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Author Archive for Melinda Miller – Page 5

Images and Texts in Medical History – Workshop at the NIH this April

Images and Texts in Medical History: A Workshop in Methods, Tools, and Data from the Digital Humanities will take place on the campus of the National Institutes of Health, in Bethesda, Maryland, on April 11-13, 2016. The workshop is designed to provide practice, hands-on instruction on using new tools, methods, and data from the digital humanities to advance understanding of medical history. The intended audience will include history faculty and advanced graduate students in the history of medicine, librarians and archivists in the history of the health sciences, and digital humanities scholars and students interested in new fields for experimentation and development. The workshop will feature a keynote address by Dr. Jeremy Greene of Johns Hopkins University, instructional sessions led by Miriam Posner of the University of California at Los Angeles and Benjamin Schmidt of Northeastern University, and roundtable sessions led by librarians and scholars working at the intersection of digital humanities and medical history. The workshop is generously funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities Office of Digital Humanities and Wellcome Trust. The host for the workshop will be the History of Medicine Division at the U. S. National Library of Medicine, on the NIH campus.

Applications for admission are now available on the workshop website (http://medicalhistworkshop.org/), along with the full schedule, list of presenters, and membership of the planning committee. The deadline for applications is September 30, 2015. Only admitted participants will be able to take part in the full workshop. The keynote address will be open to the public. Limited travel bursaries will be available for some participants to offset the costs of travel and lodging during the workshop. Updates on the workshop can be found from the website and twitter (#medhistws).

Call for Applications: Jefferson Science Fellowship

The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine is pleased to announce a call for nominations and applications for the 2016 Jefferson Science Fellows program.  Initiated by the Secretary of State in 2003, this fellowship program engages the American academic science, technology, engineering and medical communities in the design and implementation of U.S. foreign policy.

Jefferson Science Fellows (JSF) spend one year at the U.S. Department of State or the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) for an on-site assignment in Washington, D.C. that may also involve extended stays at U.S. foreign embassies and/or missions.

The fellowship is open to tenured, or similarly ranked, academic scientists, engineers and physicians from U.S. institutions of higher learning. Nominees/applicants must hold U.S. citizenship and will be required to obtain a security clearance.

The deadline for 2016-2017 program year applications/nominations is November 2, 2015. To learn more about the Jefferson Science Fellowship and to apply, visit the JSF website at: nationalacademies.org/jsf

Philadelphia’s WHYY visits Professor Pamela Smith’s Making and Knowing Project

Philadelphia radio station WHYY visited Professor Pamela Smith, head of the Making and Knowing project in her classroom laboratory to learn more about the 500 year old how-to book of artisan secrets that the students have been deciphering and reproducing, and what present-day researchers can learn from these experiments.

Listen to the podcast from WHYY’s “The Pulse”

Job Opportunity: International Visiting Scholar in the History of Science

Barnard-Columbia Weiss International Visiting Scholar in the History of Science, Fall 2015

Barnard College, Columbia University seeks a historian of science with expertise in the history of science beyond North America and Europe to co-teach part of an undergraduate lecture course on the global history of science since 1800 (taught by Professor Deborah Coen). The scholar will be responsible for designing and teaching a four-lecture module on science, colonialism, and globalization. He or she will be in residence at Barnard for two weeks in the fall of 2015. The residence will include a public lecture at Barnard on a related topic, as well as formal and informal interactions with the history of science community in the greater New York area. The aim is both to foster international collaboration in the history of science and to introduce Barnard-Columbia students to the complex legacy of colonial and post-colonial science. Completion or near completion of the Ph.D. is required.

The visiting scholar should plan to arrive on October 26 and stay through November 6, 2015. Barnard, in conjunction with the Columbia Center for Science & Society, will pay the cost of travel and accommodations, as well as a $75 per diem and a $1000 honorarium.

Applicants should send a brief cover letter, describing teaching experience, and a CV to [email protected] by May 20.


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