mercredi 25 février 2026

Comment le sexe, la race et le travail ont façonné les débuts de l'Empire français

By Flesh and Toil. How Sex, Race, and Labor Shaped the Early French Empire

Mélanie Lamotte 

 

Harvard University Press
368 pages, 8 maps, 5 tables
6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches



A richly detailed transoceanic history of the early French Empire, illuminating how it became bound by a common legal culture of race—as well as how enslaved and free people critically shaped the development of the colonies.

From the beginning of the seventeenth century, French colonies and trading posts sprawled across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. In the first pan-imperial history of the early French Empire in the English language, Mélanie Lamotte shows how an increasingly cohesive legal culture came to govern the lives of enslaved and free people of African, Malagasy, South Asian, and Native American descent. She also illuminates the important role played by these populations in the development of the empire, from Louisiana to Guadeloupe, Senegambia, Madagascar, Isle Bourbon, and India.

The early French Empire has often been portrayed as a fragmented conglomerate of isolated colonies or regions. Yet Lamotte shows that racial policies issued by the metropole, as well as by officials in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, significantly influenced one another. Rather than focusing on the actions of administrators, however, Lamotte also reveals the extensive influence of people on the ground—especially those of non-European descent. Through their sexuality and their labor, along with their socio-economic and political endeavors, they played a critical role in building the empire and setting its limits. As they sought justice for themselves, strove to protect their kin, and aimed to improve their social conditions, these individuals also pushed against the advancement of white dominion in unexpected ways.

Archivally rich and rigorously documented, By Flesh and Toil illuminates the transoceanic connections that united the French colonial world—and recasts people of African, Malagasy, South Asian, and Native American descent as key actors in the story of empire-building.

mardi 24 février 2026

Bourses de la Edward Worth Library

Fellowships at the Edward Worth Library, Dublin


Call for applications

The Edward Worth Library, Dublin, is offering two research fellowships, to be held in 2026, to encourage research relevant to its collections. The Worth Library is a collection of c. 4,300 books, left to Dr Steevens’ Hospital by Edward Worth (1676-1733), an early eighteenth-century Dublin physician. The collection is particularly strong in three areas: early modern medicine, early modern history of science and, given that Worth was a connoisseur book collector interested in fine bindings and rare printing, the History of the Book. Research does not, however, have to be restricted to these three key areas. Further information about the collection and our catalogues may be found on our website:

http://www.edwardworthlibrary.ie/Home-Page



Terms and conditions

We invite applications for short-term fellowships of between one week and one month to be held at any time between 1 June 2026 and 30 November 2026. Please note that for operational reasons the month of August is currently unavailable.

To encourage visits that integrate our important but relatively small holdings into contemporary scholarship, the Library proposes to make three types of awards:

– up to €1,500 per person for a one-week Worth Library Research Fellowship

– up to €1,750 per person for a two-week Worth Library Research Fellowship

– up to €2,000 per person for a one-month Worth Library Research Fellowship

The decision of the selection committee on all matters relating to the award of a Worth Library Research Fellowship shall be final.



The closing date is Tuesday 31 March 2026. Further details and application procedures may be found here: https://edwardworthlibrary.ie/research-fellowships/



If you have any queries, please contact:

Dr Elizabethanne Boran,

Librarian,

The Edward Worth Library,

Dr Steevens’ Hospital,

Dublin 8,

Ireland



E-mail: eaboran@tcd.ie

lundi 23 février 2026

Une histoire française de la dépression

Une histoire française de la dépression. De la tristesse mélancolique à l'humeur dépressive 


Élodie Boissard 

Classiques Garnier - Février 2026


À la fin XIXe siècle, à la Salpêtrière, l'aliéniste Jules Séglas caractérise une mélancolie sans délire avec pour symptôme central la douleur morale liée à un ensemble de passions tristes, de l'ennui au désespoir, que cible le traitement moral. Au milieu du XXe siècle, à Sainte-Anne, le psychiatre Jean Delay explique les états dépressifs-mélancoliques par un dérèglement de l'humeur, disposition affective fondamentale déterminée par le cerveau thymique, qui entraîne la tristesse et peut être soigné par les électrochocs puis les antidépresseurs. Ce qui se joue dans l'émergence de l'humeur dépressive, c'est le tournant biologique ayant mené la psychiatrie des raisons aux causes a-rationnelles des troubles mentaux.

