Sunday, 1 June 2025

Medicine on a Larger Scale: Global Histories of Social Medicine

 Lie, Anne Kveim, Jeremy A. Greene, and Warwick Anderson, eds. Medicine on a Larger Scale: Global Histories of Social Medicine. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2025. ISBN: 9781009428514. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009428514. Open access.


Book description

In a world of growing health inequity and ecological injustice, how do we revitalize medicine and public health to tackle new problems? This groundbreaking collection draws together case studies of social medicine in the Global South, radically shifting our understanding of social science in healthcare. Looking beyond a narrative originating in nineteenth-century Europe, a team of expert contributors explores a far broader set of roots and branches, with nodes in Sub-Saharan Africa, South America, Oceania, the Middle East, and Asia. This plural approach reframes and decolonizes the study of social medicine, highlighting connections to social justice and health equity, social science and state formation, bottom-up community initiatives, grassroots movements, and an array of revolutionary sensibilities. As a truly global history, this book offers a more usable past to imagine a new politics of social medicine for medical professionals and healthcare workers worldwide. This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.

Reviews

‘Medicine on a Larger Scale offers multiple visions of social medicine as an idea, field of research and teaching, form of practice, critique of health policy, and approach to the Planet’s problems. This intriguing and useful collection also places social medicine in a truly global context and gives voice to social medicine traditions form the South that are less well-known than the stories it also presents from Euro-American history. A step forward in imagining a counter-biomedicine that can better connect social suffering and healing with interpretive social science, post-colonial imaginings, and some of the more serious problems of the world. Impressive!’

Arthur Kleinman - Harvard University

‘This impressive and timely work brings together contributions from a wide range of scholars to illuminate the historical basis of social medicine. The contributors show us that the lessons are highly relevant to contemporary challenges and why reimagining social medicine in the light of current realities can help to address them.’

Andy Haines - London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

‘This collection of essays is pivotal to understanding the historical urgency of global public health. The political visibility of that urgency is embedded in global histories of social medicine movements that asked what are the social determinants of population health in post-colonial worlds. Collectively these essays powerfully demonstrate the interrogative necessity of historical analysis in order to address crippling global inequalities in health, premature mortality and debilitating morbidities.’

Dorothy Porter - University of California, San Francisco

CFP: Trauma, Institutional Knowledge, and Social Order

 CFP: Trauma, Institutional Knowledge, and Social Order: New Perspectives from Eastern and Western Europe during the Cold War - Graz 12/2025


---------------------


This explorative workshop investigates institutional and praxeological approaches to psychic suffering in Eastern and Western Europe after 1945. It investigates the making of trauma through broad political, ideological, environmental or social transformations in the Cold War period through processes of making visible, pathologization, legitimization, or denial. The workshop seeks to uncover specifically European trajectories in the conceptual and institutional history of 'trauma’.


Trauma, Institutional Knowledge, and Social Order: New Perspectives from Eastern and Western Europe during the Cold War

-------------------

Institute of History, Department of Southeast European History and Anthropology, University of Graz; Institute for the History of Medicine and Ethics in Medicine, Charité Berlin; German Police University, Münster, 8010 Graz (Austria)

03.12.2025 - 05.12.2025

Bewerbungsschluss: 01.07.2025


How did “trauma” emerge as a therapeutic concept, political discourse, and administrative practice in Europe during the Cold War? How was it treated or silenced, conceptualized or classified? What role did psychiatric diagnoses, forensic reports, police investigations, and bureaucratic procedures play in shaping societal responses to events such as political violence, armed conflicts, displacement, natural catastrophes, epidemics, or other structural forms of harm?


This explorative workshop investigates institutional and praxeological approaches to psychic suffering in Eastern and Western Europe after 1945. It investigates the making of trauma through broad political, ideological, environmental or social transformations in the Cold War period through processes of making visible, pathologization, legitimization, or denial. Moving beyond studies focused solely on World War II and its long-term psychological consequences, we aim to understand the Cold War as a period of continued upheaval, producing new institutional responses to psychic distress while shaped by the legacies of previous violence. In doing so, the workshop seeks to uncover specifically European trajectories in the conceptual and institutional history of 'trauma’.


