin de coca et la naissance de la publicité moderne est le premier livre à retracer toutes les étapes de cette histoire fascinante et pratiquement inconnue du grand public.

L'unité de la physiologie de Galien

Postdoc position in ancient medicine and philosophy: "The Unity of Galen's Physiology" (1,0 fte)  

Call for applications


A PhD in Classics or (Ancient) Philosophy or History of (Ancient) Medicine; or a PhD dissertation in one of these fields already accepted by the PhD committee.

Galen of Pergamum (129–c.213 CE) may count as the father of western medicine, whose influence dominated medical history until well into the 19th century. But he saw himself as a philosopher no less than a doctor, and in his voluminous writings we find medical and philosophical perspectives combined. The NWO-funded research project ‘Human Nature: Medical and Philosophical Perspectives in the Work of Galen of Pergamum’ explores Galen’s view of human nature from a variety of perspectives: philosophical, physiological, anatomical, psychological, moral and religious. Apart from studying Galen’s position and its intellectual background, the project is designed to
contribute to present-day debates on well-being and illness, concepts of humanity in bio-ethics, the societal role of medicine and the doctor as well as multidisciplinarity and discipline-formation.
As a postdoc you will carry out the subproject "The Unity of Galen’s Physiology," focusing on the question how far Platonic tripartite psychology, Hellenistic anatomical work concerned with the nervous system and pneumatology have been integrated by Galen into a coherent theory. You will work under the supervision of the project leader prof. dr. Teun Tieleman and complete a monograph within three years. In addition, you will play your part as member of the core research team, which apart from prof.
Tieleman will consist of two post-doctoral researchers and a PhD student. As such, you will participate in and contribute to workshops and other activities related to the project. You will be based at the Utrecht Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, section History of Philosophy, which provides a relevant, stimulating and internationally oriented research environment.
  • Excellent track record and research skills relative to experience. 
  • The ability to work both independently and as part of a team.
  • A pro-active attitude and excellent communication and collaborative skills.
  • Interest in interdisciplinary work and societal challenges is considered an advantage.
You will be offered a full-time Postdoc position (1.0 fte), initially for a period of 12 months. Upon good performance, the contract will be extended for another 24 months (three years in total). The starting salary ranges between € 3,168 and € 3,400 (gross per month on a fulltime basis depending on experience and qualifications (salary scale 10).
Utrecht University offers a pension scheme, a holiday allowance of 8% per year, an end-of-year bonus of 8.3% and flexible employment conditions. Conditions are based on the Collective Employment Agreement of the Dutch Universities. More information: terms of employment.
A better future for everyone. That is the ambition that motivates our scholars in their top research and their inspiring teaching. The various disciplines within Utrecht University collaborate closely on important social themes. Our focus is on Dynamics of Youth, Institutions for Open Societies, Life Sciences and Sustainability.
The Faculty of Humanities has around 7,000 students and 900 staff members. It comprises four knowledge domains: Philosophy and Religious Studies, History and Art History, Media and Culture Studies, and Languages, Literature and Communication. With its research and education in these fields, the Faculty aims to contribute to a better understanding of the Netherlands and Europe in a rapidly changing social and cultural context.
The enthusiastic and committed colleagues and the excellent amenities in the historical city center of Utrecht, where the Faculty is housed, contribute to an inspiring working
environment.
Applications should include
  • a letter of motivation
  • a curriculum vitae
  • two references
  • two published samples (journal articles, book chapter etc)
  • a scan of the PhD certificate
The application deadline is 01/09/2016
For further information about the vacancy, please contact prof. dr. Teun Tieleman, project leader: t.l.tieleman@uu.nl.

jeudi 7 juillet 2016

Dernier numéro d'Asclepius

Asclepius. International Journal of History and Philosophy of Medicine

Vol. 5-6: 2015-2016

http://www.ijhpm.org/index.php/IJHPM







Editorials
 
Why the History of Medicine?
Garabed Eknoyan

Full Articles

Cuba’s First Smallpox Vaccination Campaign
Cristóbal S. Berry-Cabán

The Demise of Vitalism: Fernel’s and Servetus’ Vital Spirit and Harvey’s Living Blood
Ben Caputo, James Marcum

