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ANNUAL MEETING 1-4 NOVEMBER 2018 SEATTLE, WASHINGTON

Cover | Photo by Clay Banks on Unsplash 1 Table of Contents

Acknowledgments �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 3 HSS Officers, Committees, and Program Chairs ���������������������������������������� 5 History of Science Society Volunteers ��������������������������������������������������������� 6 Respectful Behavior Policy ������������������������������������������������������������������������� 7 Statement on Scholarly Conduct ���������������������������������������������������������������� 9 Land Acknowledgment Ceremony ������������������������������������������������������������� 9 HSS Caucuses and Interest Groups ���������������������������������������������������������� 10 Book Exhibit �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 16 Digital Meeting Program �������������������������������������������������������������������������� 18 General Meeting Information ������������������������������������������������������������������� 19 2018 Meeting Program ���������������������������������������������������������������������������� 20 Thursday, November 1 ����������������������������������������������������������������������� 20 Friday, November 2 ��������������������������������������������������������������������������� 24 Saturday, November 3 ������������������������������������������������������������������������ 40 Sunday, November 4 �������������������������������������������������������������������������� 56 PSA Sessions of Interest ���������������������������������������������������������������������������� 60 Advertisements ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 62 Index �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 69

History of Science Society Mission Statement To foster interest in the history of science, promote discussion of science’s social and cultural relations, and bring this understanding to others worldwide.

2 Acknowledgments

Welcome to Seattle! The city takes its name from Chief Seattle, a leader of the Suquamish and Duwamish, two of the tribes that have lived in this area for thousands of years. Also called the Emerald City, Seattle is blessed with abundant moisture, as attendees will experience, and features a vibrant culture that attracts travelers from around the world. Once again, our conference is located in a city’s center, affording HSS members easy access to this bounty of food, sights, and sounds. Our program co-chairs, Michael Reidy (Montana State University) and David Sepkoski (University of Illinois) dedicated many hours to the 2018 program, organizing more than 100 sessions and roundtables. Only former program chairs know the challenges that reside in assembling the annual meeting. Simply trying to avoid slotting similar sessions opposite each other (an arduous task) and accommodating requests that range from favored presentation times to the choice of commentator, can test the calmest demeanor. They have my deep thanks for their efforts. I am also grateful to Karen-Beth Scholthof (Texas A&M University), who chairs the Committee on Meetings and Programs. She and they have provided valuable guidance, and I am grateful for their leadership. Our Local Arrangements Committee, chaired by Bruce Hevly (University of Washington), worked with me on multiple occa- sions – as far back as 2012 – as we mapped out the Seattle meeting. He handled a multitude of requests and he has my thanks. The annual meeting would resemble a train wreck without the efforts of the HSS office staff. Ryan Feigenbaum, our Society Coordinator and digital master, prepared for every step, from finding a conference-man- agement system to directing the work of our students. Our Notre Dame students who are on site – Whitney Lim, Hannah Morris, and Lucian Lopez – helped more than can be measured. I thank them all. Meeting in a large city, although agreeable in its variety, offers financial challenges, and we rely heavily on sponsors and supporters to help us control expenses. I would like to recognize two in particular: the University of Notre Dame for its hosting of the Executive Office and the National Science Foundation for its support of travel grants for graduate students, independent scholars, and recent PhDs (SES-1656205). There are many others who helped us, and a full list of supporters can be found on the back cover of the program. I appreciate, beyond words, their contributions.

3 And on the subject of beyond words, the HSS Executive Com- mittee provided understanding, encouragement, and wisdom on all aspects of the meeting. These officers dedicate hundreds of hours to the HSS – they too, have my profound thanks. Attendees will notice that we are meeting with PSA, and although such joint meetings represent a host of challenges, I cannot imagine a nicer colleague than Jessica Pfeifer, Executive Director of PSA. It has been a privilege to work with her, and I hope to reprise that collegiality at the 2022 conference. Finally, I must thank you, the attendees, who make this all worthwhile. Your presence, your contributions, and your involvement create a mix that cannot be replicated. And if you are not a member of the HSS, please join us – it is our members who make all of this possible.

Jay Malone

HSS Executive Director 8 October 2018

4 HSS Officers, Committees, and Program Chairs

Council

Executive Committee President, Bernard Lightman, York University Vice President, Jan Golinski, University of New Hampshire Secretary, Luis Campos, University of New Mexico Treasurer, Gwen Kay, State University of New York, Oswego Council Delegate, Paola Bertucci, Yale University Editor, H. Floris Cohen, Utrecht University Executive Director, Robert J. Malone, HSS (ex officio)

2016-2018 2017-2019 2018-2020 Babak Ashrafi Susan Jones Paola Bertucci Aileen Fyfe Gordon McOuat Nathaniel Comfort Anita Guerrini Erika Milam Olival Freire Edna Suárez Díaz Suman Seth Jacob Darwin Hamblin Mary Terrall Gabriela Soto Laveaga Elly Truitt

Past President (2018-2019), Janet Browne, Harvard University Committee Chairs Advocacy, Marc Rothenberg Education and Engagement, Lloyd Ackert, Drexel University Finances, Gwen Kay, State University of New York, Oswego Honors and Prizes, David Kaiser, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Meetings and Programs, Karen-Beth G. Scholthof, Texas A&M University Membership, Erika L. Milam, Princeton University Nominating, Paola Bertucci, Yale University Publications, Katharine Anderson, York University Technology and Communications, Stephen P. Weldon, University of Oklahoma Program Co-Chairs Michael Reidy, Montana State University David Sepkoski, University of Illinois Local Arrangements Chair Bruce Hevly, University of Washington

5 History of Science Society Volunteers

I wish to thank our volunteers whose terms will end in 2018. Their time and effort are the reason that the HSS is able to recognize superlative scholarship, to hold an annual meeting, to publish the highest-quality works, to maintain a web presence, to nurture research, and to promote interest in the history of science. I offer my deep-felt thanks to all. – Jay Malone, HSS Executive Director

Committee on Suzanne J. Levinson Nominating Com- Advocacy Prize mittee Matt Shindell Elena Aronova, Chair Asif Siddiqi Vicky Harden, Wash- Philip J. Pauly Prize Karine Chemla ington Representative Marc Rothen- Committee on Committee on berg, Chair Publications Education and Pfizer Award Katharine An- Engagement Crosbie Smith, Chair derson, Chair Lloyd Ackert, Chair Amy Fisher Derek Price/Rod Technology and Webster Award Communication Committee on Massimo Maz- Committee Finances zotti, Chair Stephen Weldon, Edith Sylla Co-Chair Ronald Rainger Prize Alex Wellerstein Committee on Alistair Sponsel, Chair Honors and Prizes Women’s Caucus Kevin Chang Nathan Reingold Prize Tina Gianquitto Karl Hall, Chair Prize Subcommit- Graduate and Early Margaret W. Rossiter tees Career Caucus History of Women in Watson Davis and Science Prize Emmie Miller Helen Miles Davis Prize Rusty Shteir, Chair HSS at Work Cau- Mark Barrow, Chair Committee on cus Matt Shindell Joseph H. Hazen Meetings and Education Prize Programs HSS/NASA Fellow- Mark Waddell, Chair Frans Van Luteren ship Teasel Muir Harmony

6 Respectful Behavior Policy

Freedom of expression and vigorous debate are crucial to scholarly exchange. The History of Science Society strongly values mutual respect and strives to provide an environment for exchange that is free from bias and intimida- tion. The Society is dedicated to securing a safe, hospitable, and productive environment for everyone. Accordingly, the Society deplores all harassment and is sensitive to the harm suffered by persons who experience it. We expect speakers and questioners at our meetings to demonstrate self-control and civility, even in the midst of strong disagreement, and not to engage in ad hominem attacks. Furthermore, we expect those participating in the Society’s meetings and events to treat others with respect and not to engage in behavior that is discriminatory, intimidating, threatening, or harassing. This expectation applies to our speakers, staff, volunteers, and attendees.

Nondiscrimination and Anti-Harassment Standards The Society prohibits any unwelcome conduct that is based on an individ- ual’s sex (including pregnancy), sexual orientation, gender identity, race, color, religion, national origin, age, marital status, disability, or employment status and that creates an environment that a reasonable person would con- sider intimidating, hostile, or abusive. Harassment may include such actions as: (1) inappropriate physical contact; (2) inappropriate jokes or verbal kid- ding or teasing; (3) verbal abuse and epithets; (4) degrading comments; (5) the display of offensive or sexually suggestive objects or pictures; (6) conduct or comments of a lewd or lascivious nature, including subtle pressure for sexual activity; (7) repeated offensive sexual flirtations, advances, or propo- sitions; and (8) any other conduct that the individual (or group of individu- als) might reasonably find to be intimidating, hostile, offensive, coercive, or threatening. Sexual harassment does not refer to occasional compliments of a socially acceptable nature or consensual personal and social relationships.

Reporting If an individual or group of individuals believes that they have experienced any violation of this policy at a Society meeting or event, the person or group should report the incident immediately to the Society Ombudsperson ([email protected]). Although anyone may seek advice from the Ombudsperson, only the individual or individuals alleging that they have been harassed may file a complaint. The Ombudsperson shall listen to the grievance, describe the policy and procedures, outline issues of privacy and confidentiality, and discuss possible courses of action regarding

7 the filing or non-filing of a formal complaint. The Ombudsperson shall take all reasonable efforts to maintain in strict confidence the identity of individuals reporting an incident and the person or persons implicated in an incident. The Ombudsperson shall prepare for Council annually an aggregate, anonymized summary of all such reported incidents. If an individual elects to file a formal complaint, that person must describe the incident in a non-confidential written statement delivered to the Ombudsperson within sixty (60) calendar days of the alleged conduct and preferably immediately following the incident. The Ombudsperson will provide the statement concurrently to the accused party or parties and to the three-person Respectful Behavior Review Committee. The accused party may elect to file a written response, and if so, the written response must be filed with the Ombudsperson within sixty (60) calendar days of receipt of the initial written complaint. The Chair of the Com- mittee shall contact both parties to discuss the incident and determine whether there is a mutually acceptable resolution. If no such resolution can be found, the Committee shall determine whether the incident constituted harassment under the terms of this Policy. If the Commit- tee determines the incident constituted harassment, it shall furnish a report of the incident, the Committee’s findings, and a recommended sanction, if any, to the Secretary of the Council within sixty (60) days.

Sanctions The Council shall consider the case. If a majority of the entire Council concurs with the recommendations of the Committee, the Coun- cil Executive Committee shall issue a written reprimand including any sanctions banning the individual from future meetings and/ or revoking the individual’s membership. The Secretary of the Coun- cil will report the outcome to all parties involved, which is final. Society Ombudsperson: [email protected] Approved by HSS Council, 7 June 2017

8 Statement on Scholarly Conduct

At its 18 June 2018 virtual meeting, the HSS Council endorsed the following statement on professional conduct. The statement will appear on all HSS media. HSS believes scholarly conduct should adhere to the highest ethical and professional standards. The Society expects contributors to its publications and meetings to present original work that respects the integrity of the research process and that conforms to rigorous standards in the citation and acknowledgment of the work of other scholars. The American Historical Association’s Statement on Standards of Professional Conduct is a useful guide. 1 Land Acknowledgment Ceremony

If you would like to include a territorial acknowledgment during your session or caucus business meeting this year, here are a few things to con- sider. We begin by noting that the Indigenous peoples of the Seattle area have distinct histories and diverse cultural and social practices. Spend some time learning about these histories, including from the resources listed on the online program and the HSS website. A territorial acknowledgment is an opportunity to reflect on personal, professional, and community responsibilities towards the peoples upon whose land we meet. Here is an example of a possible text: “I would like to begin by acknowledging that we are meeting on the historic and contemporary lands of the Tulalip, Snohomish, Suquamish, Snoqualmie, Muckleshoot, and Duwamish nations and other Coast Salish peoples who call the waters and coastline of the Salish Sea home.” We encourage you to consider how you might personalize this acknowledgment and what concrete actions you feel called to take.

9 HSS Caucuses and Interest Groups

The History of Science Society has several caucuses and interest groups to serve the numerous interests of its members. They are completely volunteer-driven and make significant contributions not only to the annual meetings, but to the Society and the field as a whole. Below are brief descriptions of each of these organizations and any sponsored sessions appearing on this year’s program. Note that membership in a caucus or interest group is not required to attend a sponsored session or business meeting. If you are curious about a particular group, please attend the business meeting and/or contact the current chair(s).

Graduate and Early Career Caucus

Chair: Kristine Palmieri Emerging from a collective consensus that the creation of a graduate student and early career caucus within HSS would greatly benefit the next generation of scholars, the GECC is working to improve resource offerings for these groups in the coming year, through venues that include, but are not limited to, their website, hssgecc.wordpress.com. The chairs and officers are graduate students and early career mem- bers of HSS, who act as liaisons between the committees of the HSS and the student/early career constituency. The objective of the group is to facilitate communication between caucus members and HSS regarding their concerns, issues, and ideas, as well as poten- tially having representation on HSS committees in the future.

2018 Sponsored Sessions and Events • Mentorship Mixer (Thursday, November 1, 20:30-21:30, Presidential Suite 3315) • Women’s Mentorship Event (Friday, Novem- ber 2, 12:00-13:15, Kirkland, Third Floor) • CV Review (Multiple Days and Times. See GECC website for details) • GECC Mixer (Friday, November 2, 20:00-22:00, Fado Irish Pub) • GECC Business Meeting (Saturday, Novem- ber 3, 16:00-17:00, Chelan, First Floor)

10 HSS at Work

Chair: Matt Shindell HSS at Work is devoted to improving opportunities and support for scholars interested in employment options for historians of science beyond the academy. Inspired by other efforts to support the scholarly community outside its traditional bounds, this caucus aims to serve graduate students, history of science alums, and faculty who are increasingly called upon to prepare their students for a variety of careers outside the traditional ten- ure-track. Reminded that “the history of science is everywhere,” we seek to expand understandings of scholarship within and without the academy, and to create new connections within the history of science community.

Joint Caucus for Socially Engaged Philosophers and Histori- ans of Science

HSS Chair: Rachel A. Ankeny The Joint Caucus for Socially Engaged Philosophers and Historians of Science (JCSEPHS) was founded in 2012 to promote research, educational, and public activities in history and philosophy of science that constructively engage matters of social welfare. The JCSEPHS seeks to bridge scholarly research and public debate on science fund- ing, research ethics, race and gender in science, and other scientific and technological matters involved in public policy debates.

2018 Sponsored Sessions and Events • JCSEPHS Social Engagement Showcase (Friday, No- vember 2, 17:00-20:30, Ballard, Third Floor)

Women’s Caucus

Co-Chairs: Tina Gianquitto & Jenna Tonn The Women’s Caucus of the History of Science focuses on the role and status of women in the profession. The caucus serves as a forum for those interested in the history of women, as well as the wider role of gender in science, medicine, and technology. The caucus also helps sponsor and administer the Dependent Care Grants and a nursing mother’s room at the annual meeting. The co-chairs of the caucus act as a resource for the History of Science Society on questions pertinent to the role and status of

11 women in the profession and in the Society. We also coordinate a list serve and a Facebook group: facebook.com/groups/HSSwomenscaucus/.

2018 Sponsored Sessions and Events • Women’s Caucus Breakfast (Friday, Novem- ber 2, 7:30-9:00, Aspen, Second Floor) • Women’s Mentorship Event (Friday, Novem- ber 2, 12:00-13:15, Kirkland, Third Floor) • Black/Brown/Queer: Geographies and Temporalities of the History of Science (Saturday, November 3, 13:30-15:45, Aspen, Second Floor)

Early Science Forum

Chair: Anne-Laurence Caudano The Early Science Forum represents the interests of scholars of scientific and technological work from antiquity through the seventeenth century. Our broad chronological, geographical, and subdisciplinary sweep is intended to foster communication and cooperation among scholars working on diverse topics who nevertheless face similar institutional and methodological obstacles. These include disciplinary fragmentation and marginalization, as well as the challenges posed by working primarily with materials that require additional language expertise or that prove difficult to access.

