[Archived] Call for Papers: ‘Alchemy and Chemistry in Context’, 4th SHAC Postgraduate Workshop

Every year, the SHAC Graduate Network organises an international workshop to provide training on research skills and methodology for graduate students and early career researchers.  This year the theme of our workshop will be ‘Alchemy and Chemistry in Context’  and will explore the extent to which chemical knowledge has been shaped by its social, economic, religious and cultural contexts, across a range of historical periods – from medieval alchemy to the chemical industry. The meeting will take place on the 26 October 2013 at the Keynes Library, Birkbeck, London. Our keynote speakers will be Dr Stephen Clucas, Reader in Early Modern Intellectual History, Birkbeck College, University of London, and Prof John Christie, University of Oxford and Leeds.

We would now like to invite 15-20 minute presentations on topics related to the theme in any historical period. To present, please submit an abstract of about 200 words by e-mail to the lead organiser, Jo Hedesan, georgianahedesan@yahoo.com by 30 June 2013. Presenters should be current postgraduate students or junior researchers (within 3 years of completion of the PhD).

Topics might include:

  • Alchemy and chemistry in society
  • Patronage and support
  • Impact of alchemy and chemistry on culture or society
  • Social, cultural and economic influence on alchemical and chemical theory and practice
  • Alchemy and chemistry’s interaction with other disciplines

The Workshop is free of charge. Bursaries are available towards the cost of travel and/or accommodation for accepted presenters in the first instance. For further details and other queries, please contact the lead organiser, Jo Hedesan at georgianahedesan@yahoo.com.

[Archived] SHAC Spring Meeting: In the Beginning: Sources of Alchemy and Chemistry

This year, the Society launches Sources of Alchemy and Chemistry, a new series of supplements to Ambix. These will offer critical editions and English translations of important works in the history of chemistry, including works composed in Greek, Syriac, Arabic, Hebrew and Latin. These editions will showcase the best and most up-to-date scholarship on early chemical writings, offering new insight into the origins of alchemy, chemistry and chemical technology. To mark the occasion, the SHAC Spring Meeting explored new work in these fields, using sources that are not yet available in modern editions.

The Meeting took place on the 16 March between 12.30 and 17.30 at Richard Eden Room, Gillian Beer House, Clare Hall (West Court site), Cambridge. The programme is outlined below:

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