Female Anatomists and their Biographical Sketches
Artineh Hayrapetian, Peter Oakes, Fred Bertino, Mohammadali M. Shoja, Margaret Wood Balch, Anthony D’Antoni, Marios Loukas, R. Shane Tubbs

Battling for Bed Space in Kingston General Hospital, Ontario: 1927 to 1958
Daniel Paluzzi

Rhazes Doubting Galen: Ancient and Medieval Theories of Vision
Mohammadali M. Shoja, Paul S. Agutter, R. Shane Tubbs

Contribution of Romanian Scientists to Gerontology and Geriatrics
Mariana Cuceu, Mohammadali M. Shoja

History and Philosophy of Surgical Informed Consent in Children
Pranit N. Chotai, R. Shane Tubbs, Eunice Y. Huang

‘Sinning against Science Itself’: Adolf Friedrich Nolde’s 1799 Code of Good Research Practice
Allan Gaw, Thomas Demant


Short Communications

When Cold Becomes Hot and Hot Becomes Cold: Unearthing a Historical Report
Mohammadali M. Shoja, Paul S. Agutter, Ghaffar Shokouhi, R. Shane Tubbs


Biographies

Samuel Thomas von Söemmerring (1755-1830)
Islam Aly, R. Shane Tubbs, Mohammadali M. Shoja, Marios Loukas


Medical Historian

Daniel Le Clerc (1652-1728) and his “Histoire de la Medecine”
Galyna Ivashchuk, Marios Loukas, R. Shane Tubbs, Margaret Wood Balch, Mohammadali M. Shoja


Annotated Images

Elizabeth Caroline Crosby (1888-1983)
Toral R. Patel, Mohammadali M. Shoja, E. George Salter, R. Shane Tubbs

John Webster Kirklin (1917-2004)
Toral R. Patel, R. Shane Tubbs, Tim L. Pennycuff, Mohammadali M. Shoja


Hypothetical Discourses

An Artistic Portrayal of Polydactyly as Sacrilege: The Case of Todd Rundgren’s Album Nearly Human
Anand N. Bosmia, Christoph J. Griessenauer, R. Shane Tubbs

Letters to the Editor

Anand N. Bosmia, R. Shane Tubbs
PDF

Les autres psychothérapies

Other Psychotherapies – across time, space, and cultures 

Call for Papers

University of Glasgow, Mon 3 Apr 2017 – Tue 4 April 2017

The Wellcome Trust-funded Conference ‘Other Psychotherapies – across time, space, and cultures’ brings contemporary Western expertise into dialogue with psychotherapeutic approaches from ‘other’ spatially, historically or otherwise ‘distant’ cultures. The Conference Committee invites abstracts of up to 300 words for 20-minute presentations, to be submitted by no later than 31 August 2016.

Keynote Speakers:
Dr Chiara Thumiger, Classics and Ancient History, University of Warwick: ‘Therapies of the word in ancient medicine’
Dr Jennifer Lea, Geography, University of Exeter: ‘Building “A Mindful Nation”? The use of mindfulness meditation in educational, health and criminal justice settings’
Dr Claudia Lang, Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich: ‘Theory and practice in Ayurvedic psychotherapy’
Dr Elizabeth Roxburgh, Psychology, University of Northampton: ‘Anomalous experiences and mental health’

University of Glasgow Organizing Committee:
Dr Gavin Miller, Medical Humanities Research Centre/English Literature
Dr Sophia Xenophontos, Classics
Dr Cheryl McGeachan, Geographical and Earth Sciences
Dr Ross White, Mental Health and Wellbeing

Papers should address one or more of the conference’s four themes:

1. Ancient approaches to psychotherapy
This theme seeks to explore ancient and medieval approaches to psychotherapy from the Egyptian and Babylonian world, the Graeco-Roman antiquity, the Chinese and medieval Islamic and Jewish traditions. It aims to foreground various ancient practices used in ‘the cure of the soul’, investigating the extent to which modern psychiatric techniques draw upon such wisdom traditions. Other key goals will be to distinguish diverse conceptions of selfhood required or advanced in psychotherapeutic settings, and to consider the borders between religion, medicine, and philosophy.