2018 Sponsored Sessions and Events • Early Science Forum Business Meeting (Friday, Novem- ber 2, 13:30-14:00, Eagle Boardroom, First Floor)

Earth and Environment Forum

Chair: Ashanti Shih The Earth and Environment Forum is a lively group of scholars interested in histories of knowledge about the land, sea, and sky, and in all manner of physical, human, and life sciences as they have been practiced outdoors, in transit, or on a global scale. We share a long tradition of helping to welcome students into the discipline, and we warmly encourage any interested parties to join us for our annual get-together at HSS. At these meetings we make introductions between scholars, renew friendships, and hear updates about ongoing work in the history of the environmental and earth sciences.

12 2018 Sponsored Sessions and Events • Earth and Environment Forum Annual Gathering (Satur- day, November 3, 7:45-8:45, Columbia, Fourth Floor)

Forum for History of Human Science

Chair: Laura Stark The FHHS was established to promote research, education, and scholarship in the history of human science; to provide a forum for discussion; and to foster interest in the history of human sci- ence among scholars, scientists, students, and the public. The Forum subscribes to a broad definition of human science that encompasses such disciplines as anthropology, economics, geogra- phy, history, linguistics, political science, psychiatry, psychology, sociology, and statistics, as well as aspects of the biological and physical sciences, medicine, education, law, and philosophy.

2018 Sponsored Sessions and Events • 2018 FHHS Distinguished Lecture (Saturday, No- vember 3, 12:00-13:15, Ballard, Third Floor) • All Too Human: Formalizations, Models, and Algo- rithms in the 20th Century Human Sciences (Sunday, November 4, 9:00-11:00, Ravenna C, Third Floor)

Forum for the History of Science in Asia

Chair: Minakshi Menon FHSAsia is devoted to furthering scholarship in the history of science, medicine, and technology in Asia. It aims to promote research and educa- tion in the history of science in Asia, to provide a forum for discussion, and to foster and support international collaboration among scholars working in all areas related to the study and practice of the sciences in Asia.

2018 Sponsored Sessions and Events • Forum for the History of Science Business Meeting (Friday, November 2, 12:00-13:15, Jefferson B, Fourth Floor) • Science Stories: The Life and Labor of Local Scientists in the Making of Modern Southeast Asia (Saturday, No- vember 3, 13:30-15:45, Columbia, Fourth Floor)

13 Forum for the History of the Chemical Sciences

Chair: Jenny Rampling The Forum for the History of the Chemical Sciences (FoHCS) was organized in 2011 to facilitate the promotion of the history of the chemical sciences, broadly conceived, within the History of Science Society. Its mission is 1) to organize sessions at annual meetings of the HSS and at other meetings in which the HSS is taking part, and 2) to encourage conversations both with professional historians of alchemy and chemistry in other historical societies and historically-minded chemists in professional chemical societies in the U.S. and abroad.

2018 Sponsored Sessions and Events: • Chemistry and the “Big Picture” in the History of Science (Friday, November 1, 9:00-11:45, Aspen, Second Floor) • Matter of State: Alchemical Controversies in Early Modern Courts (Saturday, November 3, 16:00-18:00, Jefferson A, Fourth Floor)

Forum for the History of the Mathematical Sciences

Chair: Karen Parshall The Forum for the History of the Mathematical Sciences serves as a focal point for historians of the mathematical sciences within the History of Science Society (HSS). It became an officially recognized HSS interest group in 2008 in an effort both to encourage the participation of histo- rians of the mathematical sciences in the HSS and to raise awareness of the subdiscipline in the history of science community, as opposed to the mathematics community where it has long been firmly institutionalized. FoHoMS has one face-to-face business and brainstorming meeting each year at the HSS and regular e-mail exchanges throughout the rest of the year.

2018 Sponsored Sessions and Events • Forum for the History of the Mathematical Scienc- es Luncheon (Friday, November 2, 12:00-13:15)

Physical Sciences Forum

Chair: Ann Robinson The HSS Physical Science Forum is a voluntary association of individ- uals interested in furthering scholarship in the history of the physical

14 sciences as broadly understood, including but not limited to: physics; earth, space, and atmospheric science; astronomy; and materials science. It will help forge a more coherent community for those with a core specialty in these sub-fields with a particular emphasis on developing the connections linking these sub-fields and exploring their resonance with wider scholarship. The ultimate goals are: to foster generative dia- logue and interaction within such a community for the sake of refining historiography and deepening historical insights; to maximize scholarly contributions to the history of science; and to integrate historians of physical science more closely with the history of science community.

2018 Sponsored Sessions and Events • Institutionalizing Scientific Internationalism? Diplomacy at Work in the Physical Sciences during the Cold War and Beyond (Friday, November 2, 9:00-11:45, Leschi, Third Floor) • 2018 PSF Distinguished Lecture (Friday, Novem- ber 2, 12:00-13:15, Ballard, Third Floor)

Interested in Volunteering for the HSS?

We’re always looking for dedicated volunteers to help run the Society and advance the history of science. Visit our website (hs- sonline.org) and click on Volunteer in the sidebar to sign up.

15 Book Exhibit

1. The Scholar’s Choice 2. ISD - Distributor of Scholar- ly Books 3. University of Chicago Press 4. Princeton University Press 5. Oxford University Press 6. Yale University Press 7. MIT Press 8. Routledge, Taylor and Fran- cis Group 9. Cambridge University Press 10. Johns Hopkins University Press 11. Brill

16 12. Wiley 13. Royal Society Publishing 14. Harvard University Press 15. Green Lion Press 16. University of Pittsburgh Press 17. Science History Institute 18. Springer 19. Wiki Education 20. The University of Alabama Press 21. B & L Rootenberg Rare Books 22. Palgrave Macmillan 23. Collective Book Exhibit 24. Fellowship Table 25. National Science Foundation

17 Digital Meeting Program

The most up-to-date meeting program is always available on the HSS meet- ing website. For updates during the meeting, download our meeting app, Dryfta, available on iOS and Android. Through the meeting app, you can also access the up-to-date meeting program and other useful information.

Updates and information during the meeting will also be announced via our Twitter feed (@hssonline). We’ll be using #hss18, if you’d like to follow the meeting in real time or tag your own tweets. All registered attendees will also have access to a PDF file of the meeting program and the abstract book. These are available for download on the meeting website. A note on the use of social media: This year, HSS will again take full advantage of all that social media (blogging, Twitter, Facebook, etc.) has to offer. That means you may see audience members on their phones or laptops during talks. We want to encourage this kind of digital engagement among our members, so please keep in mind that if you see someone on their phones, they may simply be sending out messages about the confer- ence to a wider audience. For those using social media during conference events, please be aware of your surroundings and keep it positive! Need to get in touch with HSS during the meeting? Use the contact form on the meeting website.

Links

• HSS Website: hssonline.org • HSS Meeting Website: hss2018.hssonline.org

Our meeting website is powered by Dryfta.com

18 General Meeting Information

Registration Family/Nursing Mother’s Room Metropolitan A, Third Floor Thursday, November 1 Everett, Third Floor 13:30–20:00 Thursday, November 1 Friday, November 2 12:00–22:30 8:00–17:00 Friday, November 2 Saturday, November 3, 7:30–22:30 8:00–17:00 Saturday, November 3 Sunday, November 4 7:30–22:30 8:00–11:00 Sunday, November 4 7:30–13:00 HSS/PSA Book Exhibit Coffee Breaks Metropolitan A & B Pre-Function Area, Third Floor Metropolitan A, Metropolitan A/B Thursday, November 1 Pre-Function, et al. 13:30–16:00 Friday, November 2 Friday, November 2 10:00-10:15 & 15:30-15:45 8:00–17:00 Saturday, November 3 Saturday, November 3 10:00-10:15 & 15:45-16:00 8:00–17:00 Sunday, November 4 8:00–11:00

19 2018 Meeting Program

Thursday, November 1 15:00-17:00 Helena Pycior (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee) All Coherence Gone? A New • “Owning the Evidence: The Isaac Newton Lasting Controversies of Early Willow, Second Floor Primatology Filmmaking,” Benja- Moderator: Jed Buchwald (Caltech) min Schultz-Figueroa (University of California, Santa Cruz) Organizer: William New- man (Indiana University) • “Biased Descriptions of Ant Colony Behavior: How the • “Newton the Alchemist,” Wil- History of Terms is Affecting liam Newman (Indiana University) Current Research,” Ryan Ketcham • “The Religion and the Science (Indiana University-Bloomington) of the Young Isaac Newton,” 1 Mordechai Feingold (Caltech) • “Big Data and Close Biology and Nationalism in Modern Korea and China Reading: Newton’s Life and Work Between the Inner Mind Kirkland, Third Floor and the Outer Limits,” Rob Moderator: John DiMoia Iliffe (Oxford University) (Seoul National University) • “Properties, Predictions, and Organizer: Christine Luk Mathematical Theories in Newton’s (University of Hong Kong) Optical Investigations,” Alan • “The Romance of the Bean: Shapiro (University of Minnesota) Rethinking the Soybean as Tech- 1 nology and Consumer Commod- Animals ity in Early Republican China,” Wendy Fu (Emory University) Jefferson A, Fourth Floor • “Marine Biology, Nation- Moderator: Katharina Stein- alism, and Nature’s Body: er (University of Zurich) Marine Biological Surveys in • “‘Management’ of the Republican China,” Christine Squirrels of Washington, D.C., Luk (University of Hong Kong) from the 1950s to the 1980s: • “South Korean Biologists’ Mem- Historical Case Studies in the ory and Use of Japanese Colonial Human-Animal Bond, Nonhuman Charisma, and Network Analysis,”

20 Thursday, November 1, 15:00-17:00 Experience,” Manyong Moon Moderator & Organizer: Olival (Chonbuk National University) Freire Junior (Universidade • “Pursuing the Next Green Federal da Bahia, Brazil) Revolution in Korea: “Scientific” • “The Uncertain Foundations Promotion and Demise of Barley of the Renormalization Program: in South Korea,” Tae-Ho Kim Attitudes Towards Quantum (Chonbuk National University) Electrodynamics in the 1950s,” 1 Thiago Hartz (Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro) Climate Cartography from • “Securing the Foundations Maps to Models of Theories without Physical Ravenna A, Third Floor Postulates: The Case of Quan- Moderator: Katharine An- tum Mechanics,” Jan Lacki derson (York University) (Un Geneve, Switzerland) Organizer: Deborah Coen • “From Light Quanta to (Yale University) Bosons. Conceptual Foundations and Interpretive Flexibility,” • “Seeing Climate in Motion,” Daniela Monaldi (York University) Deborah Coen (Yale University) • “The Discovery of RNA • “The Origins of Modern Splicing as a Surprise: Stability of Climatology in Wladimir the DNA- Co-Linearity Köppen’s 1901 Climate Classifi- Theory or Faulty Foundations cation and Map,” Mott Greene of Biological Diversity?” Pnina (University of Washington) Abir-Am (Brandeis, US) • “Memories of Rain: • “The Triumph of Bohr: The Climate Maps and German Folk History of Quantum Mechan- Colonial Revisionism,” Philipp ics and the Tension between a Sta- Lehmann (UC Riverside) ble Theory and Its Fragile Founda- • “Harold N. Fisk’s (1944) tions,” Adam Becker (UC Berkeley) Maps of the Meandering Mis- • Commentator: Alexei sissippi River,” David Spanagel Kojevnikov (UBC, Canada) (Worcester Polytechnic Institute) 1 1 “Humanistic” Science, “Scien- Colossi with Feet of Clay — tific” Humanities: Towards Stable Theories and Fragile an Integrated History of the Foundations Humanities and Science Boren, Fourth Floor Ravenna B, Third Floor

21 Thursday, November 1, 15:00-17:00 Moderator: Elizabeth Lun- • “Planted Poison and the beck (Harvard University) Chemical Examiners in British Organizer: Kristine Palmieri India,” Mitra Sharafi (University (University of Chicago) of Wisconsin-Madison) • “The Common Origins and • “Who Murdered Haim Arloso- Changing Interpretations of the roff? The Politics of Acquittal in In- Concept ‘Fact’ in German Physics terwar Palestine,” Binyamin Blum and Historiography,” Sjang Ten (UC Hastings College of Law) Hagen (University of Amsterdam) • “Spatters and Lies: Technologies • “Christian Gottlob Heyne, of Truth in the Sam Sheppard Friedrich August Wolf, and the Case, 1954-1966,” Ian Burney ‘Science’ of Philology,” Kristine (Centre for the History of Science, Palmieri (University of Chicago) Technology and Medicine at the University of Manchester) • “Two Sides of the Same Indian Coin: James Prinsep as 1 Assay Master and Antiquarian The Interplay’s the Thing: in Mid-Nineteenth Century Interrogating the Intersec- India,” Charlotte Coull (The tions of Theater and Modern University of Manchester) Science • “The Linguistic Questionnaire Leschi, Third Floor and the Formation of General Moderator: Jenna Tonn Linguistics Between the Sciences (Boston College) and the Humanities,” Emma Organizers: Ashley Clark (Uni- Mojet (University of Amsterdam) versity of Chicago) & Alona 1 Bach (Dumbarton Oaks Research Just Facts?: Evidentiary Library and Collection) Frameworks of Forensic Con- • “Observing the Inner Life viction on Stage: Goethe and the Jefferson B, Fourth Floor beginnings of the Weimar Court Theater, 1791-1798,” Ashley Moderator & Organizer: Ian Clark (University of Chicago) Burney (Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine • “‘Watts’ in a Home: Staging at the University of Manchester) and Selling Domestic Electricity in Interwar Britain,” Alona Bach • “Forensic Facts and the (Dumbarton Oaks Research Presumption of Innocence,” Library and Collection) Christopher Hamlin (Uni- versity of Notre Dame) • “‘Eating Electricity and Delivering India’: Cultural 22 Thursday, November 1, 17:30-19:30 Resistance and Electricity in Lands,” Megan Raby (The Late-Nineteenth Century Bengali University of Texas at Austin) Drama,” Animesh Chatterjee 1 (Leeds Trinity University) 17:30-19:30 • “Leben im Versuch: Exper- imental Culture in Germany’s LAND ACKNOWLEDGMENT CERE- First Garden City Hellerau MONY & PLENARY ROUNDTABLE (1910-1914),” Anne-Sophie Knowledge/Violence/Futures: His- Reichert (University of Chicago) tory of Science and its Genealogies 1 Willow Uneasy Alliances: Analyzing Moderator: Gregg Mitman (Uni- the Role of Nation States in versity of Wisconsin-Madison) the Administration of Place- Based Science Sites Organizers: Gregg Mitman Medina, Third Floor (University of Wisconsin-Mad- ison) & Michelle Murphy Moderator & Organizer: (University of Toronto) David Kaiser (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) • Kim TallBear (Uni- versity of Alberta) • “Experiments in Colonialism & Experiments as Colonial- • Michelle Murphy ism: The Making of the US (University of Toronto) Pacific Proving Grounds,” Mary • Joseph Masco (Uni- Mitchell (Purdue University) versity of Chicago) • “Proving Accelerated Wasteland: 1 The Infrastructure of Cape 19:30-20:30 Canaveral Missile Test Annex,” Jeffrey Nesbit (Harvard University) Opening Reception • “Placing Post-Cold War Metropolitan A & B Pre-Function, Physics: Attempts by Laser Third Floor Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Join your colleagues from the Observatory to Site Gravitation History of Science Society for Physics on Decommissioned our opening festivities. Light Cold War Sites,” Tiffany Nichols hors d’oeuvres and a cash bar. (Harvard University) 1 • “Corporate Science in the Banana Republics: Research and the United Fruit Company