 

Élodie Boissard est agrégée et chercheuse postdoctorale à la croisée entre philosophie de la psychiatrie et philosophie des états affectifs. Ancienne élève de l'École normale supérieure de Paris, elle a préparé sa thèse de doctorat sur l'humeur dépressive à l'Institut d'histoire et de philosophie des sciences et des techniques (université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, CNRS), et l'a soutenue fin 2023.



dimanche 22 février 2026

La financiarisation de la santé au Sénégal


La financiarisation de la santé au Sénégal (1840-1960)


Valéry Ridde 


371 pages
Date de publication : novembre 2025 

ISBN  : 978-2-925128-46-5 

Pour accéder au livre en version html, cliquez ici.
Pour télécharger le PDF, cliquez ici.


À partir des années 1980, les institutions internationales ont incité les pays africains à recourir à des instruments politiques de financement de la santé inspirés d’une approche libérale. Les patient·e·s ont de plus en plus payé les soins, les formations sanitaires ont été mises en concurrence, des ristournes et des primes ont été données aux soignant·e·s, des mutuelles de santé ont été lancées. Dans cet ouvrage qui s’adresse aux historien·ne·s de la santé et aux personnes intéressées par la santé publique, il s’agit de remonter le temps et de comprendre comment ces outils s’inscrivent dans une continuité historique. À partir du Sénégal et avec une analyse originale des archives coloniales, de la presse et des publications, l’étude montre que les idées libérales de l’organisation et du financement des soins étaient déjà ancrées dans l’administration coloniale française. Elles étaient même présentes à l’échelle de l’Empire et confirment le manque de préoccupation pour l’accès aux soins des populations africaines et des plus pauvres. Les défis actuels de ces approches pour la couverture sanitaire universelle ont donc une histoire ancienne que l’ouvrage met au jour pour réclamer un changement de paradigme.





samedi 21 février 2026

Remettre en question la binarité cis-hétéro dans la médecine antique

Beyond Gender: Challenging the Cis-Hetero Binary in Ancient Medicine 

Call for papers


SOCIETY for CLASSICAL STUDIES

158th ANNUAL MEETING

JANUARY 7-10, 2027

BOSTON

Call for Papers for Panel Sponsored by the Society for Ancient Medicine and Pharmacology


Organized by Aileen Das (University of Michigan), Malina Buturovic (Yale University)

Over the past thirty years, Anglophone scholarship on sex-gender in ancient medicine has been profoundly shaped by foundational works including (but not limited to) Leslie Dean-Jones’ Women’s Bodies in Classical Greek Science (1994), Helen King’s Hippocrates’ Woman (1998), and Nancy Demand’s Birth, Death, and Motherhood in Classical Greece (1994), as well as a series of influential articles by Ann Hanson (1990–1994). These resources—products of third-wave feminism with its emphasis on cis women’s liberation—form the bedrock of current approaches to sex-gender in the study of medicine in the Greco-Roman Mediterranean.

Since then, several important contributions–some of them in critical dialogue with Laqueur’s Making Sex: Body and Gender from the Greeks to Freud (1992)–have begun to critically interrogate the boundaries of gender/sex identity (Flemming 2000; King 2013; Holmes 2019). In more recent years, an emergent body of literature has thrown open questions of sex-gender and queerness within classics and related fields, drawing on contemporary theoretical resources. Notable contributions include The Routledge Handbook of Classics and Queer Theory (Haselswerdt, Ella, et al., 2024), the Res Difficles 2024 conference on Gender and Trans Studies, as well as scholarship in adjacent disciplines: Rabbinic and Biblical Studies (Rafael Neis 2023; Max Strassfeld 2023), Byzantine Studies (Betancourt 2020), and research on Late Antiquity and beyond (LaFleur, Raskolnikov, Klosowska, eds. 2021). At the same time, these scholarly vitalities are coupled with a sense of urgency arising from the politicization of trans identities and the historic role played by medical communities in pathologizing sex-gender variation.

