MEDICAL MUSEUMS AND ANATOMICAL COLLECTIONS
Natural History Museum - Toulouse
February 4, 2013
9.00-9.15 : Welcome speech
9.15-9.45 : Cindy Klestinec (Department of English, Miami University)
Learned and Popular Responses to the Display of Human Remains (Padua and Venice, ca. 1580)
9.45-10.15 : Christelle Patin (EHESS, IRIS)
L’Homme anatomique avec ou sans les animaux ? Circulations et recompositions entre le
monde médical et le Muséum
10.15-10.45 : Markus Oppenauer (Medical University of Vienna),
“...And to not upset the Argus-eye of zoology we decided to transport the Group of Laokoon
to the museum of human anatomy...”: (Comparative) Anatomical Collections and Scientific
Medicine in 19th-century Viennese Medicine
10.45-11.15 : Coffee break
11.15-11.45 : Alfons Zarzoso (Medical History Museum of Catalonia, Barcelona/Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona) & José Pardo Tomás (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas-
Institució Milà i Fontanals (Barcelona)),
Exhibiting Anatomical Collections in Early Twentieth-century Barcelona
11.45-12.15 : Xavier Pons (University of Toulouse II-Le Mirail),
“Why this fuss about a lot of old bones?”: The Struggle to Repatriate Aboriginal Remains
Held in British Museums
12.15-14.00 : Lunch break
14.00-14.30 : Laurence Talairach-Vielmas (University of Toulouse II-Le Mirail/Centre Alexandre Koyré),
"Collecting the Materials": Anatomical Practice from Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818) to R. L. Stevenson's “The Bodysnatcher” (1884)
14.30-15.00 : Gilles Menegaldo (University of Poitiers),
“The Bodysnatcher” from Text to Screen
15.00-15.30 : Emilia Musumeci (University of Catania (Italy)),
When Medicine Met Criminology: The Faces of “Born Criminals”
15.30-16.00 : Coffee break
16.00-16.30 : Elise Smith (Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine, University of Oxford),
Collecting Crania and Cranial Collections: Racial Anatomy and the Victorian Museum,1860-1900
16.30- 17.00 : Manon Parry (University of Amsterdam),
Animal Oddities: Teratology on Display
17.00-17.30 : Lisa Temple-Cox (Artist/Independent Researcher),
Mapping the Remains: an Exercise in Comparative Museology
17.30-18.30 : Visit of the Toulouse Natural History Museum
Natural History Museum - Toulouse
February 4, 2013
9.00-9.15 : Welcome speech
9.15-9.45 : Cindy Klestinec (Department of English, Miami University)
Learned and Popular Responses to the Display of Human Remains (Padua and Venice, ca. 1580)
9.45-10.15 : Christelle Patin (EHESS, IRIS)
L’Homme anatomique avec ou sans les animaux ? Circulations et recompositions entre le
monde médical et le Muséum
10.15-10.45 : Markus Oppenauer (Medical University of Vienna),
“...And to not upset the Argus-eye of zoology we decided to transport the Group of Laokoon
to the museum of human anatomy...”: (Comparative) Anatomical Collections and Scientific
Medicine in 19th-century Viennese Medicine
10.45-11.15 : Coffee break
11.15-11.45 : Alfons Zarzoso (Medical History Museum of Catalonia, Barcelona/Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona) & José Pardo Tomás (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas-
Institució Milà i Fontanals (Barcelona)),
Exhibiting Anatomical Collections in Early Twentieth-century Barcelona
11.45-12.15 : Xavier Pons (University of Toulouse II-Le Mirail),
“Why this fuss about a lot of old bones?”: The Struggle to Repatriate Aboriginal Remains
Held in British Museums
12.15-14.00 : Lunch break
14.00-14.30 : Laurence Talairach-Vielmas (University of Toulouse II-Le Mirail/Centre Alexandre Koyré),
"Collecting the Materials": Anatomical Practice from Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818) to R. L. Stevenson's “The Bodysnatcher” (1884)
14.30-15.00 : Gilles Menegaldo (University of Poitiers),
“The Bodysnatcher” from Text to Screen
15.00-15.30 : Emilia Musumeci (University of Catania (Italy)),
When Medicine Met Criminology: The Faces of “Born Criminals”
15.30-16.00 : Coffee break
16.00-16.30 : Elise Smith (Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine, University of Oxford),
Collecting Crania and Cranial Collections: Racial Anatomy and the Victorian Museum,1860-1900
16.30- 17.00 : Manon Parry (University of Amsterdam),
Animal Oddities: Teratology on Display
17.00-17.30 : Lisa Temple-Cox (Artist/Independent Researcher),
Mapping the Remains: an Exercise in Comparative Museology
17.30-18.30 : Visit of the Toulouse Natural History Museum
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