23 Friday, November 2, 7:30-8:45 Friday, November 2 7:30-8:45 • “‘Esperienza,’ Teacher of All Things: The Musical Art-Science HSS Women’s Caucus Break- of Vincenzo Galilei,” Adam Fix fast (University of Minnesota) Aspen, Second Floor • “Descartes ‘as a painter’: scho- Sponsored by Linda Hall Library lasticism and Pop Science in the 1 ‘Essais’,” Abram Kaplan (Columbia University/Harvard University) 8:00-12:00 • “Metamorphosis: Hooke and thatcamp Ray on Fossils as Instruments Seattle Public Library of History,” Cindy Hodoba 1000 4th Ave, Seattle, WA 98104 Eric (University of Sydney) 1 • “An Arctic Case Study: Humanism in Real Time,” Donna 10:00-10:15 Bilak (Columbia University) coffee break 1 Metropolitan A, Metropolitan A/B Authorship and Cultures of Pre-Function Area, et al. Scientific Publishing, 16th - 19th Century 1 Chelan, First Floor 9:00-11:45 Moderator & Organizer: Bettina Di- Art-Science: Premodern Theo- etz (Hong Kong Baptist University) ry and Practice Entangled • “Posthumous Publishing Medina, Third Floor and the Culture of Co-author- Moderator: Tawrin Baker ship in Eighteenth-Century (University of Pennsylvania) Botany,” Bettina Dietz (Hong Kong Baptist University) Organizer: Adam Fix (Uni- versity of Minnesota) • “A Publishing Machine: The Quest of Botanist P.J. Buch’hoz for • “Late Medieval or Baroque: Scientific Recognition in Enlight- Epochal Thresholds, Styles of enment France,” Marie-Claude Thought, and Mathematical Felton (McGill University) Practices in the Seventeenth Century,” Raz Chen-Morris • “Early Modern Drugs in Print: (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) Pierre Pomet’s,” Laia Portet-I-Co- dina (University of Cambridge)

24 Friday, November 2, 9:00-11:45 • “Journal Exchange and the Moderator: Paige Madison Value of Scientific Publications, (Arizona State University) 1800-1870,” Jenny Beckman Organizer: Paul D. Brinkman (University of Uppsala) (North Carolina Museum Chemistry and the “Big Pic- of Natural Sciences) ture” in the History of Sci- • “Theory, Observation, ence and Discipline: The Funafuti Ravenna C, Third Floor Expeditions as Crucial Ex- Sponsored by Forum for the History periments?” Alistair Sponsel of the Chemical Sciences (FoHCS) (www.studiesofscience.com) Moderator: Joel Klein (The • “Now Is the Time to Collect: Huntington Library) Museums and Salvage Zoology at the Turn of the Twentieth Centu- Organizer: Peter Ramberg ry,” Paul D. Brinkman (North Car- (Truman State University) olina Museum of Natural Sciences) • “Chemistry as part of • “Collecting Evolution in ‘Grand Narratives’ in the His- the Galapagos and Rebuilding tory of Science,” Peter Ramberg the California Academy of (Truman State University) Sciences,” Matthew James • “The History of Chemistry and/ (Sonoma State University) as the German Question,” Michael • “Sailing for Science: The Gordin (Princeton University) Voyage of the Blossom,” • “Is Compositionist Chemistry Wendy Wasman (Cleveland the Paradigm for Reductionist Museum of Natural History) Science?” Hasok Chang • “Fossil Tug of War: Evo- (University of Cambridge) lution and Controversy at • “Chemical Practice and Liang Bua,” Paige Madison Compound Histories,” (Arizona State University) Lissa Roberts (University of 1 Twente) and Simon Werrett (University College London) Indigenous and Environmen- tal Knowledges in Transla- • Commentator: Mary-Jo Nye tion (Oregon State University) Ravenna A, Third Floor 1 Moderator: Carla Nappi Expeditions, Specimens and (University of Pittsburgh) Ideas Jefferson B, Fourth Floor

25 Friday, November 2, 9:00-11:45 Organizer: Geoff Bill (New Organizer: Roberto Lalli (Max York Botanical Garden, Planck Institute for the His- Humanities Institute) tory of Science, Berlin) • “Taíno Nation: Puerto • “The Most Universal Science? Rican Archaeology in Trans- The International Astronomical lation,” Darryl Brock (City Union and the Imagined Past of University of New York) Astronomy,” David Baneke (Des- • “Troubled Translations: cartes Centre, Utrecht University) Ethnoscience and Empire in • “Attempting Neutrality: Twentieth-Century Philippines,” IUPAC, IUPAP, and the Geoff Bil (New York Botanical Resolution of a Cold War Garden, Humanities Institute) Scientific Controversy,” Ann • “‘I See the Land Desolate’: Robinson (Independent Scholar) Competency, Agriculture, and • “Europe by Design: The the Omaha Nation,” Caroline Foundation of the European Lieffers (Yale University) Physical Society during the Cold • “Perry H. Charley: Translating War,” Roberto Lalli (Max Planck the Disruption of Hozho,” Linda Institute for the History of Science) Richards (Oregon State University) • “Modeling the Nuclear Winter: • “California Bay: A The Role of ICSU between Chocolate-Like Indigenous Environmental Research and Superfood,” Frederica Bowcutt Nuclear Diplomacy,” Giulia (Evergreen State College) Rispoli (Max Planck Institute for the History of Science) • Commentator: Joshua Reid (University of Washington) • “Greening the Alliance: Towards a History of NATO’s 1 Transatlantic Science Diplomacy,” Institutionalizing Scientific Simone Turchetti (CHSTM, Internationalism? Diploma- University of Manchester) cy at Work in the Physical Sciences during the Cold War Measuring Bodies & Minds: and Beyond Perspectives on Variation and Disability in the Human Leschi, Third Floor Sciences Sponsored by the Physi- Boren, Fourth Floor cal Sciences Forum Moderator: Laura Stark Moderator: Simone Turchetti (CH- (Vanderbilt University) STM, University of Manchester) Organizer: Jaipreet Virdi (University of Deleware)

26 Friday, November 2, 9:00-11:45 • “By a Hair’s Breadth: Mea- • “Livestock, Patients and Profits: suring Hair in the Nineteenth Veterinary Medicine and the Century,” Timothy Minella Changing Landscape of Rural (University of Kentucky) Economy,” Kit Heintzman (Har- • “Measure of the Mind: vard University, History of Science) Phrenological Character • ”Remaking Mice for Re- Charts and the Marketing of producibility,” Nicole Nelson Self-Knowledge,” Kathrinne (University of Wisconsin-Madison) Duffy (Brown University) • “Social Amoebas and the • “Measuring Deaf People: Ap- Evolution of Altruism in the proaches from Audiology, Genetics 21st Century?” Tina Munz and the Psycho-Sciences, 1930- (National Humanities Center) 1970,” Marion Schmidt (Georg • Discussant: Sophia Roosth August Universität Göttingen) (Harvard University) • “Measuring and Conserving 1 Hearing/Hearing Loss in Postwar America,” Jaipreet Virdi Sino-Foreign Scientific Rela- (University of Delaware) tions from Republic to Peo- ple’s Republic: Transnational • “The Mercurial Gaze: Connections and Movements Distinctly Trainable Students, Kirkland, Third Floor Measurement, and Mental Deficiency at the Elwyn Training Moderator: Zuoyue Wang (Califor- School, 1940-1960,” Leah Samples nia State Polytechnic University) (University of Pennsylvania) Organizer: Gordon Barrett • Commentator: Laura Stark (University of Oxford) (Vanderbilt University) • “A Spectrum of Propaganda and Mites, Mice, Molds, and Mega- Scientific Exchange: Sino-British fauna Scientific Networks from World War to Cold War,” Gordon Ravenna B, Third Floor Barrett (University of Oxford) Moderator: Karl Appuhn • “Science, Nation and War: (New York University) Sino-American Scientific Coop- Organizer: Kit Heintzman eration in the 1940s,” J Megan (Harvard University) Greene (University of Kansas) • “What’s (Not) in a Name? • “Nurturing Chinese Physicists Insect Names in Early Modern at Yenching University: The Europe,” Brian Ogilvie (University Contributions of the Rockefeller of Massachusetts Amherst) Foundation and American

27 Friday, November 2, 9:00-11:45 Physicists,” Danian Hu (The Polloni (Institut für Philosophie, City College of New York) Humboldt Universität zu Berlin) • “The Chinese Role at the • “Radiance at the Limit of Beginning of the World Federation the Material World: Light as a of Scientific Workers, 1945- Property of Physical Bodies in 1950,” Xiao Liu (University of Thirteenth-Century Paris,” Therese Chinese Academy of Sciences) Cory (University of Notre Dame) • “Resisting the Isolation: • “On Bodies and Properties. Diplomacy of the Chinese Physical Effect and Causal Explana- Government-Run Associations tion in Arabic Medicine at the Turn for Science, 1949-1966,” Huibin of the Thirteenth Century,” Emma Wang (National Academy of Gannagé (Georgetown University) Innovation Strategy, China Associ- 1 ation for Science and Technology) Flashtalks • Commentator: Zuoyue ⚡ Wang (California State Ballard, Third Floor Polytechnic University) Organizers: Bernard Lightman 1 (York University), Thomas Misa (University of Minnesota), Marsha Why “Body” Matters: Premod- Richmond (Wayne State University) ern Paradigms of Corporeal- ity • “‘You are Prejudicing Your Own Case’: Women as Experts, Columbia, Fourth Floor Users, and Disturbances at the Moderator & Organizer: Therese 1970 Nelson Hearings on the Cory (University of Notre Dame) Pill,” Christopher ChoGlueck • “Body as Substance and (Indiana University-Bloomington) Quantified Body in the Early • “Defining ‘Trans’ in the 20th Thirteenth Century,” Neil Lewis Century: An Exploration of (Georgetown University) Language in Cases of Sex-Gender • “Matter and Body: Com- Nonconformity,” D Cicchiello plementary Explanations of (Oregon State University) Physical Causation in the • “Models in : Middle Ages,” David Cory (The How in Vitro Biotechnology is Catholic University of America) Used to Know the Molecular • “From Matter to Materiality: World,” Erica Dietlein (Uni- Premodern Quests for Knowing the versity of Nevada Reno) Principle of Corporeality,” Nicola

28 Friday, November 2, 12:00-13:15 • “Brevity is the Soul of • “Roles of Education in the Logic,” David Dunning History of Science,” Sarah Jozina (Princeton University) Reynolds (Indiana University) • “Constructing a Wilderness: • “Creationism Comes to The Role of Science in the Mexico: From Divine Creation International Governance of to Dinosaurs in Zacatecas, ‘Open’ Space,” Annie Handmer Mexico,” Jorge Romo (National (University of Sydney) Autonomous University of Mexico) • “The ‘Eclipse’ of Darwin- • “The Counter-Conference: ism in China,” Xiaoxing Jin Professionalism and Social (University of Notre Dame) Responsibility in Computer • “Performing Authenticity: Science, 1968-1971,” Tasha The Making-Of-Documentary Schoenstein (Harvard University) in Wildlife Film’s Blue-Chip 1 Renaissance,” Eleanor Louson 12:00-13:15 (York University, Canada and Michigan State University) Forum for the History of Sci- • “Fly Me to the Moon: Science ence in Asia Television and the Popularization Jefferson B, Fourth Floor of Spaceflight,” Ingrid Ockert 1 (Haas Postdoctoral Fellow, Science History Institute) Historicizing Psychograph- • “Science, Illustrated: The ics in the Wake of Cambridge Analytica Circulation and Translation of Images in China’s Popular Leschi, Third Floor Science Pictorial, ca. 1930,” Noa Moderator: Joanna Ra- Nahmias (York University) din (Yale University) • “Representing Science Organizers: Kira Lussier (Uni- and Space with the Digital versity of Toronto) and Luke Humanities,” Molly E. Nebiolo Stark (Dartmouth College) (Northeastern University) • Kira Lussier (Uni- • “Science, Islam, and Colonial versity of Toronto) India: Exploring the Complexity • Luke Stark (Dartmouth Thesis in the Field of Science College/Microsoft Research) and Religion,” Sarah Qidwai (University of Toronto, Institute • Daniel Guadagnolo (University for the History & Philosophy of Wisconsin-Madison) of Science & Technology)

29 Friday, November 2, 12:00-13:15 • Jacy Young (Quest Roundtable: Finding Room for University Canada) Appreciation in a More Liber- atory History of Science • Patrick Sweeney (The Graduate Center, City Ravenna A, Third Floor University of New York) Moderator & Organizer: Audra 1 Wolfe (Freelance Writer) • Deirdre Cooper Owens Physical Sciences forum (Queens College) Ballard, Third Floor • Chanda Prescod-Weinstein Sponsored by the Physi- (University of Washington) cal Sciences Forum • Leila McNeill (Freelance Writer) • Distinguished Lecture: “‘Science Now’ and Its Impli- • Daniel Chard cations for the History of the 1 Physical Sciences,” Mott T. Greene Roundtable: History, Philos- (University of Washington) ophy, and the Life Sciences: 1 The Importance of Bridging Disciplines Roundtable: Ethics in the Human Sciences of the Global Boren, Fourth Floor South Moderator: Susan Fitzpatrick Medina, Third Floor (James S. McDonnell Foundation) Moderator: Ayah Nuriddin Organizers: Kate MacCord (Johns Hopkins University) (Marine Biological Laboratory) and Kathryn Maxson Jones Organizer: Julia E Rodriguez (University of Princeton) (University of New Hampshire) • Kate MacCord (Marine • Julia E Rodriguez (Univer- Biological Laboratory) sity of New Hampshire) • Kathryn Maxson Jones • Maile Arvin (Uni- (Princeton University) versity of Utah) • Lucie Laplane (Gustave Roussy) • Ben Silverstein (Australian National University) • Andrew Inkpen (Dal- housie University) • Hans Pols (Univer- sity of Sydney) 1 • Rosanna Dent (New Jersey Institute of Technology) 1

30 Friday, November 2, 12:00-13:15 Roundtable on Publishing in Roundtable: The Chronology the History and Philosophy of Early Science of Biology Aspen, Second Floor Ravenna B, Third Floor Moderators & Organizers: Moderator: Michael Dietrich Anne-Laurence Caudano (Uni- (University of Pittsburgh) versity of Winnipeg) & Hannah Organizer: Rachel Ankeny Marcus (Harvard University) (University of Adelaide) • Ahmed Ragab (Har- • Rachel Ankeny (Uni- vard University) versity of Adelaide) • M. Willis Monroe (Uni- • Marsha Richmond versity of British Columbia) (Wayne State University) • Jean De Groot (Catholic • Roberta Millstein (Uni- University of America) versity of California Davis) • Shigehisa Kuriyama • Michael Weisberg (Uni- (Harvard University) versity of Pennsylvania) • Lauren Kassell (Uni- 1 versity of Cambridge) 1 Roundtable: Storytelling With Collections, Part I — Roundtable: When Stories are Experiences in Libraries and Science Museums Ravenna C, Third Floor Columbia, Fourth Floor Moderator: Mary Morgan (Lon- Moderator & Organizer: Pedro don School of Economics) Raposo (Adler Planetarium) Organizers: Dominic Berry (Lon- • Cynde Moya (Living don School of Economics and Computers: Museum + Labs) Political Science) and Kim Hajek • Marvin Bolt (Corning (London School of Economics) Museum of Glass) • Dominic Berry (London School • Daniel Lewis (The of Economics and Political Science) Huntington Library) • Kim Hajek (London School of • Voula Saridakis (Museum Economics and Political Science) of Science and Industry) • Ian Hesketh (The Uni- • Lilla Vekerdy (Smith- versity of Queensland) sonian Libraries) • Miriam Solomon 1 (Temple University)