This panel invites papers that move beyond the essential search for “trans-cestors”—as important as that work is for contemporary sex-gender queer communities—to explore what ancient medicine as a field can contribute to the movements “to trans the past” and to disrupt the assumption of cis-hetero sex-gender identities as pre-modern normative standards. We welcome approaches on: 

  • How pre-modern medicine theorized, biologized, and therapized normative and non-normative sex-gender identities
  • New interpretations that apply fresh theoretical perspectives to questions, problems, texts, and passages that have been traditionally understood in connection with cis-women’s health
  • Pedagogical strategies for bringing trans perspectives into ancient medicine classrooms
  • Reception studies considering how Greco-Roman medical authorities are invoked in modern debates about sex-gender diversity
  • Perspectives expanding the geographic and chronological boundaries of ‘classical antiquity,’ including comparative work with Rabbinic and Biblical Studies, Byzantine Studies, and Late Antiquity and its Islamicate uptake


As with prior panels from the Society for Ancient Medicine, we invite submissions from a broad vision of classical antiquity, with openness to various disciplines, methods, and chronologies (from pre-modern through early modern).

Please send abstracts that follow the guidelines for individual abstracts (see the SCS Guidelines for Authors of Abstracts) by email to Professor Aileen Das at the University of Michigan (ardas@umich.edu) by March 9, 2026.


Please ensure that the abstracts are anonymous.

The organizers will review all submissions anonymously, and their decision will be communicated to the authors of abstracts by early April, with enough time that those whose abstracts are not chosen can participate in the individual abstract submission process for the upcoming SCS meeting.

Key Bibliography:
Dean-Jones, Leslie. Women’s Bodies in Classical Greek Science. Clarendon Press, 1994.
Demand, Nancy. Birth, Death, and Motherhood in Classical Greece. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994.
Flemming, Rebecca. 2000. Medicine and the Making of Roman Women. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Hanson, Ann Ellis. 1987. “The Eight Months’ Child and the Etiquette of Birth: Obsit Omen.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 61: 589–602.
– 1994. A Division of Labor : Roles for Men in Greek and Roman Births. Amsterdam: Najade.
Hanson, Ann Ellis, and Iain M. Lonie. 1983. “The Hippocratic Treatises “On Generation”, “On the Nature of the Child”, “Diseases IV”. A Commentary.” The Classical World 76 (4): 249. https://doi.org/10.2307/4349462.
Holmes, Brooke. 2019. “Let Go of Laqueur: Towards New Histories of the Sexed Body.” Eugesta: Journal of Gender Studies in Antiquity (9): 40.
King, Helen. Hippocrates’ Woman. Routledge, 1998.
King, Helen. 2013. The One-Sex Body on Trial: The Classical and Early Modern Evidence. The History of Medicine in Context.
Laqueur, T.W. 1990. Making Sex: Body and Gender from the Greeks to Freud. Harvard University Press.
Sissa, Giulia. Greek Virginity. Harvard University Press, 1990.
Classics and Queer Theory
Haselswerdt, Ella, et al. The Routledge Handbook of Classics and Queer Theory. 1st ed., Routledge, 2024.
Campanile, D., Carlà-Uhink, F., and Facella, M., ed. 2017. TransAntiquity: Cross-Dressing and Transgender Dynamics in the Ancient World. Routledge Monographs in Classical Studies. London ; New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
Surtees, A., and Dyer, J.E., ed. 2020. Exploring Gender Diversity in the Ancient World. Intersectionality in Classical Antiquity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
“Res Difficles 2024 Conference on Gender and Trans Studies.”
Rabbinic and Biblical Studies
Neis, Rafael. When a Human Gives Birth to a Raven: Rabbis and the Reproduction of Species. University of California Press, 2023.
Strassfeld, Max. Trans Talmud: Androgynes and Eunuchs in Rabbinic Literature. University of California Press, 2023. Byzantine Studies
Betancourt, Roland. Byzantine Intersectionality: Sexuality, Gender, and Race in the Middle Ages. Princeton University Press, 2020.
Late Antiquity and Beyond
LaFleur, Raskolnikov, Klosowska, eds. Trans Historical: Gender Plurality Before the Modern. Cornell University Press, 2021.

vendredi 20 février 2026

L'antiscience et son impact sur la santé publique

Global Antiscience Phenomenon and Its Impact on Public Health 

Call for papers


AJPH invites submissions for a Special Section examining the global antiscience phenomenon and its implications for public health. Social and political opposition to scientific evidence has become increasingly visible in recent years, particularly in response to public health interventions such as vaccination, infectious disease control, and chronic disease prevention. Antiscience activism has influenced political discourse, policymaking, and public trust, creating barriers to effective public health action and, in some cases, hostility toward public health institutions and professionals. This call emphasizes rigorous, evidence-based analysis aimed at understanding how antiscience movements arise, how they spread, and how they can be effectively countered to protect population health and the public health science enterprise.