2. Geographies of Psychotherapy
We invite papers that wish to examine the development of psychological ideas and practices and their transformative effect over a range of (global) spaces, sites and places. Although not limited to such themes, we encourage critical debates into the uneven development of psychological practices over time and space, the changing spatialities of caring practices, embodied practices of healing, and writing psychotherapeutic geographies.

3. Postcolonial/Indigenous Psychotherapies
The emergence of different, competing schools of Western psychotherapy has been accompanied by rapid development in the capacity to share knowledge globally. Western psychotherapies are juxtaposed with forms of healing based on markedly different epistemic and philosophical underpinnings. This theme considers whether indigenous forms of healing in LMICs can be viewed as de facto psychotherapies. Attention will focus on the dynamics of power in post-colonial contexts and how this has influenced the perceived credibility of western vs indigenous forms of therapeutic/healing interaction.

4. Subcultural Psychotherapies
We invite critical engagement with the propensity to see subcultural participation (bodybuilding, gaming, body modification, BDSM, Goth, Emo, etc.) as cause or predictor of psychopathology. While remaining open to subcultural pathogenesis, we encourage exploration of subculture’s therapeutic/salutogenic dimensions, including the recovery/survivor movement, popular/mass culture, new religious movements, and anomalous experiences such as mediumship and therianthropy.

Abstract submission
Abstracts (.doc, .docx, .rtf) should be emailed to arts-otherpsychs@glasgow.ac.uk by no later than 31 August 2016 along with a short biography (100 words or less). Abstracts will be considered by the conference organizing committee, and notifications will be communicated by no later than 30 September 2016.

Journal Issue
There will be an opportunity for a selection of papers presented at the conference to be developed into a thematic issue of the international peer-reviewed journal Transcultural Psychiatry (http://tps.sagepub.com/) that will be entitled ‘Other Psychotherapies – across time, space, and cultures’.

For more information about our conference, visit its official website at: http://otherpsychs.academicblogs.co.uk/

Les autres psychothérapies

Other Psychotherapies – across time, space, and cultures 

Call for Papers

University of Glasgow, Mon 3 Apr 2017 – Tue 4 April 2017

The Wellcome Trust-funded Conference ‘Other Psychotherapies – across time, space, and cultures’ brings contemporary Western expertise into dialogue with psychotherapeutic approaches from ‘other’ spatially, historically or otherwise ‘distant’ cultures. The Conference Committee invites abstracts of up to 300 words for 20-minute presentations, to be submitted by no later than 31 August 2016.

Keynote Speakers:
Dr Chiara Thumiger, Classics and Ancient History, University of Warwick: ‘Therapies of the word in ancient medicine’
Dr Jennifer Lea, Geography, University of Exeter: ‘Building “A Mindful Nation”? The use of mindfulness meditation in educational, health and criminal justice settings’
Dr Claudia Lang, Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich: ‘Theory and practice in Ayurvedic psychotherapy’
Dr Elizabeth Roxburgh, Psychology, University of Northampton: ‘Anomalous experiences and mental health’

University of Glasgow Organizing Committee:
Dr Gavin Miller, Medical Humanities Research Centre/English Literature
Dr Sophia Xenophontos, Classics
Dr Cheryl McGeachan, Geographical and Earth Sciences
Dr Ross White, Mental Health and Wellbeing

Papers should address one or more of the conference’s four themes:

1. Ancient approaches to psychotherapy
This theme seeks to explore ancient and medieval approaches to psychotherapy from the Egyptian and Babylonian world, the Graeco-Roman antiquity, the Chinese and medieval Islamic and Jewish traditions. It aims to foreground various ancient practices used in ‘the cure of the soul’, investigating the extent to which modern psychiatric techniques draw upon such wisdom traditions. Other key goals will be to distinguish diverse conceptions of selfhood required or advanced in psychotherapeutic settings, and to consider the borders between religion, medicine, and philosophy.

2. Geographies of Psychotherapy
We invite papers that wish to examine the development of psychological ideas and practices and their transformative effect over a range of (global) spaces, sites and places. Although not limited to such themes, we encourage critical debates into the uneven development of psychological practices over time and space, the changing spatialities of caring practices, embodied practices of healing, and writing psychotherapeutic geographies.