31 Friday, November 2, 13:00-14:00 • Anna Svensson (KTH Royal • “Self-Fashioning: Clothing Institute of Technology) Technology, Ethnoscience, 1 and the Arctic Expertise of Vilhjálmur Stefánsson,” Sarah Women’s mentorship event Pickman (Yale University) Kirkland, Third Floor 1 Co-sponsored by the Gradu- Early Modern Natural Philos- ate and Early Career Caucus ophy I and Women’s Caucus Columbia, Fourth Floor 1 Moderator: Meropi Morfouli 13:00-14:00 (CNRS, Observatory of Paris, SYRTE Laboratory, France) Early Science Forum Business Meeting • “‘To the Malcontent’ as Key to Bruno’s Italian Eagle Boardroom Dialogues,” Edward Gosselin 1 (California State University) 13:30-15:30 • “Decoding the Secrets of Nature: Robert Boyle and Cryo-histories: Telling Cryptographic Metaphors in “Other” Stories of Science in Seventeenth Century Science,” Frozen Lands Dana Matthiessen (University Medina, Third Floor of Pittsburgh, History & Moderator: Michael Robinson Philosophy of Science Dept.) (University of Hartford) • “Misconduct in the Scientific Organizer: Dani Inkpen Revolution? The Case of William (Harvard University) Gilbert,” Scott Montgomery (University of Washington) • “Heroism on Ice, 25 years,” Dani Inkpen (Harvard University) • “What is a Diagram? A Renaissance Tale,” Christoph • “Principles of the Ice Age: Lüthy (Radboud University) Calculating Cosmological Influence,” Alexis Rider (Uni- 1 versity of Pennsylvania) Empire and Science • “‘A Totally Unqualified Jefferson B, Fourth Floor Woman’: Gender and the Policing Moderator: John Krige of Science in the IGY Expedition (Georgia Tech) to South Georgia,” Daniella McCahey (University of Idaho)

32 Friday, November 2, 13:30-15:30 • “Between East and West: and Development Work: Kodak Technology Transfer, Industrial as a Case Study,” Joris Mercelis Production, and Cold War (The Johns Hopkins University, Diplomacy in Socialist China, Department of History of 1945-1980,” Zhaojin Zeng Science and Technology) (University of Pittsburgh) • “‘Temperature, Humidity, • “Imperial Wires: Afghanistan’s and Movement:’ The Crisis of Resistance to the Telegraph,” Ventilation in Early 20th Century Elham Bakhtary (George American Medicine,” Caitjan Washington University) Gainty (King’s College, London) • “Science and the Native 1 Tongue: Agricultural Scientists Eugenics and Race in the Laboratory and Beyond in Colonial Bengal,” Pankoj Ballard, Third Floor Sarkar (Tata Institute of Social Moderator: Judith Johns Schloe- Sciences, Mumbai, India) gel (Independent Scholar) • “The Triple Structure • “John MacEachran and of : The Madras the Eugenics Board in Alberta Model of G. N. Ramchandran,” (1929-1965),” Hank Stam Deepanwita Dasgupta (Uni- (University of Calgary) versity of Texas at El Paso) • “‘In Truth and Service,’ Black 1 Academia’s Use of Eugenic Engineering Science in HBCU Classrooms and Culture, 1910-1940,” Ravenna B, Third Floor Bridgette Robinson (Prince Moderator: Robin Scheffler (Mas- George’s Community College ) sachusetts Institute of Technology) • “Games and Genes: Cytogenet- • “Tuning the Blood Circuit: ics Meets Human Diversity, Mexi- Gibbon’s Experimental Heart- co 1968,” Ana Barahona (National Lung Machines between Autonomous University of Mexico) Control and Communication, • “W. E. B. Du Bois’s Evo- 1930–1953,” Benjamin Prinz lutionary Sociology,” Trevor (Bauhaus-Universität Weimar) Pearce (UNC Charlotte) • “Designing with Purpose: 1 Human Factors Engineering at NASA,” Layne Karafantis (NASA) Roundtable: Imagined Futures in Pedagogy • “Industrial and State Secrecy in Twentieth-Century Research Kirkland, Third Floor

33 Friday, November 2, 13:30-15:30 Moderator & Organizer: Isaac Crisis, 1950-1983,” Stephen Record (Michigan State University) Casper (Clarkson University) • Isaac Record (Michigan 1 State University) Reproductive Health in the • Vivien Hamilton (Har- 19th and 20th Centuries vey Mudd College) Ravenna A, Third Floor • Georgina Montgomery Moderator: Evelynn Ham- (Michigan State University) monds (Harvard University) • Delia Gavrus (Uni- Organizer: Miriam Rich versity of Winnipeg) (Harvard University) 1 • “‘Three Million Defective Medicine, Gender, and Empire Children’: Saving America with Ravenna C, Third Floor Prenatal Health Care, 1900- 1930,” Shannon Withycombe Moderator: Louise Palmer (University of New Mexico) (Fairfield University) • “‘So Degraded in the Scale • “Ports and Pestilence: Medical of Being’: Medical Concepts Surveillance and Sanitary Imperi- of Monstrosity and Defective alism in Late Nineteenth-century Reproduction in the Nine- North Africa,” Edna Bonhomme teenth-Century U.S.,” Miriam (Max-Planck-Institut für Wis- Rich (Harvard University) senschaftsgeschichte) • “Keeping Fit: Black Repro- • “Claiming Care: Medical duction and Race Survival, Caregiving and Treaty Claims in 1890-1930,” Wangui Muigai the Western Great Lake,” Margaret (Brandeis University) Flood (University of Minnesota) • “Fall of a Metric: The • “Civilizing Medicine: Race, Shifting Utility of the Global Gender, Sexuality, and Health Infant Mortality Rate,” Emily in Theory and Practice on the Harrison (Harvard University) Reservation,” Courtney Thompson 1 (Mississippi State University) • “Concussions & Agnotology: Rethinking the Historiogra- How Postwar Violent Fantasies, phy of Biology Suburban Lifestyles, and Racial Leschi, Third Floor and Gender Norms Constructed a Moderator: Abraham Gibson Culture of Ignorance and Thereby (Arizona State University) Made an Invisible Public Health

34 Friday, November 2, 13:30-15:30 • “How the Modern Synthesis Practice in Nineteenth-Century Came to Ecology,” Philippe Prussia,” Markus Krajewski Huneman (IHPST CNRS Paris) (University of Basel) • “Getting Personal in the • Commentator: Julia Kursell Pre-Synthesis Period: R. A. (University of Amsterdam) Fisher, Selection, and the New 1 Genetics, 1910-30,” Alexander Aylward (University of Leeds) Sensing • “The Neutralist-Selectionist Boren, Fourth Floor Divide across Biology and Moderator: Anna Maerker Beyond,” William Bausman (King’s College, London) (University of Geneva) Organizers: Anna Echter- • “The Historical Evolution of hölter (University of Vienna) Allostery: From a Population-Based and Cesare Pastorino (Tech- Account to a Single-Molecule Ac- nische Universität Berlin) count and Back Again,” Jacob Neal • “‘Fixing, Seeing: Circulating (University of Pittsburgh, History Canada Balsam in Victorian & Philosophy of Science Dept.) Microscopy,’” Meegan Kennedy 1 (Florida State University) Reweighing Antiquity: Mate- • “Frivolous Science? Expertise rial Practices of Precision and Knowledge-making in the between Science and Human- Twentieth-century Perfume ities Industry,” Galina Shyndriayeva Chelan, First Floor (University of Tokyo) Moderator: Julia Kursell (Uni- • “Rethinking the Medical versity of Amsterdam) Origins of Aesthetics: Involuntary • “Measuring the Measures Motion, Regimen, and the of the Ancients: Metrology, Experience of Beauty, 1700- Philology and Experimentation 1750,” Alexander Wragge-Morley in Georg Agricola and Johannes (University College London) Kepler,” Cesare Pastorino • “Reductionism and Holism in (Technische Universität Berlin) Early Twentieth Century Neu- • “Calibrating Political Econ- rophysiology: A Comparison of omies: August Boeckh and the Sherrington’s and Goldstein’s Views Treasury,” Anna Echterhölter on Integration and the Mind-Body (University of Vienna) Relation,” Mahi Hardalupas (University of Pittsburgh) • “Weighing Water and Wine: Comparing as a Media 1 35 Friday, November 2, 15:30-15:45 15:30-15:45 • “Comets and Courts in Early Modern Germany,” Patrick Boner Coffee break (University of Oklahoma) Metropolitan A, Metropolitan A/B • “Kepler’s Rejection of Pre-Function Area, et al. Circularity, as shown on the 1 Crucial Folium P356 of the Mars Notebook,” William Donahue 15:45-17:45 (St. John’s College, Santa Fe) Acoustics • “Transmutations of Light: Chelan, First Floor Phosphors in the Early Eigh- teenth Century,” Fokko Jan Moderator: Scott Walter Dijksterhuis (University of (University of Nantes) Twente/Vrije Universiteit) • “Harmonious Philosophy: 1 The Place of Sound in British Science, 1830-1840,” Edward Framing Eugenics in the 21st Gillin (University of Cambridge) Century: Engaging Current Debates with the History of • “Between Dissonance and Science Nuisance: The Understandings Ballard, Third Floor of Noise before the Mechanical Reproduction of Sound,” Chen- Moderator: Lloyd Ackert Pang Yeang (University of Toronto) (Drexel University) • “Physiology, Psychology, and Organizers: Lloyd Ackert (Drexel Music Pedagogy: Regimes of University) and Samantha Muka Musicality in Germany at the Turn (Stevens Institue of Technology) of the Twentieth Century,” Joshua • Sam Muka (Stevens Navon (Columbia University) Institute of Technology) 1 • Ayah Nuriddin (Johns Astronomy and Physics in Hopkins University) Early Modern World • Nathaniel Comfort (Johns Jefferson B, Fourth Floor Hopkins University) Moderator: Roland Boucher • Christine Manganaro (Mary- land Institute College of Art ) • “The Controversy over the Comets: Reflections for the • Jenna Tonn (Boston College) 400th Anniversary,” Kraig Bartel 1 (University of Oklahoma) Genetics Ravenna C, Third Floor

36 Friday, November 2, 15:45-17:45 Moderator: Nathaniel Comfort Measures,” Leah McClimans (Johns Hopkins University) (University of South Carolina) • “The Castle-Pearl Controversy, • “Clean Data on the Cholera 1915-1917: Practical Breeding Plague: Jaume Ferrán’s Sub- and Experimental Genetics missions to the Prix Bréant,” in the United States,” Sunguk David Teira (UNED) Jung (University of Toronto) 1 • “Biological Specificity, Human and Psychological Genetic Causation, and Sciences Mathematical Modeling in the History of Modern Biology,” Kirkland, Third Floor Ute Deichmann (Ben-Gurion Moderator: Kim Hajek (Lon- University of the Negev) don School of Economics • “Bateson on Characters, and Political Science) Genes, and Species as Theoretical • “A Tale of Two Neurosci- Elements,” Aleta Quinn (University ences: Francis Schmitt, Herbert of Idaho; Smithsonian Institution) Jasper, and the Twin Births of • “Myth-Historical CRISPR Organized Neuroscience,” Yvan Edits: Emerging Histories Prkachin (Harvard University) and Contested Futures,” Jose • “Wounded in Mind: Marjorie Perillan (Vassar College) Van de Water of the Science Service and her Campaign for Health and Computing Humane Treatment of Bat- Ravenna A, Third Floor tle-Weary World War II Soldiers,” Moderator: Mike Osborne Susan Swanberg (University of (Oregon State University) Arizona School of Journalism) • “Data Rituals: Measuring and • “Beyond Psychogenic Recording Height and Weight in Versus Biogenic: Rereading the Baby Books, 1872-1940,” Fenneke History of Psychiatry,” Justin Sysling (Utrecht University) Garson (Hunter College) • “MYCIN Explains Itself: Com- • “The Année Sociologique: puting, Authority, and Trust in Writing Journal Reviews and American Medicine,” Andrew Lea Training Sociologists in Fin- (University of Oxford, Max Planck de-siècle France,” Daniela S Institute for the History of Science) Barberis (Shimer Great Books School, North Central College) • “Between Standardization and Medical Ethics: The History of Health-related Quality of Life

37 Friday, November 2, 15:45-17:45 Physics in the Twentieth • “Mutant Sexuality: The Century Private Life of a Plant (and Those Boren, Fourth Floor who Studied It),” Luis Campos (University of New Mexico) Moderator: David Cahan (Uni- versity of Nebraska-Lincoln) • “‘Playing the White Man’s Game’: Francis La Flesche, Indig- • “Erwin Schrödinger as a enous Ethnology, and Queer Fail- Modernist,” Lisa Barge (University ure,” Eli Nelson (Williams College) of Toronto Mississauga) • “Sex Beyond Humans: • “A Tale of Resilience: the Finding a Queer Ethology in Periodic System after Radio- Naomi Mitchison’s ‘Memoirs activity and the Discovery of of a Spacewoman,’” Caitlin the Neutron,” Annette Lykknes McDonough (Syracuse University) (NTNU-Norwegian University of Science and Technology) 1 • “‘Thank You for Transformers’: Reproduction The Post-WWII American-Soviet Columbia, Fourth Floor Scientific Exchange Program,” Anna Amramina (University of Moderator: Gisela Mateos Minnesota) and Brigitte Van • “Personal Practices: Con- Tiggelen (Science History Institute) traceptive Technologies and • “Scientific Peace Entrepreneur- Scientific Vision,” Anna Reser ship: The Pugwash Organization (University of Oklahoma) and Resistance to Biological Weap- • “Delivering Knowledge: ons Research, 1957-1971,” William Translations for Jewish Midwives in Vogel (University of Minnesota) Eighteenth-Century Amsterdam,” 1 Jordan Katz (Columbia University) • “Ogino-Knaus/Rhythm Queer Science Method and the Birth Control Leschi, Third Floor Movement in Early Twentieth-cen- Moderator: Luis Campos tury America,” Miwa Yokoyama (University of New Mexico) (Ochanomizu University) Organizer: Beans Veloc- • “Moral Agency of Infants ci (Yale University) in Child-Rearing Manuals and Infant Pedagogy of Pre-Darwinian • “‘Of Course, It Was Really Nineteenth-century America,” a Male’: Unknowing Sexual Elisabeth Yang (Rutgers University) Multiplicity in Nineteenth-cen- tury Animal Studies,” Beans 1 Velocci (Yale University)

38 Friday, November 2, 19:00-20:00 Scientific and Religious Com- a Botanic Garden in New munities in Victorian Britain, South Wales, c. 1820,” J’Nese and After Williams (Stanford University) Medina, Third Floor • “A Visit to Biotopia: Genre, Ge- Moderator: Donald Opitz netics, and Gardening in the Early (DePaul University) Twentieth Century,” Jim Endersby (University of Sussex, UK) • “Laws of Nature and Divine Action in the Era of Victorian • “Post-Colonial (bio)Prospects: Scientific Naturalism: The Source Founding a Seed Bank for of the Conflict Thesis,” Clinton Kew Gardens,” Xan Chacko Ohlers (University of Hong Kong) (University of California, Davis) • “Strange Tales from the Unseen 1 World: A Confluence of Systems 18:00-18:45 of Understanding in Stewart & Tait’s the Unseen Universe,” Mason HSS Prize Ceremony Tattersall (Oregon State University) Aspen, Second Floor • “Darwin’s Drawings: The Vic- Please come and support the best torian Geological Field Guide and scholarship in the history of science, Imperial Resource Management,” including the awarding of two new Anne Ricculli (Drew University) prizes, the Rainger and Pauly Prize. • “Gentlemanly Journals amidst The highlight of the ceremony will the Growth of Science: How the be the presentation of the Sarton Royal Society’s Publishing Division Medal to Sally Gregory Kohlstedt. Coped, c.1900-1965,” Aileen 1 Fyfe (University of St Andrews) 19:00-20:00 1 Speculative Biology: Uses for HSS Prize Reception and of the World Metropolitan A/B Pre-Function Area, Third Floor Ravenna B, Third Floor Moderator: Rachel Mason Celebrate the HSS prize winners Dentinger (University of Utah) with hors d’oeuvres and drinks. • “The Reception of a New World 1 Drug: 100 Years of Sassafras in English Print,” Katrina Maydom (University of Cambridge) • “Plant Exchanges and Imperial Reform: Founding