The workshop focuses on institutional archives and documentary sources - psychiatric and therapeutic case files, forensic assessments, hospital records, bureaucratic documents, police files, and court proceedings. These materials reveal how societies perceived, managed, and classified mental suffering - or failed to do so - under specific historical conditions. We engage with recent historiographical debates that challenge the simplistic East–West dichotomy. The assumption that Western societies openly addressed psychic suffering while the East repressed it has proven increasingly inadequate. Instead, evidence suggests that similar diagnostic and administrative frameworks were in place across both systems until around 1980, with mental suffering often recognized only when considered temporary and treatable. Diagnoses such as “superficial neurosis” in Yugoslavia or “gross stress reaction” in the DSM-I exemplify these limitations in collective recognition.


We invite contributions based on institutional sources that examine how psychic distress was defined, regulated, or marginalized in diverse national and political contexts across Europe during the Cold War.


Possible topics include (but are not limited to):

- Psychiatric, legal, and other administrative approaches to psychic suffering in Eastern and Western Europe

- Diagnostic strategies: between pathologization and normalization, acknowledgement and ignorance

- Forensic reports, police files, and psychiatric records as sources for the history of trauma

- The relationship between political repression, mental distress, and medical classification

- Social, gender, environmental, health, and economic dimensions of the (non-)recognition of psychic vulnerability

- Institutional logics in addressing war trauma, imprisonment-related suffering, and structural violence

- Interactions between medical knowledge, administrative practices, and norms of psychological normalcy


Date: 3–5 December 2025

Location: University of Graz, Institute of History


We plan to circulate working papers beforehand to allow for in-depth discussion and exchange during the workshop. The workshop language is English. Travel and accommodation costs will be covered.


Submission:

Please send your abstract (max. 300 words) and a short biographical note (max. 150 words) by 1 July 2025 to:

heike.karge@uni-graz.at

Notification of acceptance: by 15 July 2025.

Deadline for paper submission: 3 November 2025.


The Global Campus: Academic Fiction in World Literature

 World Literature Studies 1/2025 “The Global Campus: Academic Fiction in World Literature / Globálny kampus: akademická fikcia vo svetovej literatúre”EDITORIÁL/EDITORIAL

Open access: https://www.sav.sk/?lang=sk&doc=journal-list&part=list_articles&journal_issue_no=11117582


Blashkiv, O.: The global campus: Academic fiction in world literature. (s. 2)

ŠTÚDIE/ARTICLES

Moseley, M.: Globalism, then and now: The rise of international neoliberalism and the academic novel. (s. 3)

Blashkiv, O.: Central European perspectives of the global campus: Slavic academic fiction after 1989. (s. 16)

Gaidash, A.: Aging professors: Reading transatlantic academic plays of the 1990s. (s. 30)

Perkowska-Gawlik, E.: The academic murder mystery as a popular subgenre from the Polish perspective. (s. 41)

Hrtánek, P.: The campus novel and university satire in recent Czech literature. (s. 56)

Selejan, C.: Magical realism and the othering of the academic in three Romanian postcommunist novels. (s. 71)

Koval, M.: The American university in the aftermath of 9/11 in Susan Choi’s novel A Person of Interest. (s. 85)

Anténe, P.: “The inhospitable city”: A Spanish view of Oxford in Javier Marías’s All Souls. (s. 97)

Šedíková Čuhová, P. - Kubealaková, M.: The Perlmann crisis of the academic world. (s. 109)

Mengel, E.: The university as heterotopia in Tabea Mußgnug’s Nächstes Semester wird alles anders.... (s. 123)

Hansen, J.: A tale of two professions in the Swedish campus novel Vård, skola och omsorg. (s. 137)

MATERIÁLY/MATERIALS

Kirova, M.: The phenomenon of the “Professorenroman” in Bulgarian literature. (s. 147)

RECENZIE/BOOK REVIEWS

Gáfrik, R.: SHUNQING CAO – PEINA ZHUANG: A New Introduction to Comparative Literature: From a Sinitic Perspective. (s. 157)

Bžoch, A.: Anton Vydra: Hermés bez krídel. Kultúrne obrazy kontinentálnej hermeneutiky [Hermes without wings. Cultural images of continental hermeneutics]. (s. 159)