Topics May Include:

  • Defining antiscience and distinguishing it from reasonable scientific skepticism
  • Historical and global perspectives on antiscience movements and their public health impacts
  • Social, political, cultural, and structural drivers of antiscience beliefs
  • Mechanisms of antiscience messaging, misinformation, and digital dissemination
  • Impacts of antiscience beliefs, policies, and programs on population health outcomes
  • Differential effects of antiscience on specific communities or subpopulations
  • Strategies to counter antiscience movements, including communication and policy approaches
  • Effects of antiscience on public health professionals, researchers, and institutions


 

Submission Types:

  • Research Articles: Data-driven, timely, unbiased, and methodologically rigorous
  • Program Evaluations & Analytic or Historical Essays: Empirical or contextual analyses
  • Opinion Editorials: Balanced, reflective, and scientifically accurate


How to Submit:

Visit the AJPH Author Instructions page and submit your manuscript by April 1, 2026. Include a cover letter noting that the submission is for the Special Section on “Global Antiscience Phenomenon and Its Impact on Public Health.”

Contact: Dr. Kenneth Rochel de Camargo – kencamargo@gmail.com

Contact Information

Dr. Kenneth Rochel de Camargo
Associate Editor/AJPH

Contact Email
kencamargo@gmail.com

URL
https://ajph.aphapublications.org/callforpapers

jeudi 19 février 2026

Histoire des femmes en médecine

M. Louise Carpenter Gloeckner, M.D. Research Fellowship

Call for applications


The M. Louise Carpenter Gloeckner, M.D. Research Fellowship is offered annually by the Drexel University College of Medicine Legacy Center, Archives, and Special Collections on Women in Medicine in Philadelphia, PA. A $4,000 stipend is awarded to one applicant for research completed in residence at the Legacy Center. The term of the fellowship is no less than four to six weeks to begin on or after June 1, 2026.

The deadline for current applications is April 15, 2026. A short essay summarizing research findings is required upon completion of the fellowship.

In addition to materials related to the history of the Woman's Medical College/Medical College of Pennsylvania, the collections have particular strengths in the history of women in medicine, nursing, medical missionaries, the American Medical Women's Association, American Women's Hospital Service, and other Women in Medicine organizations. The majority of the collections fall within the period 1850 to the present.

This fellowship was established in memory of M. Louise Carpenter Gloeckner, M.D., by her husband Frederick Gloeckner in recognition of her key leadership role in the medical profession. This is a competitive annual fellowship open to scholars, students, and general researchers.

Full information at http://bit.ly/wye5FM or email Margaret Graham at CoM_Archives@drexel.edu.

Contact Information

Margaret Graham

Contact Email

CoM_Archives@drexel.edu

URL

http://bit.ly/wye5FM

mercredi 18 février 2026

Soigner et raconter au XVIe siècle

Soigner et raconter au XVIe siècle. Écriture de soi et récit de cure chez Leonardo Fioravanti et Ambroise Paré

Ariane Bayle  

Droz
2026  
440 pages
ISBN-13 : 978-2-600-06630-3

 

 Dans la seconde moitié du xvie siècle, pour illustrer le succès de leur pratique, des chirurgiens publient les récits de cures marquantes qu’ils ont réalisées, en visant un public qui s’étend bien au-delà du cercle des seuls spécialistes. Ils écrivent en langue vernaculaire plutôt qu’en latin, exploitant avec un art certain de la narration les circonstances particulières de ces cas cliniques. Ils font de leur métier une véritable aventure et cherchent à captiver l’attention du lecteur, tout autant qu’à transmettre un savoir. Leonardo Fioravanti, chirurgien et médecin empirique italien, raconte dans le Tesoro della vita humana (1570) une série de cures qui l’ont conduit, en dix ans, au gré d’une formation itinérante, de la Sicile à Venise, où il devient un auteur reconnu. Son contemporain, Ambroise Paré, revient à l’automne de sa vie, dans les Voyages (1585), sur les campagnes militaires lors desquelles il a su déployer toute la palette de ses talents en tant que chirurgien de guerre. Ce sont les liens qu’entretiennent au xvie siècle la carrière médicale et l’expérience clinique, le récit autobiographique et le soin des autres, qu’explore Ariane Bayle dans cet essai, en confrontant les écrits de ces deux chirurgiens-écrivains.