39 Saturday, November 3, 7:45-8:45 20:00-22:00 Meet and mingle with your fellow graduate students & early Graduate and Early Career careerists. Stay safe and leave Caucus Mixer with a group from the lobby. Fado Irish Pub, 801 1st Ave, Seattle, 1 WA 98104 Saturday, November 3 7:45-8:45 Environmental Change,” Emilie Raymer (Johns Earth and Environment Fo- Hopkins University) rum Annual Gathering • “Man and Nature,” James Leschi, Third Floor Bergman (Temple University) 1 • “‘Our Destiny and Our Forum for the History of Duty’: Evolution’s Role in Man’s Health, Medicine and the Life Role in Changing the Face of Sciences the Earth,” Jonathan Phillips (Johns Hopkins University) Columbia, Fourth Floor • “‘Negative Miracles’ – Lewis 1 Mumford and Man’s Role 10:00-10:15 in Changing the Face of the Earth,” Zachary Loeb coffee break (University of Pennsylvania) Metropolitan A, Metropolitan A/B • “A Science for ‘Man with Pre-Function Area, et al. a Capital-M’: Man’s Role and 1 Anthropology in the Atomic Age,” 9:00-11:45 Simon Torracinta (Yale University) 1 “Man’s Role in Changing the Face of the Earth” Bodies of Formalization Chelan, First Floor Medina, Third Floor Moderator: Adrianna Liink Moderator: Jacqueline Wernimont Organizer: Emilie Raymer Organizer: Stephanie Dick (Johns Hopkins University) (University of Pennsylvania) • “‘The Agency of Man on • “Policing, Forensics, and the So- the Earth’: Cross-Disciplinary cial History of Photography: Ber- Studies about Anthropogenic tillon’s Crime-Scene Photographs and Their Museum Display,”

40 Saturday, November 3, 9:00-11:45 Kelly Gates (Communications and • “Alum Analysis in Europe, Science Studies, UC San Diego) 1750-1810,” John Christie • “Lost in Translation: Symbolic (University of Oxford) Formalisms and Mathematical • “From the Fields of India to Embodiment in the History the Factories of England: Helenus of Mathematics,” Clare Kim Scott, James Keir, and the Case (HASTS, Massachusetts of the Indian Alkali,” Kristen Institute of Technology) Schranz (University of Toronto) • “‘The Standard Head’: • “The Role of Chemical Analysis Identification, Formalization, and within the Indirect Amalgama- Standardization in an Early Facial tion Process in the Habsburg Recognition Program,” Stephanie Monarchy, 1784-1848,” Peter Dick (University of Pennsylvania) Konečný (Max-Planck-Institute • “Noise in the System: Record- for the History of Science) ing and Erasure in Mid-Century • Commentator: Evan He- American Dance,” Whitney pler-Smith (Boston College) Laemmli (Columbia University) 1 • Commentator: Jac- Collecting, Printing and queline Wernimont Publishing Natural History in 1 the long Eighteenth Century Chemists in the Field and the Aspen, Second Floor Factory: Making and Knowing Moderator: Gordon McOuat Outside the Laboratory, 1750- (University of King’s College) 1850 Organizer: Edwin Rose (Uni- Columbia, Fourth Floor versity of Cambridge) Moderator: Evan Hepler-Smith • “Collecting the Archipelago: (Boston College) Georg Everhard Rumphius Organizer: Kristen Schranz (1627-1702) and his Inter-Island (University of Toronto) Information Networks,” Genie • “Farms as Laboratories: Yoo (Princeton University) Chemists in Agriculture and the • “Swimming on the Page: Beginning of Field-Laboratories, Marcus Élieser Bloch and His 1750-1830,” Christopher Natural History of Fishes,” Didi Halm (Universität Regensburg, van Trijp (Leiden University) Wissenschaftsgeschichte • “Printing, Publishing and Cir- / History of Science) culating Books across the Botanical

41 Saturday, November 3, 9:00-11:45 World of Joseph Banks,” Edwin 1861-1934,” Jethro Hernandez Rose (University of Cambridge) Berrones (Southwestern University) • “Thomas Molyneux, Hans • “Birth and Death in Sloane and the Debate over the Maternity Ward of the ‘Pretended Giants’: Collecting and Guadalajara’s Hospital Civil, Publishing at the Royal Society, 1870-1940,” Laura Shelton 1694-1728,” Oscar Kent-Egan (Franklin and Marshall College) (Cambridge University) • “As If They Were Ministers • “General Marsili’s Mediterra- of God: Epidemic Control in nean: Reframing Ocean Science Nineteenth-Century Mexico,” in Early Modern Europe,” Tamara Farren Yero (Duke University) Caulkins (Oregon State University) 1 1 Disability Contending Positions: Sci- Ravenna C, Third Floor ence, Medicine, and Religion in 19th- and 20th-century Moderator: Elena Fratto Mexico (Princeton University) Ravenna B, Third Floor • “German Approaches to Moderator & Organizer: Disability in 20th-Century Jethro Hernandez Berrones America,” Katherine Sorrels (Southwestern University) (University of Cincinnati) • “Unwanted Pregnancies • “Imagined Community, Parent and State Secularization in Memoirs, and the Construction Mid-Nineteenth Century of Autism and Down Syndrome,” Mexico,” Elizabeth O’Brien Emer Lucey (University of (University of Texas at Austin) Wisconsin-Madison) • “‘How Do I Know … Prayers • “Looking through a Marginal Don’t Do More Good Than … Perspective: Sensory Integration, Pills:’ Don Pedrito Jaramillo, Autism, and the Evolvement Curanderismo, and the Rise of Occupational Therapy,” of Professional Medicine in Wen-Ching Sung (University the Texas-Mexico Borderlands of Toronto, Institute for the over the Turn-of-the-Century,” History & Philosophy of Science Jennifer Seman (Metropolitan & Technology) and Sunguk State University of Denver) Jung (University of Toronto) • “Medicine in Revolution: Map- • “Critiquing the ‘Biomedical ping Homeopathy in the Land- Model’: A Vehicle for Alternative scape of Mexican Medical Science,

42 Saturday, November 3, 9:00-11:45 Narratives of Disability,” Andrew Glands and Hormones: Hogan (Creighton University) 20th-century Hopes and Fears across the Northern • “From Blindness to Super Rec- Hemisphere ognition: Prosopagnosia and the Politics of Seeing Others,” Sharrona Kirkland, Third Floor Pearl (University of Pennsylvania) Moderator: Heiko Stoff (Medical 1 School Hannover / Germany) Organizer: Tabea Cornel (Uni- Economics as a Life Science versity of Pennsylvania) Leschi, Third Floor • “The Failure of a Japanese Moderator: Dana Simmons (Uni- Mad-Scientist? Sakaki Yasusaburō versity of California, Riverside) and the Steinach Rejuvenation Organizer: Jonny Bun- Operation in the 1920s,” Yize ning (Yale University) Hu (Johns Hopkins University) • “Human Capitalists: Valuing • “Sex as a Malleable Essence Lives in the Slave South,” Caitlin of the Body: Chinese Sexology, Rosenthal (UC Berkeley) 1920–1940s,” Howard Chiang (University of California, Davis) • “Reproducing Human Capital: The New Microeconomics of • “Estrogens, Androgens, and the Fertility and the Biopolitics Development of the Concept of of Birth in the 1970s,” Jonny Hormone-Dependent Cancers,” Bunning (Yale University) Gina Surita (Princeton University) • “Of Patient Pigeons and • “Hormonal Fillings for Impulsive Humans: Choice over Epistemic Gaps: Testosterone Time in Psychology and Economics as a Bridge between Incoherent since 1960,” Will Deringer (Mas- Concepts of ‘the Brain,’” Tabea sachusetts Institute of Technology) Cornel (University of Pennsylvania) • “Crossing Boundaries, Sharing • Commentator: Heiko Spaces: 20th-Century Biologists Stoff (Medical School and Economists Model Growth,” Hannover / Germany) Jason Oakes (UC Davis) 1 • “The Science of Value: Organisms without Borders: Economic Expertise and the Transnational Travel Sto- Pricing of Human Life in ries of Practices, Data, and Federal Regulatory Agencies,” Standards Katherine Hood (UC Berkeley) Ravenna A, Third Floor 1

43 Saturday, November 3, 9:00-11:45 Moderator: Scott Gilbert Flowers and Fruits,” Marilena (Swarthmore College) Panarelli (Università del Salento) Organizer: Rachel Ankeny • “Thinking, Dwelling, (University of Adelaide) Planting. Dried Gardens • “The Function and Value of and Natural Philosophy in Animal Ethics Committees in 16th-Century Europe,” Marimer Australia: Historical Perspectives Carrión (Emory University) and Current Practices,” Karina • “Plants as Models in Early Mod- Burns (University of Adelaide) ern Medicine: The Case of Riolan • “The Organismal Landscape in le fils, Harvey, and Malpighi,” Developmental Biology,” Nathan Fabrizio Baldassarri (University of Crowe (University of North Bucharest/HAB, Wolfenbuettel) Carolina Wilmington) and Michael • “Darwin’s shrub: The sprouting Dietrich (University of Pittsburgh) of the tree of life,” Norbert • “Phenomic Data between Local Peeters (Leyden University) Fields and Global Databases: • “The Non-Humboldtian Developing Labels for Field Data Revolution in Botany,” Ga- Collection, 1990-2016,” Sabina briel Finkelstein (University Leonelli (University of Exeter) of Colorado Denver) • “Ferrets Here and There: 1 Global Development of Rethinking the Nature of Experimental Practices for Technology and Medicine: Influenza Modelling,” Rachel Global Spaces of Science in Ankeny (University of Adelaide) China and the World • Commentator: Scott Gilbert Boren, Fourth Floor (Swarthmore College) Moderator: Dagmar Schäfer 1 Organizer: James Lin (Uni- Plants as Case Study in the versity of Washington) History of Philosophy, Sci- • “Embodying Productivity: ences, and Medicine Chinese Sericulture in Colonial Jefferson B, Fourth Floor Xinjiang, 1878-1889,” Peter Moderator: Lavelle (Temple University) Organizer: Fabrizio Baldassar- • “Scions and Rootstocks: The ri (HAB, Wolfenbuettel) Chinese Honey Nectar Peach and the Grafting of Science, • “The Description of Plant 1920s-1965,” Jongsik Christian ‘Metabolism’ in Albert the Great’s Yi (Harvard University) De vegetabilibus: The Case of

44 Saturday, November 3, 12:00-13:15 • “Globalizing the Green Revo- Moderator: Gabriela Soto lution: Taiwanese Vegetables and Laveaga (Harvard University) International Agricultural Science Organizer: Sebastián Gil-Riaño Institutes, 1971-1981,” James (University of Pennsylvania) Lin (University of Washington) • Eve Buckley (Univer- • “Between Nativism and sity of Delaware) Cosmopolitanism: The History of Wartime Chinese Communist Sci- • Micah Oelze (Florida ence and Medicine, 1937-1945,” International University) Wayne Soon (Vassar College) • Karin Rosemblatt (University • Commentator: Dagmar Schäfer of Maryland, College Park) 1 • Sarah Walsh (Washington State University, Pullman) 12:00-13:15 • Adam Warren (Univer- Roundtable: “Like Somebody sity of Washington) Who Has Seen Thousands of 1 Trees but Has Never Seen a Forest”: The Critical Role of Roundtable: Histories of History and Philosophy of Knowledge? Reassessing the Science in Science Education Relationship between History of Science and Intellectual Ravenna C, Third Floor History Moderator: Charles Pence (Uni- Ravenna B, Third Floor versité catholique de Louvain) Moderator: Suman Seth Organizer: Gregory Macklem (Cornell University) (University of Notre Dame) Organizer: Daniela Helbig • Gregory Macklem (Uni- (University of Sydney) versity of Notre Dame) • Daniela Helbig (Uni- • Michael Clough (Texas A&M) versity of Sydney) • Zoubeida Dagher (Uni- • Nasser Zakariya (University versity of Delaware) of California Berkeley) • Erik Peterson (Uni- • Isabel Gabel (University versity of Alabama) of Pennsylvania) 1 • Nima Bassiri (Uni- Roundtable: Globalizing the versity of Chicago) Human Sciences in Latin Amer- ica: Tensions and Possibilities Leschi, Third Floor

45 Saturday, November 3, 12:00-13:15 • Stefanos Geroulanos Technologies of Taste (New York University) Columbia, Fourth Floor 1 Moderators & Organizers: Hannah Roundtable: Rethinking Sci- LeBlanc (Stanford University) ence and Nature: A Roundta- and Crystal Lee (Massachusetts ble Institute of Technology) Medina, Third Floor • Ann-Sophie Barwich (Indiana Moderator & Organizer: Car- University Bloomington) olyn Merchant (University • Deborah Fitzgerald (Massa- of California Berkeley) chusetts Institute of Technology) • Francesca Rochberg (Uni- • Victoria Lee (Ohio University) versity of California Berkeley) • Christy Spackman • Theodore Grudin (Santa (Harvey Mudd College) Clara University) 1 • Sharon Fuller (Sonoma Writing the History of Sci- State University) ence • Elizabeth Allison (California Ravenna A, Third Floor Institute of Integral Studies) Moderator & Organizer: Roger Lau- 1 nius (Launius Historical Services) Storytelling With Collec- • Jim Fleming (Colby College) tions, Part II — Beyond Insti- tutional Walls • Lijing Jiang (Haas Postdoctoral Fellow, Science History Institute) Kirkland, Third Floor • David DeVorkin (Smithsonian) Moderator & Organizer: Benjamin Gross (Linda Hall Library) • Molly Backes (Iowa State University) • Cassandra Hatton (So- theby’s Auction House) • Matthew Hersch (Harvard University) • Peggy Kidwell (National Museum of American History) 1 • Teasel Muir-Harmony (Na- Forum for history of human tional Air and Space Museum) science Distinguished Lecture • Elisabeth Berry Drago Ballard, Third Floor (Science History Institute) Sponsored by the Forum for His- 1 tory of Human Science (FHHS)

46 Saturday, November 3, 13:30-15:45 • “Histories of Science in and for • Commentator: Jennifer Practice: Turning Points in Archae- Light (Massachusetts In- ology,” Alison Wylie (Philosophy of stitute of Technology) the Social and Historical Sciences 1 at University of British Columbia) Alternatives to Fact 1 Kirkland, Third Floor 13:30-15:45 Moderator: Cathy Gere A Hard Core: Architects and Organizer: Henry Cowles Science in the Research Uni- (University of Michigan) versity • “Science (Studies) Fiction: Leschi, Third Floor Michael Crichton and the Moderator: Jennifer Light (Massa- Postwar History of Reality,” chusetts Institute of Technology) Joanna Radin (Yale University) Organizers: Theodora Vardouli (Mc- • “Creatures of Habit: Anecdotes Gill University) and Daniel Cardoso and Animal Reason,” Henry Llach (Carnegie Mellon University) Cowles (University of Michigan) • “Mathematization of • “Scientific Facts Embedded Megastructure: Yona Friedman’s in Christian Teachings,” Myrna North American Expeditions, Perez Sheldon (Ohio University) 1964-1974,” Theodora Var- • “Technology and the Occult douli (McGill University) from Oppenheimer to ARPANET,” • “Architectural Scientists in the Benjamin Breen (UC-Santa Cruz) Steel City: Computing Urban • Commentator: Cathy Gere Form at Carnegie Mellon’s Institute for Physical Planning (1969- 1 1974),” Daniel Cardoso Llach Animals in the Environment (Carnegie Mellon University) Ravenna A, Third Floor • “The Science of Ideology Cri- tique: Fredric Jameson and Archi- Moderator: Kathryn Davis tecture Theory in America,” Mat- (San Jose State University) thew Allen (Harvard University) • “To Avoid Hitting a Rabbit: • “Territories of Finance: Martin Translating Theory into Practice Wagner, German Economics, and in Death Valley National Mon- Postwar US City Planning,” Anna ument, 1933-1941,” Jonathan Vallye (Connecticut College) Shafer (Auburn University) • “Turning Monkeys into Smokers and Smokers into