Janiec-Nyitrai, A.: Miloš Zelenka: Central Europe in Symbolic and Literary Geography. (s. 161)

Ružbaská, A.: Ivana Kupková: Cesty k „novej“ ruskej literatúre v slovenských prekladoch po roku 1989 [Paths to “new” Russian literature in Slovak translations after 1989]. (s. 164)

Wednesday, 28 May 2025

ESEH online seminar "Hooked: A History of the Black Sea in Six Animals" on June 5

 ESEH online seminar "Hooked: A History of the Black Sea in Six Animals" on June 5


The time has come for the last seminar of the 2024-2025 season. On June 5, 16:00 CET, Taylor Zajicek will give a talk “Hooked: A History of the Black Sea in Six Animals” with Constantin Ardeleanu as a discussant. Please see the information below.

Presenter: Taylor Zajicek (Columbia University)

Discussant: Constantin Ardeleanu (Institute for South-East European Studies/New Europe College)

Chair and organizer: Anna Mazanik (Max Weber Network Eastern Europe)

Thursday, June 5, 16:00 CET

Abstract: What makes a region? Historians have different ideas. For many, a region is a cluster of cultural, linguistic, and historical traits. Others point to commerce, or geography. But what happens when these networks break down—or when the ecology itself changes? This talk will introduce one such region in flux: the Black Sea. It will trace the Black Sea’s evolution, as both a geopolitical and physical space, through its history of fishing. More specifically, the presentation will explore the interaction of six kinds of animals: three fish, one marine mammal, an invasive comb jelly, and us. Aquatic wildlife shaped the diets and cultures of the Black Sea’s humans for millennia. Yet in recent centuries, these creatures acquired new economic, scientific, and diplomatic significance—with immense (and eventually catastrophic) consequences for the Black Sea environment. This ESEH seminar will reconstruct this historical arc, from the Greek colonies of Antiquity to the competitive industrialization of the 1930s, to the environmental diplomacy of the Cold War. The presentation (based on fieldwork in Italy, Romania, Russia, Turkey, Ukraine, and the US) will conclude with a discussion of the Black Sea’s ongoing precarity, as a home and battlefield.

Taylor Zajicek is a Mellon postdoctoral fellow at Columbia University’s Harriman Institute for Russian, Eurasian, and East Europe Studies. His first book project—Black Sea, Cold War—explores the intersection of geopolitics, science, and environmental change in the modern Black Sea region. The manuscript builds on his Princeton University dissertation, which won the Oxford University Press USA Prize for international history in 2024. Fieldwork for this project was sponsored by multiple institutions, including the Fulbright-Hays Program, Social Science Research Council, and American Research Institute in Turkey. In summer 2025, Zajicek will join the Williams College History Department as an assistant professor.

Constantin Ardeleanu  is a research fellow at the Institute for South-East European Studies of the Romanian Academy and at the New Europe College in Bucharest. He specializes in the history of the Black Sea region over the last two centuries. His most recent monograph, Steamboat Modernity: Travel, Transport, and Social Transformation on the Lower Danube, 1830–1860, was published by CEU Press in 2024.

Please register to get the Zoom link https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1b2Np1YI2uST0YbKhQ3XjxxbVYlvSxUx0635WIr74CnE/edit

The link will be send on the day event. Sometimes the emails with the link end up in the spam folder or are rejected by the mailing system. If you do not get the link one hour before the meeting, please write to Anna Mazanik directly anna.mazanik@mws-osteuropa.org

hps.cesee article alert

 Mattes, Johannes, and Cécile Philippe. “Crossing Boundaries, Forging Unity: Nuclear Medicine and Science Diplomacy in Cold War Europe.” The British Journal for the History of Science, 2025, 1–25. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007087425000317.

Ličen, Daša. “Against ‘Plebeian Ignorance’ and for ‘Civilized Behavior’: Habsburg Trieste’s Società Zoofila as a Bourgeois Instrument.” Austrian History Yearbook, 2025, 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0067237825000207.

Juhászová, Tereza. “Teachers in Power: Nation-Building and Loyalty in a Czechoslovak Periphery (1918–1947).” Contemporary European History, 2025, 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0960777325000153.

