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X-WR-CALNAME:The Center for Science &amp; Society at Columbia University
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://blogs.cuit.columbia.edu/scisoc
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for The Center for Science &amp; Society at Columbia University
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TZID:America/Halifax
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DTSTART:20170312T060000
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DTSTART:20171105T050000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20171030T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20171030T190000
DTSTAMP:20260606T154329
CREATED:20170818T192021Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171026T150035Z
UID:7661-1509386400-1509390000@blogs.cuit.columbia.edu
SUMMARY:Benjamin Breen - Explorations in the Medical Humanities: Three Ways of Looking at an Opium Ball
DESCRIPTION:Heyman Center for the Humanities\, Second Floor Common Room \nSpeaker: Benjamin Breen\, Assistant Professor in the Department of History\, University of California Santa Cruz \nRespondent: Joel Klein\, Haas Fellow\, Chemical Heritage Foundation \nThis event is part of the series\, Explorations in the Medical Humanities. \n\n\nThe opium poppy (Papaver somniferum) is one of the plants that has stood longest at the side of humans — and one of the most ambiguous. It can be deeply harmful; it can also be miraculously helpful. It is a European native that somehow became an enduring symbol of Orientalism. Today\, it continues to serve as the raw material for a host of copyrighted and hugely valuable pharmaceutical compounds\, while also exemplifying a bygone medical tradition. This talk sketches out three ways of looking at opium within a bounded historical context. We will look first at the deep history of Papaver somniferum\, which has an ancient heritage of medical and recreational use in Europe. The second way of looking at an opium ball raises the question of why opium became so closely associated with Persia\, India\, and eventually China from the seventeenth century onward. I link this shift to the emergence of new theories of medicine\, biology\, and empire in early modern Europe\, and\, perhaps even more importantly\, to unheralded technological changes such as the invention of the opium pipe and the hookah. The third view of an opium ball is to look not at it\, but inside it: opium itself is not in high demand today\, but the opiate molecules it contains are more popular than ever. The final section of the talk will consider how the isolation of morphine from opium (circa 1803) transformed not just this particular drug\, but the history of drugs and pharmaceuticals as a whole. These three views of an opium ball are meant to highlight both the protean identities of the drug in different times and places\, and the surprising continuities between them. \n\n\n About the series:\n\n\nThis lecture series will explore the enigma of how what we write relates back to the experience of bodies in different stages of health and disease. Our speakers will explore how the medical humanities build on and revise earlier notions of the “medical arts.” At stake are the problems of representation and the interpretation of cultural products from the past and present through medical models. \n\n\nSponsored by The Society of Fellows in the Humanities\, the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society\, and the Center for Science and Society.
URL:https://blogs.cuit.columbia.edu/scisoc/cssevent/explorations-medical-humanities/
LOCATION:Heyman Center Common Room\, Columbia University\, 74 Morningside Drive\, New York\, NY\, 10027\, United States
CATEGORIES:Center for Science and Society Events,Columbia University Events,NYC Metro area events
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