47 Saturday, November 3, 13:30-15:45 Monkeys: When Behavioral (Max Planck Institute for the Pharmacology Went Corporate,” History of Science, Berlin) Stephan Risi (Stanford University) • “Civilization and Diffusion: • “What’s in a Name? The From Comparative Law to Persistence of an Endangered International Copyright,” Hansun Desert Fish and the Science of Hsiung (Max Planck Institute Collecting and Classifying,” for the History of Science) Kevin Brown (University of • Commentator: Florence Hsia California Santa Barbara) (University of Wisconsin-Madison) • “Bringing the Bluegrass 1 West: Scientific Agriculture and the California Thoroughbred Embracing the Electronic Industry,” Brian Tyrrell (University Brain: Cold War Entangle- of California Santa Barbara) ments of Organisms, Minds, and Computers 1 Chelan, First Floor Asia and the Global Origins Moderator: Dana Simmons (Uni- of the Social Sciences, 1700- versity of California Riverside) 1900 Boren, Fourth Floor Organizers: Michael McGovern (Princeton University) and Youjung Moderator: Florence Hsia (Uni- Shin (Korea Advanced Institute versity of Wisconsin-Madison) of Science and Technology) Organizer: Mårten Söderblom • “‘Tortoise Because He Saarela (Max Planck Institute for Taught Us:’ Animality and the History of Science, Berlin) Humanity in Grey Walter’s • “The First Treatise of Indology Cybernetic Brains,” Katja and the Origins of Anthropology,” Guenther (Princeton University) Carolina Armenteros (Pontificia • “Amphibian a priori: Filters, Universidad Católica Madre y Mae- Fields, and the Contested Vision stra / Wolfson College, Cambridge) of Neuroscience,” Michael Mc- • “Philosophy, Orientalism, Govern (Princeton University) and the Invention of ‘Eastern • “Lively Artifacts: Heinz Wisdom,’” Alexander Statman von Foerster and the Machines (The Huntington Library) of his Biological Computer • “Joshua Marshman Reads the Laboratory,” Jan Müggenburg Kangxi zidian Rhyme Tables,” (Leuphana Universität Lüneburg) Mårten Söderblom Saarela • “From Big Theory to Big Data: The Formation of

48 Saturday, November 3, 13:30-15:45 Neuroscience as a Discipline in Negotiation and Development the U.S., 1960-1990,” Youjung in Latin America: Science, Shin (Korea Advanced Institute Medicine, and Technology in of Science and Technology) the Western Hemisphere • Commentator: Dana Simmons Jefferson B, Fourth Floor (University of California Riverside) Moderator: Andra Chastain 1 (Yale University) Organizer: Steve Server Knowing Nature: An Interspe- (University of Chicago) cies Enterprise Medina, Third Floor • “Que Nuestro Pueblo Viva como Gente: Mexican Citizens, Moderator: Susan Jones (Uni- Consumers, and Bodies under versity of Minnesota) Cardenismo,” Steve Server Organizer: Kathleen Sullivan Thom- (University of Chicago) as (Mississippi State University) • “Indigenous Nuclear Tech- • “Imperial Infestations: Science, nologies, Development, and State Power, and Insect Agency in Sovereignty: The Atomic Age in Napoleonic Italy,” Joseph Horan Argentina and Brazil,” Christopher (Colorado School of Mines) Dunlap (Naval Postgraduate School - Visiting Faculty) • “The Economy of South African Nature: The Value of • “Innovation on Standby: Politi- African Fauna to Health and cal Pitfalls, Economic Uncertainty, Wealth,” Jules Skotnes-Brown and Scientific Frustrations in Local (University of Cambridge) Computer Innovation at Rio de Janeiro’s National Computer Sci- • “Going Wild: Disease and ence Laboratory (LNCC),” Beatrice Wildlife in Mid-Twentieth Century Choi (Northwestern University) America,” Kathleen Sullivan Thom- as (Mississippi State University) • “Constructing Technologies and Imaginaries of Mass Migration: The • “Animal Factory: The Rise of Case of Western Mexico,” Mateo Concentrated Animal Feeding Carrillo (Stanford University) Operations, 1945-2000,” Abeer Saha (University of Virginia) • Commentator: Andra Chastain (Yale University) • Commentator: Fritz Davis (Purdue University) 1 1

49 Saturday, November 3, 13:30-15:45 rountable: black/brown/ Sponsored by the Forum for the queer: geographies and tem- History of Science in Asia poralities of the history of science Moderator: Warwick Ander- son (University of Sydney Aspen, Second Floor and Harvard University) Sponsored by the Women’s Caucus Organizer: Anthony Medra- Moderator: Ahmed Ragab no (Harvard University) Organizers: Ahmed Ragab • “Entomologist to the Farms: (Harvard University) and Leopoldo Uichanco and the Shireen Hamza (Harvard Uni- Growth of Philippine Rural Agri- versity, History of Science) culture,” Ruel Pagunsan (University • Ahmed Ragab (Har- of the Philippines, Diliman) vard University) • “The Visible Collectors: Regino • Carla Nappi (Univer- García and the Development of sity of Pittsburgh) Colonial Botanies in the Philip- pines,” Kathleen Cruz Gutierrez • Eli Nelson (Williams College) (University of California Berkeley) • Evelyn Hammonds • “A Table for Two?: Mo Meng (Harvard University) Yim and the Origins of Forensic • Ezelle Sanford III Medicine in Siam (Thailand),” (Princeton University) Trais Pearson (Boston College) • Gili Vidan (Harvard University) • “‘Ikan Bagai Makanan’: • Juanita Becerra (Har- Ishak bin Ahmad and the vard University) Feeding of Malay Nationalism, 1923-1941,” Anthony Medrano • Lan Li (Columbia University) (Harvard University) • Shireen Hamza (Har- • Commentator: Warwick vard University) Anderson (University of Sydney • Sophia Roosth (Har- and Harvard University) vard University) 1 1 Timing Knowledge Science Stories: The Life and Ravenna B, Third Floor Labor of Local Scientists in the Making of Modern South- Moderator & Organizer: An- east Asia na-Maria Meister (Max Planck Columbia, Fourth Floor Institute for the History of Science, Berlin; TU Munich)

50 Saturday, November 3, 16:00-17:00 • “Mapping the Future: • “We Have Never Been Different Temporalities in Eco- African,” Terence Keel (University nomic Forecasting,” Laetitia Lenel of California Santa Barbara) (Humboldt-University Berlin) • “Nuclear Model: Hans Bethe • “Philology on (and off) the and Cold War Memory,” Benjamin Clock: The case of the Thesaurus Wilson (Harvard University) Linguae Latinae,” Christian • Commentator: Norton Flow (Princeton University) Wise (University of Cal- • “Simulated Knowledge, ifornia Los Angeles) Simulated Time,” Janina Wellmann 1 (Leuphana Universität Lüneburg) 16:00-17:00 • “Culpability as a Psy- cho-Historical Problem: The Graduate and Early Career Temporality of Responsibility in Caucus Business Meeting 19th-Century Vienna,” Richard Chelan, First Floor Spiegel (Princeton University) 1 • Commentator: Anna-Maria Meister (Max Planck Institute 16:00-18:00 for the History of Science, Berlin; TU Munich) Anglo-American Science and Liberal Religion, 1840-1940 1 Boren, Fourth Floor Usable Pasts: Historical Memory in Modern Science Moderator: Matthew Stanley (New York University) Ravenna C, Third Floor Organizer: Edward Da- Moderator: Deborah Coen vis (Messiah College) (Yale University) • “Natural Law Theodicy Organizers: Ryan Dahn (Univer- and Liberal Christianity in the sity of Chicago) and Benjamin United States,” Kristin Johnson Wilson (Harvard University) (University of Puget Sound) • “The History of Science and the • “Popular Science Period- Many Worlds of Nikolai Vavilov,” icals and the Public Sphere Elena Aronova (University of after Darwin,” Bernard California Santa Barbara) Lightman (York University) • “Pascual Jordan, the Cold War, • “How Liberal Protestants and Remembrance of Nazi Pasts,” Bought White’s Conflict Thesis Ryan Dahn (University of Chicago) and Lost Their Faith,” Edward Davis (Messiah College)

51 Saturday, November 3, 16:00-18:00 • Commentator: Matthew • “‘Imperfect, Inequitable, and Stanley (New York University) Precarious’: Rationalizing the South 1 Asian Monsoon, 1886-1930,” Sar- ah Carson (Princeton University) Body Matters: Making Cat- • “Extreme Climate By Design (A acomb Saints, Prosthetic Hands, and Automata in Early History of the Climatic Room in Modern Europe Southern Africa 1963-70),” Megan Eardley (Princeton University) Aspen, Second Floor 1 Moderator: Matthew Jones (Columbia University) Matter of State: Alchemical Controversies in Early Mod- Organizer: Heidi Hausse ern Courts (Columbia University) Jefferson A, Fourth Floor • “Artisans and Artificial Hands: Reading Early Modern Sponsored by the Forum for Objects Inside and Out,” Heidi the History of the Chemi- Hausse (Auburn University) cal Sciences (FoHCS) • “Some Assembly Required: Moderator: Alisha Rankin Building Whole-Body Catacomb (Tufts University) Saints in Early Modern Bavaria,” Organizer: Jennifer Rampling Noria Litaker (University (Princeton University) of Nevada, Las Vegas) • “The King’s Business: Trans- • “Automata and Artifice,” Jessica acting Transmutation in Medieval Keating (Carleton College) and Tudor England,” Jennifer • Commentator: Matthew Rampling (Princeton University) Jones (Columbia University) • “Assaults on the Body of the 1 Sovereign: Poison, Alchemy, and Magic in Sixteenth-Century Climate Germany,” Tara Nummedal Leschi, Third Floor (Brown University) Moderator: Gabriel Henderson • “La Bastille alchimique: Suspi- (American Institute of Physics) cion and Optimism about Trans- mutation in Early Eighteenth-Cen- • “El Niño, Drought, and the tury France,” Lawrence Principe Transatlantic Slave Trade,” William (Johns Hopkins University) Turner IV (University of California Davis) and Terrence Nathan 1 (University of California Davis)

52 Saturday, November 3, 16:00-18:00 Measurement and Calcula- of India’s Geological Past,” Emma tion Kitchen (University of Chicago) Columbia, Fourth Floor • “The Biogeological and Carto- Moderator: John Wee (Uni- graphic Dimensions of Darwin’s versity of Chicago) Coral-Reef Theory,” Ali Mirza (Indiana University Bloomington) • “Towards a Bureaucratic His- tory of Natural History: Genesis • Commentator: Caitlin Donahue and Transit of the Cameralistic Wylie (University of Virginia) Static,” Marco Tamborini (Institut 1 für Philosophie, TU Darmstadt) Press and Publishing • “Theological Algebra: George Boole and the Practical Pedagogy Jefferson B, Fourth Floor of Mathematical Logic,” David Moderator: Kevin Chang Dunning (Princeton University) (Academia Sinica, Taiwan) • “Hermann von Helmholtz • “Ricardo Flores Magón, a on the Meaning of Quantity, in Re- Mexican Anarchist and Revolu- lation to Electromagnetic Measure- tionist: From Biology to Society in ment and Standardization,” Biying Periodical Press,” Ricardo Nogu- Ling (University of Chicago) era-Solano (National Autonomous 1 University of Mexico) and Juan Manuel Rodriguez-Caso (National Modeling in Clay: Ecology Autonomous University of Mexico) as the Adhesive between the Cracks of Geological Infer- • “Building a Catholic Science: ence Scientific Strategies and Uses on the Italian Clerical Press in the Age Medina, Third Floor of Positivism (1848-1914),” Carlo Moderator: Alistair Sponsel Bovolo (Independent Researcher) Organizers: Ali Mirza (Indiana Uni- • “Transnational Knowledge of versity, Bloomington) and Emma Scientific Conceptions of Race Kitchen (University of Chicago) and their Impact on Pictorial • “No Analog Situation: Paleo- Representations of Homo sapiens Ecology When the Present Doesn’t in Mexico,” Erica Torrens Look like the Past,” Melissa Char- (National University of Mexico) enko (Michigan State University) 1 • “Casting Knucklebones Radiation, Indigenous Peo- to Retrodict the Past: Nine- ples, and Expertise in the Far teenth-Century Reconstructions North Kirkland, Third Floor

53 Saturday, November 3, 16:00-18:00 Moderator: Anna Amramina 1943-1945,” Andrew Amstutz (University of Minnesota) (University of Wisconsin, Madison) • “‘I Remember When the 1 Russian Satellite Fell:’ Cosmos 954 Standards and Experts: and the Shape of Northern Nucle- Knowing and Regulating Risk arity, 1968-1979,” Lisa Ruth Rand (University of Wisconsin-Madison) Ravenna B, Third Floor • “Discovering Another Moderator: Erica O’Neil (Ar- Civilization through an ‘Oth- izona State University) ered’ People: Investigations of Organizer: Colleen Lanier-Chris- Radioactivity at the Site of the tensen (Harvard University) Tunguska Explosion,” Andy Bruno • “Regulating Chemical Risks (Northern Illinois University) and International Trade at the • “Radiation, Indigenous Organization for Economic Rights, and the Temporal Politics Cooperation and Development,” of Settler Colonialism in Cold Colleen Lanier-Christensen War Alaska,” Ronald E. Doel (Harvard University) (Florida State University) • “The Rise (and Fall) of the 1 Food-Drug Line: Classification, Gatekeepers, and Spatial Mediation Rethinking the Histories of Science in Modern South Asia in U.S. Food and Health Markets,” Xaq Frohlich (Auburn University) Ravenna C, Third Floor • “Fetal Protection Policies in Moderator: Somaditya Banerjee the Industrial Workplace,” Pallavi (Austin Peay State University) Podapati (Princeton University) • “Racial Prejudice and the • Commentator: Erica O’Neil Lost Legacy of Jagadis Chan- (Arizona State University) dra Bose, India’s First Plant Physiologist,” Peter Minorsky 1 (Austin Peay State University) The Microbial and Biomedical • “Traditional Ecological Ravenna A, Third Floor Knowledge in India – A Historical Moderator: Barbara Canavan Assessment,” Baisakhi Bandyop- (Independent Researcher) adhyay (The Asiatic Society) • “Fantastic Microbes and Where • “Rethinking Islamic Medicine to Find Them,” Neeraja Sankaran during the Bengal Famine, • “Originating the Micro- biome: Joshua Lederberg and

54 Saturday, November 3, 18:30-19:30 Microbiology’s Self-Narration • “The T Suppressor Cell at the Advent of the Human Program and the Dynamics of Microbiome Project,” Melissa Wills Collective Error in Biomedical (University of California, Davis) Science,” Thomas Kepler (Boston • “Film, Television, and Medium University School of Medicine) Specificity in Postwar Biomedical 1 Science Education,” Scott Curtis (Northwestern University) 18:30-19:30

Distinguished Lecture

Science v. the Sacred, a Dead-end Settler Ontology — And Then What? Metropolitan B, Third Floor Kim TallBear (University of Alberta) Introduction by Susan Lindee (University of Pennsylvania)