Wacław Pagórski: Die Allgemeine Weltbeschreibung von Cosmus von Simmer (1581–1650): Zum Bestand und zum Wert eines vergessenen kosmografischen Werkes, Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung 1/2025, S. 1–29. https://doi.org/10.25627/202574111610

online conference: Felix Klein on the centenary of his death

 online conference: Felix Klein on the centenary of his death. The Master and his students. 4 June 2025, 11:00–19:35 (Online/ ZOOM)


Conference on 125th anniversary of the award of an honorary doctorate to Felix Klein by the Jagiellonian University (7 June 2025) and on the centenary of his death (22 June 2025) 

Poster: https://www.ihnpan.pl/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Klein_2025-06-04.pdf

Program: https://www.ihnpan.pl/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Klein_2025-06-04_program.pdf

 Abstracts: https://www.ihnpan.pl/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/abstrakty-i-biografie-prelegentow-Klein.pdf

Sunday, 25 May 2025

Call for papers: The Moralization of Science

Call for papers: The Moralization of Science

Sep 17, 2026 - Sep 18, 2026


Conference at the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna (Austria) | Conveners: Daniel Brewing, Moritz Fischer, Elke Seefried (RWTH Aachen), Alexander Bogner (Austrian Academy of Sciences), Axel Jansen (GHI Washington)



Warnings against moralization are a common theme in discourses about the sciences and the humanities. Moralization introduces a dichotomy of good and evil, which, from an epistemic perspective, constitutes an impermissible simplification of complex relationships and, from a social perspective, contributes to the entrenchment of conflicts. Ultimately, it transforms the opposing party into an enemy against whom one’s own values must be asserted with full force. Warnings against moralization assume that both truth and social peace are endangered by it—and that it is others who engage in moralizing.


However, moralization can also yield positive effects, as illustrated by the rise of bioethics. To the extent that advances in the life sciences have been interpreted as profound moral challenges, bioethics has undergone institutionalization and professionalization from the 1960s onward. Concern for moral standards in scientific practice has contributed to the further development of research ethics. In this way, ethics has evolved into the most visible subdiscipline of philosophy. Thus, moralization can function as a driving force in the differentiation of research fields. At times, moralization originated from within academia itself. One example from the early postwar period is political science, which understood itself as an instrument for promoting liberal democracy. In response to the crimes of National Socialism, political education and academic reform in Germany sought to prevent future abuses. Similar debates emerged globally, for example, in the U.S. after Hiroshima, and in Japan through anti-nuclear movements. Another example is environmental and climate science: After the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, scientific efforts to contribute to ecological transformation intensified. Environmental and climate sciences serve the cause of sustainability and, among other things, advance the moralization of markets and consumption. The fact that contemporary surveys indicate declining trust in climate science due to its perceived proximity to politics suggests that science can also fall victim to its own moralization.


When it comes to moralization, science does not merely function as a subject or object of such processes. Scientific knowledge itself can serve as a resource in processes of moralization. Relevant examples are value conflicts, which often revolve around the question of who the “true” victims are. Consider the controversy over stem cell research during the 2000s: Are the true victims the patients who are denied access to a potential stem cell therapy due to insufficient research funding or the embryos that are used and consumed for research purposes? In such disputes, the ability to prevail depends, among other things, on the possession of relevant scientific expertise.


This outline highlights the intricate and multifaceted relationships between science and the humanities, moralization, and victimization. As debated among historians, moralization is an essentially contested concept: diverse actors employ the term—often in opposition to one another—leading to ambiguity regarding its meaning and semantic boundaries. Our conference seeks to address this challenge by exploring the intersection of scholarship and moralization from a historical perspective.


We proceed from the assumption that the interrelationship between moralization and science has become increasingly prominent and visible since 1945. Of course, this issue has been debated in various forms at least since the professionalization and differentiation of the sciences in the late nineteenth century. But in the German-speaking world, the continued relevance of issues discussed in the earlier Werturteilsstreit (debate over value judgments) after World War II and the 1960s Positivismusstreit (debate over positivism) highlighted tensions about the role of critical science in democratic societies. Both debates revolved around the extent to which non-scientific values could or should influence academic discussions and whether a scholar could still claim scientific freedom while advocating for social justice. These lines of conflict persist into the present.


