Animals and Epidemics in Historical Perspective
(Hybrid) International Conference
Berlin March 30 – April 1, 2022
The current debates about the origins and spread of COVID-19 illustrate how profoundly the lives of non-human animals and humans are intertwined. In a world that has reached a problematic intensity of anthropogenic influence on the ecological system, these entanglements are both matters of fact and concern. Whether bats, cats or mink are seen as causes or victims of the current global crisis, these entanglements raise the question of how the role of animals in the outbreak of past and present epidemics can be adequately narrated without falling back into a one-sided blame game or ignoring the agency of the animals involved. At the same time, epidemics and pandemics offer a lens for methodological reflections and empirical investigations into the historically variable relationships between non-humans and humans.
The conference will highlight the historically transformative power of pandemics and ask how pandemic events have affected the view on nature, animals and human cultures. It will pay special attention to the biopolitical practices and spatial impacts related to animals in epidemics and to the emergence of narrative tropes with, for example, racial and colonialist connotations. Taking cues from an animal studies perspective, it will furthermore discuss the specific materiality of diseases and what this means for scientific research.
The interdisciplinary conference brings together zoologists, historians of science and medicine, ethnographers and human-animal scholars to explore the potentials of a multispecies approach to assessing cultural, societal, epistemological and bodily vulnerabilities of societies in the past caused by epidemics.
Wednesday, March 30th, 2022
15.00-15.30 Axel C. Hüntelmann (Berlin), Christian Jaser (Klagenfurt), Mieke Roscher (Kassel), Nadir Weber (Bern): Introduction: Animals and Epidemics in Historical Perspective
Panel 1 - Multispecies Entanglements – An Interdisciplinary Approach to Epidemics
15.30-16.15 Matthias Glaubrecht (Hamburg): Waves of Wild Viruses - How we help Zoonotic Infectious Diseases to spark Pandemics
16.15-16.30 Coffee Break
16.30-17.15 Brett Mizelle (Long Beach): Epidemics, the Mass Killings of Pigs, and the Challenge of Multispecies Justice
17.15-17.45 Discussion Panel 1 (Chair: Christian Jaser)
Thursday, March 31st, 2022
9.00-10.00 Eben Kirksey (Melbourne): Keynote: The Emergence of COVID-19: A Multispecies Story
10.00 -10.15 Coffee Break
Panel 2 The Biopolitics of Epidemics: Control, Discipline and the Animal Other
10.15-11.00 Matheus Alves Duarte Da Silva (St. Andrews): A Global War against Wild Rodents? Imperial tensions, ecological anxieties, and the circulation of sylvatic plague (1927-1938)
11.00-11.45 Dominik Hünniger (Hamburg): Bugs, Worms and Dying Cattle. Multispecies Histories of Cattle Plague Outbreaks in the Long 18th Century
11.45-12.00 Coffee Break
12.00-12.45 Axel C. Hüntelmann (Berlin): The Beast in the Mosquito. Researching Mosquitos and Flies in England, Germany and India around 1900
12.45-13.45 Lunch
13.45-14.30 William Riguelle (Louvain): Legislation against Animals during Epidemics in the Cities of the Netherlands and Principality of Liege (1600-1669)
14.30-15.00 Discussion Panel 2 (Chair: Mieke Roscher)
15.00-15.30 Coffee Break
Panel 3 The Space of Animals in Epidemics and Society
15.30-16.15 Carol Rawcliffe (Norwich): ‘The Abominable Offence and Poisoning of the Air’: Animals, Miasmas and Urban Epidemics in Late Medieval England
16.15-17.00 Saurab Mishrah (Sheffield): Peasant Households, ‘Public Cattle’, and Healing Strategies in Late-Colonial India
17.00-17.45 Jules Skotnes-Brown (St. Andrews): Rats, Race, and Forced Removals: Bubonic Plague in Port Elizabeth (Gqeberha), 1938
17.45-18.15 Discussion Panel 3 (Chair: Nadir Weber)
Friday, April 1st, 2022
Panel 4 Epoch-making? Animals, Epidemics, Time and Space
9.00-9.45 Martin Bauch (Leipzig): Of Marmots and Squirrels, Mice and Men – Plague Reservoirs in 14th Century Central Europe
9.45-10.30 Timothy P. Newfield (Washington): Premodern Animal Plagues: Common but Enigmatic?
10.30-11.00 Coffee Break
11.00-11.45 Lucinda Cole (Urbana): Cattle Politics, 1866: Anti-Contagionism and Cheap Lives
11.45-12.30 Delphine Berdah (Paris): Veterinary Expertise, Public Health, and the Control of Animal Contagious Diseases in France and the UK, 1860-1960: The Example of Bovine Tuberculosis
12.30-13.00 Discussion Panel 4 (Chair: Axel Hüntelmann)
13.00-14.00 Lunch Break
14.00-14.45 Martin Ullrich (Nürnberg): Final Notes: Epidemic Dancing and Musical Spiders: Tarantism and Zoomusicology
14.45-15.15 Final Discussion with coffee (Chair: Jeannette Vaught)
Organizers:
Axel C. Hüntelmann, Institute for the History of Medicine, Charité Berlin
Christian Jaser, University of Klagenfurt
Mieke Roscher, University of Kassel
Nadir Weber, University of Bern
Conference Venue:
Freie Universität Berlin, Akademischer Senatssaal, Henry Ford Bau, Garystraße 35, 14195 Berlin and Online
https://www.fu-berlin.de/sites/hfb/anfahrt/index.html <https://www.fu-berlin.de/sites/hfb/anfahrt/index.html>
Contact and Registration:
Olivia Mayer (olivia.mayer@aau.at <mailto:olivia.mayer@aau.at> )
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