3. Postcolonial/Indigenous Psychotherapies
The emergence of different, competing schools of Western psychotherapy has been accompanied by rapid development in the capacity to share knowledge globally. Western psychotherapies are juxtaposed with forms of healing based on markedly different epistemic and philosophical underpinnings. This theme considers whether indigenous forms of healing in LMICs can be viewed as de facto psychotherapies. Attention will focus on the dynamics of power in post-colonial contexts and how this has influenced the perceived credibility of western vs indigenous forms of therapeutic/healing interaction.

4. Subcultural Psychotherapies
We invite critical engagement with the propensity to see subcultural participation (bodybuilding, gaming, body modification, BDSM, Goth, Emo, etc.) as cause or predictor of psychopathology. While remaining open to subcultural pathogenesis, we encourage exploration of subculture’s therapeutic/salutogenic dimensions, including the recovery/survivor movement, popular/mass culture, new religious movements, and anomalous experiences such as mediumship and therianthropy.

Abstract submission
Abstracts (.doc, .docx, .rtf) should be emailed to arts-otherpsychs@glasgow.ac.uk by no later than 31 August 2016 along with a short biography (100 words or less). Abstracts will be considered by the conference organizing committee, and notifications will be communicated by no later than 30 September 2016.

Journal Issue
There will be an opportunity for a selection of papers presented at the conference to be developed into a thematic issue of the international peer-reviewed journal Transcultural Psychiatry (http://tps.sagepub.com/) that will be entitled ‘Other Psychotherapies – across time, space, and cultures’.

For more information about our conference, visit its official website at: http://otherpsychs.academicblogs.co.uk/

mercredi 6 juillet 2016

Histoire du Montreal General Hospital

The General: A History of the Montreal General Hospital 

Joseph Hanaway & John H. Burgess


Hardcover: 664 pages
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press (July 1, 2016)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0773546855
ISBN-13: 978-0773546851






Officially founded in 1821, the Montreal General Hospital is recognized as a pioneering institution in North America for the many discoveries in medical research made there and for its early association with the Faculty of Medicine at McGill University – the first medical school in Canada. Covering nearly 200 years of history, The General relates the story of the hospital from its early development and founding to the transition and aftermath of its incorporation into the McGill University Health Centre in 1997. With contributions that show the perspectives of clinicians, nurses, surgeons, professors, and administrators, chapters chronicle the history of particular departments and specializations of the hospital, including cardiology, dermatology, endocrinology, neurosurgery, plastic surgery, obstetrics, emergency medicine, pathology, and radiology, as well as nursing, administration, and governance. Among the major turning points in the history of the hospital were the introduction of autopsy pathology by Sir William Osler, the debut of the electrocardiograph by Thomas Cotton in 1914, the discovery of a malignant tumour marker by Phil Gold and Samuel Freedman in 1965, its transformation from a community hospital serving anglophone Montreal to an internationally recognized academic centre during the 1950s and ’60s, and changes in governance due to the 1970 Quebec Medicare Act. Both a collective reminiscence and an extensive institutional history, The General is an engaging account of one prominent hospital’s origins over nearly two hundred years.

120 ans de Lev Vygotsky

"L'Homme dans le monde de l'incertitude. Méthodologie de la cognition culturelle et historique". Colloque international pour le 120e anniversaire de la naissance de Lev Vygotsky


Appel à communications


le jeudi 13 octobre 2016
9h30-18h30

Centre de Russie pour la Science et la Culture
61, rue Boissière 75116 Paris

Organisé par l'Agence fédérale Rossotroudnitchestvo, l'Institut fédéral du développement de l'éducation, l'ANO «Institut des problèmes de la politique éducative «Euréka», la Société psychologique de Russie et le Centre de Russie pour la Science et la Culture à Paris

Nous avons l'honneur de vous informer du Colloque scientifique international pour le 120e anniversaire de la naissance du psychologue et pédagogue russe Lev Vygostky: "L'Homme dans le monde de l'incertitude. Méthodologie de la cognition culturelle et historique"

Le colloque aura lieu le jeudi 13 octobre 2016 au Centre de Russie pour la Science et la Culture à Paris (61, rue Boissière 75116 Paris).


