History Department Events Calendar
Friday, September 13, 2024
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Embodied Faith: Spirituality and Corporeality in Early Modern ChristianityTeaching Grid, University of Warwick LibrarySophie Mann and Martha McGill have arranged a two-day international workshop focusing on spirituality, corporeality and health in the early modern period. In early modern Christian thought, bodies blended material and immaterial qualities. The flux of Galenic humours conditioned ways of thinking and feeling, and early modern scholars offered comprehensive advice about the maladies engendered by humoral excesses or deficits. But humoral balance was not explicable in straightforward biological terms; it depended on wider environmental factors, and could be influenced by occult forces. Human bodies were also governed by souls. This workshop seeks to facilitate a conversation about early modern spirituality and corporeality. How did Christian theologians, philosophers and physicians understand the body, and how did medical or ministerial practice respond to humans’ multifaceted nature? The workshop will also discuss historiography. In recent years there has been a proliferation of work on religion and the body, but there remain methodological challenges. How to conceptualise the relationship between belief and practice, or language and experience, remains a thorny theoretical problem for both social and cultural historians. We envisage that the workshop will offer a relaxed setting for discussion and debate, and welcome informal papers and work in progress. |
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CHM: 25th Anniversary Celebration EventFAB 2.43The Centre for the History of Medicine (CHM) is celebrating its 25th anniversary in 2024. CHM founder, stalwart and inspiration, Professor Hilary Marland will also be retiring this year - at least to the extent that a creative and inspirational scholar ever does! To mark both of these milestones, CHM will host a day-long event on 13 September 2024. From 11:00, our Anniversary Fellows, Dr Jennifer Crane, Dr Vicky Long, and Professor Colin Jones will lead us in thinking about what the Centre has brought to the history of medicine, health, and culture across its quarter-century. After lunch, we will host a discussion roundtable marking Hilary’s many contributions, and considering the overall impact of the CHM on our collective lives, trajectories and research. Last but not least, we will pop corks and share cakes to celebrate both the Centre and Hilary! Please register here for catering purposes, if you'd like to join us. We look forward to seeing you! |