samedi 14 février 2026

Les débuts de la traite atlantique et l'invention de la corporéité moderne

The Early Atlantic Slave Trade and the Invention of Modern Corporeality


Lecture by Pablo F. Gómez (University of Wisconsin-Madison)

Please join us on 11 March at 2:30pm for the annual Dr. Martin A. Entin Lecture in the History of Medicine. 

Room 101, SSOM (3647 Peel)



This talk examines how early Atlantic slave trading communities made human corporeality articulable with a new set of ideas about finance, facts, objectivity, and measurable risk that emerged in the early modern era. These communities drew on centuries of legal, commercial, financial, and maritime material customs and ideas. Through their violent procedures, Iberian Atlantic slave trading communities abstracted and assimilated groups of human bodies to numbers. They did so to protect their financial interests rather than caring for enslaved people. The ruthlessness inherent in these practices became ingrained in the modern corporeal mathematics that emerged from the early slave trade and diffused through its vast political, financial, logistical, and intellectual networks. The model for understanding human bodies these communities created foreshadows and shares basic notions with those sustaining the intellectual edifice of disciplines as varied as political arithmetic, economics, population health, demographics, epidemiology, and contemporary biomedicine. 

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