Organisateurs:
Agence fédérale Rossotroudnitchestvo, Institut fédéral du développement de l'éducation, ANO «Institut des problèmes de la politique éducative «Euréka», Société psychologique de Russie, Centre de Russie pour la Science et la Culture à Paris, avec le concours des partenaires français.

Thèmes de discussion:
Diffusion et développement des idées du du psychologue et pédagogue russe Lev Vygostky (1896-1934) dans les sciences humaines contemporaines (psychologie, pédagogie, philosophie, sciences du langage, histoire, arts et d'autres) en Russie et à l'étranger. Les experts venus de Russie, France et d'autres pays participeront au colloque.

Projet:
Colloque scientifique international pour le 120e anniversaire de la naissance du psychologue et pédagogue russe Lev Vygostky est conçu comme un projet "mobile": après la première réunion à Paris, d'autres colloques auront lieu dans les Centres de Russie pour la Science et la Culture (liste des pays à préciser), avec une clôture dans la République de Bélarus, à Gomel, en novembre 2016.


Langues de travail: Russe, Français (traduction simultanée).

Des communications en anglais sans traduction sont aussi possibles.

Forme de participation: en présentiel


Propositions de participation:
Merci de bien vouloir adresser vos propositions de participation avant le 20 juillet 2016 à l'adresse: science.crsc@gmail.com selon la forme:

Nom, Prénom
Lieu de travail ou d'études, poste, titre scientifique
Adresse postale
E-mail
Téléphone
Titre de l'exposé
Bref résumé (500 mots maximum)

Dates:
Date limite de soumission des propositions de participation: le 20 juillet 2016.
Réponse du comité scientifique: le 1 août 2016.
Confirmation définitive de la part des participants: le 10 septembre 2016.
Programme provisoire: le 15 septembre 2016.
Programme définitif: le 30 septembre 2016г.
Colloque au CRSC à Paris: le 13 octobre 2016.


Modalités de participation:
La participation au colloque est gratuite (les frais d’inscription sont pris en charge par le CRSC). Le transport et l'hébergement sont à la charge des organismes des participants.


Une publication des Actes du colloque est prévue, sous la forme papier ou électronique (l'information sera communiquée ultérieurement).


THEMES DE DISCUSSION (liste non-exaustive)

Discussion plénière: "Actualité de Lev Vygotsky: biographie des idées"


Session 1 "Psychologie", "Sciences du langage"

- Sources culturelles et historiques de l'œuvre de Vygotsky
- A l'avance de son temps: les idées du constructivisme dans l'œuvre de Vygotsky
- Méthode instrumentale et génétique de Lev Vygotsky dans la psychologie russe
- Formation de l'identité dans le contexte des activités et des systèmes de valeurs et des normes culturelles
- Potentiel euristique de la théorie des fonctions psychiques supérieures
- Psychologie des émotions: approche culturelle et historique
- La conscience comme problème de la psychologie culturelle et historique
- Approche culturelle et historique de Lev Vygotsky et d'Alexandre Luria comme méthodologies de la neuropsychologie et de la psychopathologie
- Méthodologie culturelle active de Lev Vygotsky et d'Alexei Leontiev dans la psychologie contemporaine: problèmes et perspectives
- "Pensée et langage": autour de la conception de Vygotsky


Session 2 "Pédagogie et éducation"

- Modernisation socio-culturelle de l'éducation en Russie: approche systémique et active pour la planification des programmes éducatifs
- Éducation comme possibilité d'élargir le potentiel du développement de la personnalité: du diagnostique de la sélection au diagnostique du développement
- Méthodologie culturelle et historique de la planification de l'éducation variable
- Socialisation positive des enfants ayant des besoins spéciaux dans le système de l'éducation


Session 3 "Art"

- Objectif de l'art comme une pratique culturelle et historique
- Psychologie de l'art de Lev Vygotsky: de la théorie à la pratique
- L'art comme formation des fonctions psychiques supérieures



Contacts:
Centre de Russie pour la Science et la Culture à Paris, Inna Merkoulova: science.crsc@gmail.com, +33 144 34 79 79


mardi 5 juillet 2016

Renaissance de l'anatomie

Renaissance de l'anatomie

CUIR Raphaël

Hermann éditeurs
316 pages
40 illustrations
Parution : 28 Juin 2016
ISBN 9782705692339 26,00 €