Settler-colonial society works hard to separate so-called spirituality from the material. This worldview inhibits settler society grasping Indigenous knowledges as knowledge based on centuries of observations and intimate relations with other-than-human relatives. Instead, Indigenous peoples are viewed as exceedingly “spiritual,” and dominant scientific traditions (including the social sciences and humanities) tend to denigrate Indige- nous understandings of the world as beliefs rather than knowledges. The knowledge/belief divide stems from a hierarchy of life that the sciences share with major religious traditions. Within this understanding of sentience and agency, some humans rank above others, and humans rank above other life 55 Sunday, November 4, 7:45-8:45 forms. More recently, thinkers such as the “new materialists” and multi-spe- cies ethnographers commit themselves to understanding other-than-humans in less hierarchical and more “vibrant” or agential, if still secular terms. But that “ontological turn,” while fascinating, may not be a sufficiently encouraging response in this moment of settler-colonial existential crisis. For those paying attention, Indigenous worldviews compel and edify. That is not to say that Indigenous understandings of the world can save settler society from itself. Non-Indigenous people must learn to live well together here, and it does not look good. Nonetheless, in an act of edification, I bring Indigenous ideas of being in good relation into conversation with the more sensible ideas of thinkers working within the settler state academy. 1 Sunday, November 4 7:45-8:45 9:00-11:00

HSS Business Meeting All Too Human: Formaliza- Aspen, Second Floor tions, Models, and Algo- rithms in the 20th Century All HSS members are welcome. Human Sciences Refreshments will be served. Ravenna C, Third Floor Materials for the HSS Business Sponsored by the Forum for Meeting, including the 2017 History of Human Science Business Meeting minutes and committee reports are available Moderator: Hunter Heyck (History on the meeting website. of Science, Technology and Med- icine - University of Oklahoma) Agenda Organizer: Ekaterina Babintseva • President’s Welcome, • “Stressed Minds: Cybernetics Bernard Lightman and the Language of the Mind • Approval of Minutes in the mid-Twentieth Cen- • Executive Director’s tury United States,” Angelica Report, Jay Malone Clayton (Yale University) • Editor’s Report, • “Creativity for the Information H. Floris Cohen Age: Algorithms, Heuristics, and Soviet Psychology of Thinking in • Treasurer’s Report, Gwen Kay the 1960-1970s,” Ekaterina Babint- • Committee Reports seva (University of Pennsylvania) Synopsis, Jay Malone • “The Logic Behind the Logic 1 Theory Machine: Administrative 56 Sunday, November 4, 9:00-11:00 Science, RAND, and the Dawn to Draw Young Women into of Artificial Intelligence,” Jonnie STEM, 1965-Today,”Amy Penn (University of Cambridge) Bix (Iowa State University) • “Cybernetics in China: Qian • “Advantages of Being a Scientif- Xuesen and Somatic Science,” ic Outsider: Stanford Ovshinsky’s Bo An (Yale University) Discovery of Phase-Change Mem- • Commentator: Jamie ory,” Lillian Hoddeson (University Cohen-Cole (Department of of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) American Studies Columbia, • “Why Did the Number of College of Arts & Sciences) History of Science Courses Increase 1 in Japanese Higher Education after World War II? Influence of Postwar Climate, Planet, Environment Advisors from the United States,” Kirkland, Third Floor Mai Sugimoto (Kansai University) Moderator: Aileen Fyfe (Uni- 1 versity of St Andrews) Early Modern Natural Philos- • “Planetary Designs: The ophy II Historical Intersection of Geoengi- Jefferson A, Fourth Floor neering and Terraforming,” Daniel Moderator: Meropi Morfouli Zizzamia (Harvard University Solar (CNRS, Observatory of Paris, Geoengineering Research Program) SYRTE Laboratory, France) • “Military Natures of Astro- • “Origin of Forms and Qualities: biology: Life-on-Mars Studies Robert Boyle’s Reply to William in the Early Cold War,” Jordan Harvey,” Ashley Inglehart (Con- Bimm (Princeton University) sortium for the History of Science, • “Climate and Time: The Technology, and Medicine) Shifting Status of ‘The Janitor • “Chymical Collections: Geologist (FRS),’” Laura Brassing- Seventeenth-Century Textual ton (University of Cambridge) Transmutations in the Work 1 of Arthur Dee,” Megan Piorko Crossing STEM Boundaries: (Georgia State University) Germany, Japan, and the U.S. • “Making Room for the Natural Boren, Fourth Floor Sciences in Seventeenth Century Morocco,” Justin Stearns (New Moderator: Anne-Sophie York University Abu Dhabi) Godfroy (CNRS) • “Surgeons and Disease in • “Girls Heart STEM: The Sixteenth-Century Spain: Peste Wildly-Accelerating Movement

57 Sunday, November 4, 9:00-11:00 and Morbo Gallico in Surgical of Paint Samples in Nine- Texts,” Kristy Wilson Bowers teenth-century England,” Mariana (University of Missouri) Pinto (Utrecht University) 1 • “Art Histories around 1900,” Maria Teresa Costa East Asian Science (Max Planck Institute for the Ravenna A, Third Floor History of Science, Berlin) Moderator: Zhaojin Zeng • “How X-Rays Changed the (University of Pittsburgh) Practice of Art History,” Sven • “India and China and the Dupré (Utrecht University) Exchange of Medical Knowledge • “In Search of the ‘Secrets in Antiquity,” Sean Bradley of the Old Masters’: Early (University of Washington) Analytical Approaches to the • “Faces of the Scientific Self Characterization of Traditional in Colonial and Post Colonial Easel Paintings,” Kristin DeGhe- Korea,” Sungook Hong (Seoul taldi (University of Delaware) National University) 1 • “From Bacon to Mao: The Minds “Great Inventions” Narrative in Modern China,” Galen Poor Ravenna B, Third Floor (University of Wisconsin-Madison) Moderator: Michael Weis- • “China as a Field: Carl Bishop, meyer (University of Cal- Ji Li, and the ‘First Archaeological ifornia Los Angeles) Expedition in China led by the • “Plant Mind, Plant Chinese Themselves,’” Kuang-chi Soul: Darwin, James, and Hung (Department of Geography, the Problem of Plant Con- National Taiwan University) sciousness,” Tina Gianquitto 1 (Colorado School of Mines) • “‘What is Mind?’: Friedrich Expertise in Art and Science: Hayek’s Theory of Mind between Art (History), Conservation and Modern Science and Tech- Vienna, London, and Chicago, nology 1920-1952,” Ohad Reiss Sorokin (Princeton University) Medina, Third Floor • “How Comparative Psy- Moderator: Brigitte Van Tiggelen chology Lost its Soul: Psychical (Science History Institute) Research and Animal Minds, • “Chemists in the Field of 1898-1920,” David Pence Archaeology: Pigment Analysis

58 Sunday, November 4, 9:00-11:00 (University of Pittsburgh, History (Fundação Getúlio Vargas, Direto- & Philosophy of Science Dept.) ria de Análise de Políticas Públicas) • “Mind out of Matter: Psychol- 1 ogie Physiologique and the Annus Observation at Large Scale Mirabilis of Telepathy (1886),” Courtenay Raia (Colburn School) Jefferson B, Fourth Floor 1 • Moderator: Helen Rozwad- owski (University of Connecticut, Missionaries, Indigenous Associate Professor of History Knowledge, and Globaliza- and Maritime Studies) tion in Early Modern Iberian Worlds • “Boosters and Speculators of Leschi, Third Floor Southern California: Making Mount Wilson Observatory,” Moderator: Florence Hsia (Uni- Eun-Joo Ahn (University of versity of Wisconsin-Madison) California Santa Barbara) Organizer: Matthew Crawford • “The Science behind Sanguine: (Kent State University) Chronobiological Concerns • “Global Empire, Jesuit with ELF,” Jole Shackelford Networks, and the Deniable (University of Minnesota) Body: Nature and Disease in • “Rand McNally’s Geophys- Colonial Brazil, 1549-1565,” ical Globe: How the Earth Hugh Cagle (University of Utah) was Depicted during the Early • “The Extirpation of Idolatry Space Age,” Simon Whitehouse and the Secularization of (Florida State University) Nature: Jesuit Missionaries and • “The Aquatic Frontier: Cold Indigenous Healing Knowledge War Science on the Seafloor,” in Colonial Peru,” Matthew Antony Adler (Carleton College) Crawford (Kent State University) 1 • “Jesuit Beans and Vomitory Nuts: Mobilising Indigenous Perfecting the Body in Pre- Materia Medica in the Late modern Europe Seventeenth-Century Phil- Chelan, First Floor ippines,” Sebestian Kroupa Moderator: Anita Guerrini (University of Cambridge) (Oregon State University) • “Global Connections and Organizer: Bradford Bouley (Uni- Representations: The Circulation of versity of California, Santa Barbara) a Medicinal Plant in the Late Eigh- teenth-Century Portuguese Amer- • “‘Their God Is Their ica,” Danielle Sanches De Almeida Belly’: Meat and Medicine in 59 Sunday, November 4, 9:00-11:00 Seventeenth-Century Rome,” of Kassel, Germany) and Mary Bradford Bouley (University of Morgan (London School of Eco- California, Santa Barbara) nomics and Political Science) • “Remaking the Body: Her- • “Making Science Historical: maphrodites and the Science of How Narrative Structured Surgery in the Late Middle Ages,” Darwin’s Science,” Greg Priest Leah DeVun (Rutgers University) (Stanford University) • “Quotient of Malleability: • “Simultaneous Discovery or Breeding and the Renaissance Competing Concepts? Economists’ Animal,” Mackenzie Cooley Notions of Utility in the Late (Cornell University) 19th Century,” Mary Morgan • “Sinful Bodies and (London School of Economics) Global Catastrophe in Early • “Research Narratives and Modern Italy,” Lydia Barnett Conceptual Change in Devel- (Northwestern University) opmental Genetics: Mosaics and 1 Gene Action, 1954-1978,” Robert Meunier (London School of Eco- Scientists’ Narratives nomics and Political Science, UK/ Columbia, Fourth Floor University of Kassel, Germany) Moderator: Sabina Leonelli • “Soups and Sparks, Round (University of Exeter) II: Narrative Explanations and the Conceptualization of ‘Syn- Organizers: Robert Meunier apse,’” Corinne Bloch-Mullins (London School of Economics and (Marquette University) Political Science, UK/University 1 PSA Sessions of Interest

All HSS attendees may also attend Thursday, November 1 regular sessions hosted by the • 8:30-10:00, “Dealing with Philosophy of Science Association Diversity: Perspectives from (PSA). The sessions listed below the History, Philosophy, and may be of particular interest to Social Studies of Biology” historians of science. See the • 8:30-10:00, “What is PSA meeting website for the full a Chemical Element?” program: psa2018.philsci.org. • 8:30-10:00, “Method- ologies of Integration”

60 Sunday, November 4, 9:00-11:00 • 10:15-11:45, “Beyond The- • 13:30-15:30, “Replication ory-Centric Studies of Scientific and Reproducibility” Progress: Repertoires in Biology” • 15:45-17:45, “Community • 10:15-11:45, “Ernst Science as Democratic Science” Cassirer’s Neo-Kantian • 15:45-17:45, “History of Philosophy of Science” the Philosophy of Science” • 10:15-11:45, “Sculpting the Image of Science for Sunday, November 4 Education in its Historical and • 9:00-11:45, “Trust and the Philosophical Background” Feminist Politics of Science” • 16:00-18:00, “President’s We wish to thank HSS member, Plenary Symposium: Shedding Rachel Ankeny, and PSA Program Light on Dark Matter” Chair, Kevin Elliott, for their guid- • 19:30-21:00, “PSA2018 Public ance in cross listing PSA sessions. Forum: For the Public Good? 1 Values and Accountability in AI and Data Science” (Seattle Public Library: Microsoft Auditorium)

Friday, November 2 • 9:00-11:45, “Aspects of Scientific Consensus” • 13:30-15:30, “Epis- temic Injustice” • 13:30-15:30, “Chemistry” • 15:45-17:45, “Bridging the Gap between Scientists and the Public” • 15:45-17:45, “Imag- ination in Science”

Saturday, November 3 • 9:00-11:45, “Climate Science and Public Interests: Social Values and Climate Change” • 9:00-11:45, “The Replication Crisis: How Should Science Change?”

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Dispatches from Where Are We Diamonds Planet 3 Heading? An Early History of Thirty-Two (Brief) The Evolution of the King of Gems Tales on the Solar Humans and Things Jack Ogden System, the Milky Ian Hodder Way, and Beyond Marcia Bartusiak Pasta for Breakpoint Nightingales Reckoning A 17th-Century Minds Make with America’s Handbook of Bird- Societies Environmental Crises Care and Folklore How Cognition Jeremy B. C. Jackson Giovanni Pietro Olina Explains the World and Steve Chapple Translated from the Humans Create Italian by C.J.P. Clayton Pascal Boyer Foreword by Belonging on Helen Macdonald an Island A co-publication with Royal The Mind Is Flat Birds, Extinction, and Collection Trust The Remarkable Evolution in Hawai’i Shallowness of the Daniel Lewis Improvising Brain Against the Grain Nick Chater A Deep History of the The Human Earliest States Planet James C. Scott Seeing Trees How We Created the Paper A History of Street Anthropocene Trees in New York City Simon L. Lewis and Void and Berlin Mark A. Maslin The Strange Physics Sonja Dümpelmann of Nothing Think Tank James Owen Fishing Weatherall Forty Neuroscientists Paper How the Sea Fed Explore the Biological Civilization Roots of Human Brian Fagan Experience The Shape of Paper Edited by a Life David J. Linden One Mathematician’s Delayed Response Search for the Universe’s Hidden The Art of Waiting The Geometry from the Ancient to Misinformation the Instant World Shing-Tung Yau Age and Steve Nadis Jason Farman How False Beliefs Spread Cailin O’Connor and James Owen Weatherall

