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April 2017

Two Cultures Reading Group – CP Snow and the Atomic Bomb

April 13, 2017, 5:00 pm - 6:00 pm

The inaugural meeting of our reading group will take place on April 13 at 5 pm in 513 Fayerweather. We will be discussing "The New Men" (1954), a novel that centers around the British atomic bomb project in the 1940s. Together with "The Masters" it was awarded the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1954 but fell out of fashion only a few years later.

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Exploratory Works: Drawings from the Department of Tropical Research Field Expeditions

April 13, 2017, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
The Drawing Center, 35 Wooster St
New York, NY 10013 United States
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This exhibition brings to light for the first time an archive of images that illustrate the formation of our modern definition of nature. William Beebe (1877–1962) was one of America's greatest popularizers of ecological thinking and biological science. Beebe literally took the lab into the jungle, rather than the jungle to the lab. The Department of Tropical Research was pioneering in that, under Beebe’s direction, women were hired as lead scientists and field artists. Artist Isabel Cooper, joining in 1919, publicly relished her opportunity to travel through the jungles of Guyana juggling a “vivid serpent or tapestried lizard in one hand, and the best grade of Japanese paintbrush in the other.” The structure of The Drawing Center’s exhibition will mirror the two salient stages of the Department of Tropical Research's investigations: jungle field station work and floating laboratories for marine biology —revealing that artists and scientists worked closely and productively in the near past and that scientists once understood art as a valuable tool for promoting ecological thinking to a broad public.

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Rose Holz – Art in the Service of Medical Education: The Robert L. Dickinson-Belskie Birth Series and the Use of Sculpture to Teach the Process of Human Development from Fertilization Through Delivery

April 13, 2017, 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
New York Academy of Medicine, 1216 Fifth Avenue at 103rd Street
New York, NY
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Professor Rose Holz examines the life of Dr. Robert L. Dickinson (1861-1950), sexologist, gynecologist, artist extraordinaire (and highly active Academy Fellow), investigating the hugely influential Birth Series sculptures he created in 1939 with fellow artist Abram Belskie. The Birth Series illustrates the process of human development from fertilization through delivery. First displayed to much fanfare at the 1939-1940 New York City World's Fair, the sculptures were reproduced in a variety of forms and sent out to medical teaching institutions and public health museums across the nation and the globe. Their effect, moreover, cannot be underestimated. The Birth Series both shaped modern gynecological education for aspiring practitioners and educated lay individuals in matters of pregnancy and reproduction and gave rise to new understandings of pregnancy radically different from those that held sway in the 1800s. In doing so, it also helped create the language and imagery central to modern reproductive politics.

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The Medical Legacy of War – Perspectives from the Field

April 14, 2017, 8:00 am - 5:00 pm

Explore a unique perspective on post-traumatic stress disorder and war with Academy Fellow Randi Epstein as she discusses the medical and psychological aspects of conflict with two veteran war correspondents, journalist and writer Judith Matloff and photographer Robert Nickelsberg. The conversation will explore Matloff’s No Friends but the Mountains: Dispatches from the World’s Most Violent Highlands. Nickelsberg, a TIME magazine contract photographer for 25 years, accompanied Matloff on several trips. His photographs will be on display as the panel discusses capturing war images with an eye to the physical and psychological trauma suffered by soldiers and civilians. Books will be available for purchase at the event.

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Stephanie M. Fullerton – Practicing Precision: Reflections on the Pursuit of Genomic Research in Clinical Settings

April 14, 2017, 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
Vagelos Education Center, Columbia University, 104 Haven Avenue
New York, NY 10032 United States
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Stephanie M. Fullerton gives a talk on Practicing Precision: Reflections on the Pursuit of Genomic Research in Clinical Settings. Precision medicine, defined by NIH as “an emerging approach for disease treatment and prevention that takes into account individual variability in environment, lifestyle and genes,” is predicated on programs of biomedical (especially genomic) research that gather, aggregate, and store for indefinite open-ended use patients’ biological specimens, self-reported (and soon mobile-mediated) lifestyle and environmental exposure data, as well as private health information.

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Patricia Falguières – The Mimesis of the Ancients

April 17, 2017, 8:00 am - 5:00 pm

The NYU German Department presents a public lecture, “The Mimesis of the Ancients," by Patricia Falguières (EHESS, Paris). This talk will take place on Tuesday, April 25th at 5:00pm in the first floor Great Room of 19 University Place. This lecture is associated with the graduate seminar The Culture of the Renaissance: A Re-Translation, taught by Professors Juliet Fleming (English) and Christopher Wood (German), and is supported by the NYU Center for the Humanities.

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Language and the Brain: How Our Brains Turn Sounds into Words

April 18, 2017, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Kolb Research Building, Columbia University, 40 Haven Avenue; 7th Floor Conference Room
New York, NY United States
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Here’s your chance for a behind-the-scenes introduction to how neuroscience research works. Bring your family and friends to Late Night Science, a seminar series with lab tours by graduate students of Columbia University Neuroscience Outreach (CUNO).

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Exhibition Tour—Picturing Math: Selections from the Department of Drawings and Prints

April 19, 2017, 10:30 am - 11:30 am
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1000 5th Avenue
New York, NY 10028 United States
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This gallery tour allows visitors to explore the new exhibition Picturing Math: Selections from the Department of Drawings and Prints. The visualization of mathematics has taken many forms since the advent of printing. Animated by tensions between the abstract and the figural, the geometric and the gestural, these works from The Met collection show how artists from the 15th century to contemporary times have engaged in the creation and communication of mathematical knowledge through the use and production of images. To learn more about the exhibition and view selected images, visit the Met's website.

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Evidence: An Interdisciplinary Conversation about Knowing and Certainty

April 21, 2017 - April 22, 2017
Jerome Greene Hall Room #103, Columbia University, 435 West 116th Street
New York, NY 10027 United States
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The conference will bring together academic scholars, public policy makers, non-governmental advocates, and media experts to discuss the state of “evidence” today. Our goal is to examine the use of evidence – from massive data sets to individual case studies – within and across the disciplines.

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Joanna Radin – Latent Life in Biomedicine’s Ice Age

April 21, 2017, 3:30 pm - 4:30 pm
New York Academy of Medicine, 1216 Fifth Avenue at 103rd Street
New York, NY
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The History of Medicine and Health Working Group of the Consortium for the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine meets monthly to discuss a colleague’s work in progress or to discuss readings that are of particular interest to participants. The next meeting of the Medicine and Health Working Group of the Consortium for the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine is on Friday, April 21, 2017, at 3.30 ET.

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