Ce livre est le premier à se concentrer sur un paradoxe des images anatomiques de la Renaissance au XVIIIe siècle : la mise en scène de squelettes et d’écorchés animés, bien que leur état suppose qu’ils ne soient plus en mesure de l’être. Cette approche met en lumière la profonde cohérence entre théorie de l’art et théorie de l’anatomie à la Renaissance, qui se développent dans le même cadre de pensée – la rhétorique humaniste – et sont déterminées par un concept philosophique dominant – le finalisme. Au finalisme scientifique correspond un finalisme esthétique et tous deux se complètent dans la conception des images anatomiques où ils se mêlent à un finalisme symbolique, d’ordre moral, eschatologique ou érotique. La mise en évidence d’une anatomie finaliste permet de distinguer l’émergence, à la fin du XVIIe siècle, d’une anatomie cartésienne. Elle renonce progressivement à la rhétorique finaliste de l’anatomie, elle fait abstraction de la vie et évacue progressivement toute connotation symbolique de l’image. Elle consacre ainsi la conception du corps comme objet de connaissance, déjà présente dans l’anatomie finaliste où, cependant, même disséqué, le corps ne cessait d’avoir une âme, d’être.

Le partage des idées médicales

The Sharing of Medical Ideas and Information Among Early-Modern Practitioners

Workshop

Organized by the UCD Centre for the History of Medicine in Ireland and The Edward Worth Library


Tuesday 2 August 2016, 2 p.m.-5.30 p. m.

Venue: The Boardroom, Dr Steevens’ Hospital, Dublin 8 

Keynote Speaker: Professor Ole Peter Grell, MA, Ph.D., FRHS 

Contact: Dr Ben Hazard, ben.hazard@ucd.ie
www.ucd.ie/history/chomi/ http://www.edwardworthlibrary.ie/


Programme Tuesday 2 August 2016 

1.00pm: Registration 1.45pm: 

Official Opening 

Panel 1
Chaired by: Professor James Kelly MRIA 

2.00pm: 
Dr Jason Harris, Centre for Neo-Latin Studies, University College Cork
“The Latinity of Renaissance Physicians” 

2.30pm: 
Dr Benjamin Hazard, School of History,University College Dublin
“Medical Recipes for Military Chaplains in Spanish Flanders, 1587- 1660” 

3.00pm: Coffee Break 

Panel 2
Chaired by: Prof. James Kelly 

3.30pm: 
Dr Elizabethanne Boran,Librarian,
The Edward Worth Library (1733) “Buying and Selling Medical Books in Early Modern Ireland” 

4.00pm: Keynote
Chaired by: Dr Catherine Cox, Director, UCD Centre for the History of Medicine in Ireland 

Professor Ole Peter Grell,
“The Importance of the Republic of Letters for the Exchange of Medical Knowledge and Ideas in the Early Seventeenth Century: The Physician Ole Worm (1588-1654) and his Correspondents” 

5.00pm: Closing Remarks

Free Admission – Booking Essential

For bookings, contact: ben.hazard@ucd.ie  

lundi 4 juillet 2016

Dernier numéro du Bulletin d'Histoire et d'Epistémologie des Sciences de la vie

Bulletin d'Histoire et d'Epistémologie des Sciences de la vie

2016/ 1 (vol. 23)









Biométrie et génétique des populations ; échanges franco-britanniques dans l'entre-deux guerres
Jean Gayon

Du milieu extérieur au milieu intérieur : Construction, déconstruction et reconstruction d’un concept en biologie (1810-1875), Partie II
Emmanuel d'Hombres

La médecine (évolutive) entre individu et population : L’apport de la microbiologie au problème de l’individualité biologique
Pierre-Olivier Methot

Un problème d'anthropologie et d'évolution : la découverte du Néandertalien de La Chapelle aux Saints en 1908
Olivier Perru

D’une histoire épistémologique des modèles de régulation à l’émergence d’une épistémologie historique en science de la vie
Mathieu Arminjon