We expect to place particular focus on the period since the 1970s, asking to what extent a specific constellation emerged during this decade that intensified moralizing discourses in science. In Western industrialized countries, the legacy of ‘1968’ and the rise of new social movements prompted a critical reassessment of the role of science amid broader social and cultural transformations, and of the relationship between science and activism. This shift helped catalyze the rise of Science and Technology Studies (STS) and, within the social sciences, a growing emphasis on subjectivity, individual experience, and authenticity. Particularly in Western Europe, ideas of participatory democracy and equality began to permeate not only the social sciences and humanities but also the natural sciences, fostering methods and practices that blurred the boundaries between science, society, and the public sphere. These developments contributed to the emergence of “counter-knowledge” from above (A. von Schwerin) and became a central driver of the growing moralization of science. In the United States, the 1970s likewise saw an intensification of moralizing tendencies, shaped by the decline of the Great Society paradigm in politics, culture, and public life. The rise of neoliberalism signaled a return to an older, historically embedded discourse centered on the individual as a moral agent. Across both sides of the Atlantic, these developments reinforced the moralization of science.


We invite contributions that explore the role of moralization in fields of science, the social sciences, and the humanities, in public discourses fueled by these fields, and in public discussions about them. How is science a driver of moralization and victimization? What conflicts evolve from the moralizing role of science for science itself? What conflicts evolve for societies at large? In short: Under what circumstances and in what historical contexts does science become the subject, object, or resource of moralization—and what are the consequences with respect to awareness of societal problems, political decision-making, and research itself?


Key Questions for Inquiry


We invite contributions from historians, sociologists, and scholars in related fields to present papers that take up questions such as the following:


- In what ways have discourses and practices of moralization been interconnected in the history of science and the humanities? What roles have they played in stabilizing or challenging paradigms and disciplinary communities? How have these discourses and practices changed over time?

- To what extent has moralization contributed to scientific self-reflection and progress? Conversely, to what extent has it posed a threat to the scientific ethos and to adherence to norms of truth-seeking?

- Who has engaged in moralization, who has accused others of doing so, and to what end? What cultural, political, or economic contexts have shaped these dynamics?

- What role have methodological problems played in advancing or hindering moralization within scientific and humanistic fields?

- What resources has science contributed to public debates on “political correctness” or critiques of historical injustice? How have the humanities drawn on science in these contexts, and what roles have scientists themselves chosen to adopt—or avoid—in academic and public discourse?

- We are also interested in the impact of different forms and practices of communication: How should we evaluate the role of intermediaries such as journalists? What role does the public play in shaping or responding to moralizing discourses?

- Potential topics include (but are not limited to) nuclear technology, environmental science, the AIDS crisis, and biomedical ethics in the 1980s and 1990s. While the sciences offer particularly rich ground for analysis, we also welcome papers on moralizing discourses in the social sciences and the humanities.


The conference will bring together scholars from diverse fields, including history (such as the history of science or medicine), sociology, and science studies, as well as related disciplines. The conveners aim to publish contributions to this conference as a special issue in a peer-reviewed journal or (given the interdisciplinary nature of the project) as an edited book.


The conference will be held at the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna (Austria) on September 17 and 18, 2026. Please upload a paper proposal in our applicant portal by September 15, 2025. (Please find the link for the applicant portal in the CFP published on the GHI website, at https://www.ghi-dc.org/events/event/date/the-moralization-of-science.) A proposal consisting of a single PDF-file containing a brief description of the research project (up to 300 words), a brief CV (1 or 2 pages), and contact information. Successful applicants will be notified in October 2025.


Accommodation will be arranged and paid for by the conference organizers. Participants will make their own travel arrangements; funding subsidies for travel may be available upon request for selected scholars, especially those who might not otherwise be able to attend the conference, including junior scholars and scholars from universities with limited resources.


Kontakt

For further information regarding the event’s format and conceptualization, please contact Axel Jansen (a.jansen@ghi-dc.org). For questions about the submission platform or logistics (travel and accommodation), please contact our event coordinator Nicola Hofstetter (hofstetter-phelps@ghi-dc.org).


Medicine on a Larger Scale: Global Histories of Social Medicine

 Lie, Anne Kveim, Jeremy A. Greene, and Warwick Anderson, eds. Medicine on a Larger Scale: Global Histories of Social Medicine. Cambridge: C...