Yale university press www.YaleBooks.com

HistoryofScience4.25x7.indd68 1 9/26/18 6:56 PM Index

A Barrett, Gordon 27 Bunning, Jonny 43 Barrow, Mark 6 Burney, Ian 22 Abir-Am, Pnina 21 Bartel, Kraig 36 Burns, Karina 44 Ackert, Lloyd 5, 6, 36 Barwich, Ann-So- Adler, Antony 59 phie 46 C Ahn, Eun-Joo 59 Bassiri, Nima 45 Cagle, Hugh 59 Allen, Matthew 47 Bausman, William 35 Cahan, David 38 Allison, Elizabeth 46 Becerra, Juanita 50 Campos, Luis 5, 38 Almeida, Danielle Becker, Adam 21 Sanches De 59 Canavan, Barbara 54 Beckman, Jenny 25 Amramina, Anna 38, Carrillo, Mateo 49 54 Bergman, James 40 Carrión, Marimer 44 Amstutz, Andrew 54 Berrones, Jethro Her- Carson, Sarah 52 nandez 42 An, Bo 57 Casper, Stephen 34 Berry, Dominic 31 Anderson, Katha- Caudano, Anne-Lau- rine 6, 21 Bertucci, Paola 5 rence 12, 31 Anderson, Warwick 50 Bilak, Donna 24 Caulkins, Tamara 42 Ankeny, Rachel 31, Bil, Geoff 26 Chacko, Xan 39 44, 61 Bill, Geoff 26 Chang, Hasok 25 Ankeny, Rachel A. 11 Bimm, Jordan 57 Chang, Kevin 6, 53 Appuhn, Karl 27 Bix, Amy 57 Chard, Daniel 30 Armenteros, Caro- Bloch-Mullins, Charenko, Melissa 53 lina 48 Corinne 60 Chastain, Andra 49 Aronova, Elena 6, 51 Blum, Binyamin 22 Chatterjee, Animesh 23 Arvin, Maile 30 Bolt, Marvin 31 Chemla, Karine 5, 6 Ashrafi, Babak 5 Boner, Patrick 36 Chen-Morris, Raz 24 Aylward, Alexander 35 Bonhomme, Edna 34 Chiang, Howard 43 Boucher, Roland 36 B ChoGlueck, Chris- Bouley, Bradford 59, 60 topher 28 Babintseva, Ekater- ina 56 Bovolo, Carlo 53 Choi, Beatrice 49 Bach, Alona 22 Bowcutt, Frederica 26 Christie, John 41 Bowers, Kristy Wil- Cicchiello, D 28 Backes, Molly 46 son 58 Clark, Ashley 22 Baker, Tawrin 24 Bradley, Sean 58 Clayton, Angelica 56 Bakhtary, Elham 33 Brassington, Laura 57 Clough, Michael 45 Baldassarri, Fabrizio 44 Breen, Benjamin 47 Coen, Deborah 21, 51 Bandyopadhyay, Bai- Brinkman, Paul D. 25 sakhi 54 Cohen-Cole, Jamie 57 Brock, Darryl 26 Baneke, David 26 Cohen, H. Floris 5, 56 Browne, Janet 5 Banerjee, Somaditya 54 Comfort, Nathan- Barahona, Ana 33 Brown, Kevin 48 iel 5, 36, 37 Barberis, Daniela S 37 Bruno, Andy 54 Cooley, Mackenzie 60 Barge, Lisa 38 Buchwald, Jed 20 Cornel, Tabea 43 Barnett, Lydia 60 Buckley, Eve 45 Cory, David 28 69 Cory, Therese 28 Elliott, Kevin 61 Greene, Mott 21 Costa, Maria Teresa 58 Endersby, Jim 39 Greene, Mott T. 30 Coull, Charlotte 22 Gross, Benjamin 46 Cowles, Henry 47 F Grudin, Theodore 46 Crawford, Matthew 59 Feigenbaum, Ryan 3 Guadagnolo, Daniel 29 Crowe, Nathan 44 Feingold, Mordechai 20 Guenther, Katja 48 Curtis, Scott 55 Felton, Ma- Guerrini, Anita 5, 59 rie-Claude 24 Gutierrez, Kathleen D Finkelstein, Gabriel 44 Cruz 50 Dagher, Zoubeida 45 Fisher, Amy 6 Dahn, Ryan 51 Fitzgerald, Deborah 46 H Dasgupta, Deepan- Fitzpatrick, Susan 30 Hagen, Sjang Ten 22 wita 33 Fix, Adam 24 Hajek, Kim 31, 37 Davis, Edward 51 Fleming, Jim 46 Hall, Karl 6 Davis, Fritz 49 Flood, Margaret 34 Halm, Christopher 41 Davis, Kathryn 47 Flow, Christian 51 Hamblin, Jacob DeGhetaldi, Kristin 58 Fratto, Elena 42 Darwin 5 De Groot, Jean 31 Freire, Olival 5 Hamilton, Vivien 34 Hamlin, Christo- Deichmann, Ute 37 Frohlich, Xaq 54 pher 22 Dentinger, Rachel Fuller, Sharon 46 Mason 39 Hammonds, Evelyn 50 Fu, Wendy 20 Hammonds, Eve- Dent, Rosanna 30 Fyfe, Aileen 5, 39, 57 lynn 34 Deringer, Will 43 Hamza, Shireen 50 DeVorkin, David 46 G Handmer, Annie 29 DeVun, Leah 60 Gabel, Isabel 45 Hardalupas, Mahi 35 Dick, Stephanie 40, 41 Gainty, Caitjan 33 Harmony, Teasel Dietlein, Erica 28 Gannagé, Emma 28 Muir 6 Dietrich, Michael 31, Garson, Justin 37 Harrison, Emily 34 44 Gates, Kelly 41 Hartz, Thiago 21 Dietz, Bettina 24 Gavrus, Delia 34 Hatton, Cassandra 46 Dijksterhuis, Fokko Jan 36 Gere, Cathy 47 Hausse, Heidi 52 DiMoia, John 20 Geroulanos, Ste- Heintzman, Kit 27 fanos 46 Doel, Ronald E. 54 Helbig, Daniela 45 Gianquitto, Tina 6, Henderson, Gabriel 52 Donahue, William 36 11, 58 Hepler-Smith, Evan 41 Drago, Elisabeth Gibson, Abraham 34 Berry 46 Hersch, Matthew 46 Gilbert, Scott 44 Duffy, Kathrinne 27 Hesketh, Ian 31 Gillin, Edward 36 Dunlap, Christo- Hevly, Bruce 3, 5 Gil-Riaño, Sebastián 45 pher 49 Heyck, Hunter 56 Dunning, David 29, 53 Godfroy, Anne-So- phie 57 Hoddeson, Lillian 57 Dupré, Sven 58 Golinski, Jan 5 Hodoba, Cindy 24 E Gordin, Michael 5, 25 Hogan, Andrew 43 Hong, Sungook 58 Eardley, Megan 52 Gosselin, Edward 32 Hood, Katherine 43 Echterhölter, Anna 35 Greene, J Megan 27 70 Horan, Joseph 49 Kohlstedt., Sally 39 Louson, Eleanor 29 Hsia, Florence 48, 59 Kojevnikov, Alexei 21 Lucey, Emer 42 Hsiung, Hansun 48 Konečný, Peter 41 Luk, Christine 20 Hu, Danian 28 Krajewski, Markus 35 Lunbeck, Elizabeth 22 Huneman, Philippe 35 Krige, John 32 Lussier, Kira 29 Hung, Kuang-chi 58 Kroupa, Sebestian 59 Luteren, Frans Van 6 Hu, Yize 43 Kuriyama, Shigehisa 31 Lüthy, Christoph 32 Kursell, Julia 35 Lykknes, Annette 38 I Iliffe, Rob 20 L M Inglehart, Ashley 57 Lacki, Jan 21 MacCord, Kate 30 Inkpen, Andrew 30 Laemmli, Whitney 41 Macklem, Gregory 45 Inkpen, Dani 32 Lalli, Roberto 26 Madison, Paige 25 Lanier-Christensen, Maerker, Anna 35 J Colleen 54 Malone, Jay 6, 56 James, Matthew 25 Laplane, Lucie 30 Malone, Robert J. 5 Jiang, Lijing 46 Launius, Roger 46 Manganaro, Chris- Jin, Xiaoxing 29 Laveaga, Gabriela tine 36 Soto 5, 45 Johnson, Kristin 51 Marcus, Hannah 31 Lavelle, Peter 44 Jones, Kathryn Max- Masco, Joseph 23 son 30 Lea, Andrew 37 Mateos, Gisela 38 Jones, Matthew 52 LeBlanc, Hannah 46 Matthiessen, Dana 32 Jones, Susan 5, 49 Lee, Crystal 46 Maydom, Katrina 39 Jung, Sunguk 37, 42 Lee, Victoria 46 Mazzotti, Massimo 6 Junior, Olival Freire 21 Lehmann, Philipp 21 McCahey, Daniella 32 Lenel, Laetitia 51 McClimans, Leah 37 K Leonelli, Sabina 44, 60 McDonough, Cait- Kaiser, David 5, 23 Lewis, Daniel 31 lin 38 Kaplan, Abram 24 Lewis, Neil 28 McGovern, Michael 48 Karafantis, Layne 33 Lieffers, Caroline 26 McNeill, Leila 30 Kassell, Lauren 31 Light, Jennifer 47 McOuat, Gordon 5, 41 Katz, Jordan 38 Lightman, Bernard 5, Medrano, Anthony 50 28, 51, 56 Kay, Gwen 5, 56 Meister, Anna-Ma- Liink, Adrianna 40 ria 50, 51 Keating, Jessica 52 Li, Lan 50 Menon, Minakshi 13 Keel, Terence 51 Lim, Whitney 3 Mercelis, Joris 33 Kennedy, Meegan 35 Lindee, Susan 55 Merchant, Carolyn 46 Kent-Egan, Oscar 42 Ling, Biying 53 Meunier, Robert 60 Kepler, Thomas 55 Lin, James 44, 45 Milam, Erika 5 Ketcham, Ryan 20 Litaker, Noria 52 Milam, Erika L. 5 Kidwell, Peggy 46 Liu, Xiao 28 Miller, Emmie 6 Kim, Clare 41 Llach, Daniel Car- Millstein, Roberta 31 Kim, Tae-Ho 21 doso 47 Minella, Timothy 27 Kitchen, Emma 53 Loeb, Zachary 40 Minorsky, Peter 54 Klein, Joel 25 Lopez, Lucian 3

71 Mirza, Ali 53 O Prinz, Benjamin 33 Misa, Thomas 28 Oakes, Jason 43 Prkachin, Yvan 37 Mitchell, Mary 23 O’Brien, Elizabeth 42 Pycior, Helena 20 Mitman, Gregg 23 Ockert, Ingrid 29 Mojet, Emma 22 Oelze, Micah 45 Q Monaldi, Daniela 21 Ogilvie, Brian 27 Qidwai, Sarah 29 Monroe, M. Willis 31 Ohlers, Clinton 39 Quinn, Aleta 37 Montgomery, Geor- O’Neil, Erica 54 gina 34 R Opitz, Donald 39 Montgomery, Scott 32 Osborne, Mike 37 Raby, Megan 23 Moon, Manyong 21 Owens, Deirdre Radin, Joanna 29, 47 Morfouli, Mero- Cooper 30 Ragab, Ahmed 31, 50 pi 32, 57 Raia, Courtenay 59 Morgan, Mary 31, 60 P Ramberg, Peter 25 Morris, Hannah 3 Pagunsan, Ruel 50 Rampling, Jennifer 52 Moya, Cynde 31 Palmer, Louise 34 Rampling, Jenny 14 Müggenburg, Jan 48 Palmieri, Kris 10 Rand, Lisa Ruth 54 Muigai, Wangui 34 Palmieri, Kristine 22 Rankin, Alisha 52 Muir-Harmony, Teasel 46 Panarelli, Marilena 44 Raposo, Pedro 31 Muka, Sam 36 Parshall, Karen 14 Raymer, Emilie 40 Muka, Samantha 36 Pastorino, Cesare 35 Record, Isaac 34 Mukharji, Projit 6 Pearce, Trevor 33 Reichert, Anne-So- phie 23 Munz, Tina 27 Pearl, Sharrona 43 Reid, Joshua 26 Murphy, Michelle 23 Pearson, Trais 50 Peeters, Norbert 44 Reidy, Michael 3, 5 N Pence, Charles 45 Reser, Anna 38 Reynolds, Sarah Nahmias, Noa 29 Pence, David 58 Jozina 29 Nappi, Carla 25, 50 Penn, Jonnie 57 Ricculli, Anne 39 Nathan, Terrence 52 Perillan, Jose 37 Richards, Linda 26 Navon, Joshua 36 Peterson, Erik 45 Rich, Miriam 34 Neal, Jacob 35 Phillips, Jonathan 40 Richmond, Mar- Nebiolo, Molly E. 29 Pickman, Sarah 32 sha 28, 31 Nelson, Eli 38, 50 Pinto, Mariana 58 Rider, Alexis 32 Nelson, Nicole 27 Piorko, Megan 57 Risi, Stephan 48 Nesbit, Jeffrey 23 Podapati, Pallavi 54 Rispoli, Giulia 26 Newman, William 20 Polloni, Nicola 28 Roberts, Lissa 25 Nichols, Tiffany 23 Pols, Hans 30 Robinson, Ann 14, 26 Noguera-Solano, Poor, Galen 58 Robinson, Bridgette 33 Ricardo 53 Portet-I-Codina, Robinson, Michael 32 Nummedal, Tara 52 Laia 24 Rochberg, Francesca 46 Nuriddin, Ayah 30, 36 Prescod-Weinstein, Chanda 30 Rodriguez, Julia E 30 Nye, Mary-Jo 25 Priest, Greg 60 Romo, Jorge 29 Principe, Lawrence 52 Roosth, Sophia 27, 50

72 Rose, Edwin 41, 42 Silverstein, Ben 30 Tonn, Jenna 11, 22, 36 Rosemblatt, Karin 45 Simmons, Dana 43, Torracinta, Simon 40 Rosenthal, Caitlin 43 48, 49 Torrens, Erica 53 Skotnes-Brown, Rothenberg, Marc 5, 6 Jules 49 Trijp, Didi van 41 Rozwadowski, Hel- Truitt, Elly 5 en 59 Smith, Crosbie 6 Solomon, Miriam 31 Turchetti, Simone 26 S Soon, Wayne 45 Turner IV, William 52 Tyrrell, Brian 48 Saarela, Mårten Sö- Sorokin, Ohad Reiss 58 derblom 48 Sorrels, Katherine 42 V Saha, Abeer 49 Spackman, Christy 46 Vallye, Anna 47 Samples, Leah 27 Spanagel, David 21 Vardouli, Theodora 47 Sanford III, Ezelle 50 Spiegel, Richard 51 Vekerdy, Lilla 31 Sankaran, Neeraja 54 Sponsel, Alistair 6, Saridakis, Voula 31 25, 53 Velocci, Beans 38 Sarkar, Pankoj 33 Stam, Hank 33 Vidan, Gili 50 Schäfer, Dagmar 44, 45 Stanley, Matthew 51, Virdi, Jaipreet 26, 27 52 Scheffler, Robin 33 Vogel, William 38 Stark, Laura 13, 26, 27 Schloegel, Judith 33 Stark, Luke 29 W Schmidt, Marion 27 Statman, Alexander 48 Waddell, Mark 6 Schoenstein, Tasha 29 Stearns, Justin 57 Walsh, Sarah 45 Scholthof, Kar- en-Beth 3 Steiner, Katharina 20 Walter, Scott 36 Scholthof, Karen-Beth Stoff, Heiko 43 Wang, Huibin 28 G. 5 Suárez Díaz, Edna 5 Wang, Zuoyue 27, 28 Schranz, Kristen 41 Sugimoto, Mai 57 Warren, Adam 45 Schultz-Figueroa, Sullivan Thomas, Wasman, Wendy 25 Benjamin 20 Kathleen 49 Wee, John 53 Seman, Jennifer 42 Sung, Wen-Ching 42 Weisberg, Michael 31 Sepkoski, David 3, 5 Surita, Gina 43 Weismeyer, Michael 58 Server, Steve 49 Svensson, Anna 32 Weldon, Stephen 6 Seth, Suman 5, 45 Swanberg, Susan 37 Weldon, Stephen P. 5 Shackelford, Jole 59 Sweeney, Patrick 30 Wellerstein, Alex 6 Shafer, Jonathan 47 Sylla, Edith 6 Wellmann, Janina 51 Shapiro, Alan 20 Sysling, Fenneke 37 Wernimont, Jacque- Sharafi, Mitra 22 line 40, 41 Sheldon, Myrna T Werrett, Simon 25 Perez 47 TallBear, Kim 23, 55 Shelton, Laura 42 Whitehouse, Simon 59 Tamborini, Marco 53 Williams, J’Nese 39 Shih, Ashanti 12 Tattersall, Mason 39 Shindell, Matt 6, 11 Wills, Melissa 55 Teira, David 37 Wilson, Benjamin 51 Shin, Youjung 48, 49 Terrall, Mary 5 Shteir, Rusty 6 Wise, Norton 51 Thompson, Court- Withycombe, Shan- Shyndriayeva, Ga- ney 34 non 34 lina 35 Tiggelen, Brigitte Siddiqi, Asif 6 Van 38, 58 Wolfe, Audra 30

73 Wragge-Morley, Alex- ander 35 Wylie, Alison 47 Wylie, Caitlin Do- nahue 53 Y Yang, Elisabeth 38 Yeang, Chen-Pang 36 Yero, Farren 42 Yi, Jongsik Christian 44 Yokoyama, Miwa 38 Yoo, Genie 41 Young, Jacy 30 Z Zakariya, Nasser 45 Zeng, Zhaojin 33, 58 Zizzamia, Daniel 57

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