Bourse de maîtrise/ doctorat en histoire du nursing psychiatrique au Québec

Bourse de maîtrise/ doctorat en histoire du nursing psychiatrique au Québec

Appel à candidatures

 Description de la recherche
Dans le cadre du projet de recherche financé par les Instituts de recherche en santé du Canada (IRSC,
2015-2019) et intitulé Des institutions et des femmes : Évolution du nursing psychiatrique, 1912-1976, nous cherchons à recruter un(e) étudiant(e) à la maîtrise ou au doctorat pour travailler sur les archives de la Division des services psychiatriques (1962-1971) et du Comité de la santé mentale (1971-2005). Retraçant l’histoire du nursing psychiatrique au Québec à partir de l’analyse croisée des institutions d’accueil et de formation que furent l’Hôpital St-Jean-de-Dieu (Montréal), l’Institut Albert Prévost (Montréal) et l’Hôpital Robert-Giffard (Québec), ce projet de recherche cherche à mettre en évidence les conditions d’émergence d’une spécialisation des infirmières en psychiatrie avant et après l’instauration des politiques de déshospitalisation psychiatrique qui marquèrent la province au cours des années 1960-1970. Dans ce contexte, l’étude des activités de la Division des services psychiatriques, créée à la suite du rapport Bédard (1962), s’avère essentielle pour cerner le contexte et les conditions dans lesquelles le système québécois de santé mentale et de formation des professionnel(le)s a pu s’épanouir. Ce travail contribuera en outre à éclairer le rôle des instances et institutions politiques dans l’histoire des pratiques et de la formation des infirmières en psychiatrie au
Québec. Il participera en ce sens pleinement au projet de recherche mené par notre équipe et pourra
s’intégrer au webdocumentaire qu’elle vise à réaliser autour de ces questions.

Admissibilité
La bourse de recherche, d’une valeur de 10 000$ par année et renouvelable, est offerte aux étudiants et étudiantes désirant initier ou poursuivre des études de 2e ou 3e cycle universitaire (maîtrise ou doctorat) sous la direction ou co-direction d’un des membres de l’équipe.
Le projet de mémoire ou de thèse devra s’inscrire dans le projet de recherche de l’équipe et utiliser les ressources documentaires sur la Division des services psychiatriques et du Comité de la santé mentale disponible à la BaNQ de Québec (Fonds E5-E8 et E95).
Les candidats et candidates devront être inscrits à leur programme d’études à temps plein.

Conditions de versement
La bourse sera versée en trois versements, aux trimestres d’automne 2016, d’hiver 2017 et printemps
2017, sous condition d’inscription à temps plein à chacun des trimestres.
Directives pour soumettre sa candidature :
1. Fournir une lettre de présentation (1 page) qui devra rendre compte de l’utilisation qui sera faite
des ressources documentaires;
2. Joindre les relevés de notes de l’ensemble des études aux divers cycles universitaires, tant pour
les études complétées que pour les études en cours;
3. Joindre un curriculum vitae;
4. Joindre deux lettres de référence, dont l’une du directeur ou de la directrice de maîtrise ou du
doctorat;
5. La date limite est le 31 août. Soumettre votre candidature à aklein@uottawa.ca.

dimanche 3 juillet 2016

Napoléon Ier et ses dentistes

Napoléon Ier et ses dentistes 

Riaud Xavier

L'Harmattan (éd.),
Collection Médecine à travers les siècles
Paris, 2016, 200 p.



Combien de livres ont été écrits sur la médecine napoléonienne ? Des milliers. Combien de livres ont été écrits sur la chirurgie dentaire napoléonienne ? Aucun. Cet opus, dont Xavier Riaud, spécialiste de
la médecine sous le Premier Empire, est l’auteur, est le premier du genre.
Si la médecine prend un essor surprenant après la loi de 1794, la chirurgie dentaire n’en profite pas et reste à l’abandon. Pour exercer dans le respect de la libre concurrence, le paiement d’une simple patente suffit, laissant le champ libre à un charlatanisme florissant. Les plus démunis n’auront pas accès aux soins plus facilement pour autant et se verront même contraints pour subsister de monnayer leurs dents. Dans le même temps, la Grande Armée, engagée dans des combats partout en Europe, connaîtra les bienfaits d’une chirurgie maxillo-faciale de guerre qui prendra son envol sous
l’impulsion d’un Dominique Larrey, son chirurgien en chef à partir de 1812, toujours plus innovant et imaginatif.
Si les rois et empereurs de toute l’Europe se préoccupent de leur hygiène bucco-dentaire et s’entourent de praticiens confirmés, l’intérêt sociétal, s’il est en net progrès, se limite principalement aux villes et à une clientèle privilégiée. Ainsi, Napoléon n’a pas connu de problèmes dentaires sérieux avant son exil à Sainte-Hélène.
Son dentiste, Jean-Joseph Dubois-Foucou, ne lui faisait que des détartrages. Arrivé sur l’île en exil, le vainqueur d’Austerlitz, revenu à une échelle plus humaine après sa défaite à Waterloo, fera, à partir
de 1816, abcès dentaire sur abcès dentaire.

Les infections à l'hôpital

From Microbes to Matrons:The Past, Present and Future of Hospital Infection Control and Prevention

Symposium 

On 1st and 2nd September 2016 at the Royal College of Surgeons, London, a symposium will bring together historians, healthcare professionals and policy makers to consider the contemporary relevance of past infection control practices. As the first of its kind in terms of interdisciplinarity and subject matter, the symposium aims to forge new synergies between disciplines by reflecting on the historical lessons of antiseptic and aseptic practices in the nineteenth century, and the introduction of antibiotics and drug resistance in the twentieth. It examines the extent to which recent failures in hospital hygiene, as the focus of high profile hospital scandals, and critical levels of global antibiotic resistance have resulted in a current shift to a more ecological model of infection control originating in the nineteenth century (Healthcare Commission, 2007; Mid Staffordshire Inquiry, 2010). The symposium also takes on the task of suggesting innovative potential futures for infection control and prevention strategies.

Key questions of the symposium include:

· How have policies relating to infection prevention and control been implemented in practice and to what success?

· How have hospital hygiene methods and practices of infection prevention and control and post-operative wound care evolved and changed since the nineteenth century?

· How have practitioners and policy makers responded to challenges of the past?

· How have these methods and practices varied according to hospital and geographic location?

· Who have been the key players in hospital infection prevention and control?


Confirmed speakers include: Dr Thomas Schlich (James McGill Professor in History of Medicine at the Department of Social Studies of Medicine at McGill University); Dr Pamela Wood (Associate Professor, School of Nursing, Eastern Institute of Technology, New Zealand); and Neil Wigglesworth, (Deputy Director of Infection Prevention and Control, Guys’ and St Thomas’ NHS Trust, London).

There are a few places remaining for students and early-career researchers to attend the symposium free of charge. Places are limited and will be offered on a first come first served basis. Please contact Dr Claire L. Jones (Claire.l.jones@kcl.ac.uk) if you would like to attend or for any other information. Student and early-career Society for the Social History of Medicine travel bursaries are available to attendees who are SSHM members (https://sshm.org/bursaries/)

The symposium forms part of a Leverhulme Trust-funded research project “From Microbes to Matrons: Infection Control in British Hospitals, 1870-1970” based at King’s College London (co-PI Professor Anne Marie Rafferty) and the University of Glasgow (co-PI Professor Marguerite Dupree). It is generously supported by the Wellcome Trust and the Society for the Social History of Medicine.

samedi 2 juillet 2016

Cesare Lombroso et l'anthropologie criminelle

Homo Criminalis. Cesare Lombroso et l'anthropologie criminelle en Italie

Monica Ginnaio



L'Harmattan
Juin 2016 • 366 pages
ISBN : 978-2-343-09045-0


Cesare Lombroso (1838-1909) est le psychiatre italien considéré comme l'inventeur de l'anthropologie criminelle. Doctrine fortement critiquée, elle fut bâtie pour comprendre le phénomène criminel dans son intégralité : dans ces termes, elle peut donc être estimée comme une étape fondamentale de l'actuelle criminologie. Fondée sur les écritures de l'auteur, cette analyse retrace les points essentiels du parcours de l'anthropologie criminelle dans le contexte positiviste du XIXe siècle italien.