Most Recent
Lecture
The Making of a Chinese Medicine Text
Tue., April 23, 2019
Sean Bradley, Ph.D. candidate at the University of Washington, explores the history and development of an early text on emergency Chinese medicine, the Zhouhou beiji fang 肘後備急方 (Emergency Medicines to Keep on Hand), by the 4th-century alchemist and scholar, Ge Hong 葛洪.
Conference
Stereotypes and Stereotyping in the Early Modern World
Fri., April 19, 2019
The use and abuse of stereotypes is not limited to present-day politics. In this conference, experts in British and American history examine stereotypes related to such vital issues as race, religion, gender, nationality, and occupation.
Lecture
Off the Beaten Tracks: Little-Known Facts and Well-known Fiction about Chinese Railroad Workers
Wed., April 17, 2019
Sue Fawn Chung, professor emerita at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, presents facts and fictions about late 19th-century Chinese railroad workers, introducing newly published work on the subject: The Chinese and the Iron Road.
Lecture
Stars Under the Microscope: Ancient Stardust in Meteorites
Mon., April 15, 2019
Larry Nittler, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism at the Carnegie Institution for Science, discusses how he uses microscopic analyses to understand what "presolar" stellar fossils - tiny grains of dust in meteorites - tell us about the evolution and inner workings of stars and the chemical histo
Video
Conserving The Blue Boy in Public
Fri., April 12, 2019
One of the most iconic paintings in British and American history, The Blue Boy, made around 1770 by English painter Thomas Gainsborough (1727-1788), is undergoing its first major conservation treatment since its acquisition in 1921.
Video
The Internal British Landscapes of Celia Paul and John Constable
Thu., April 11, 2019
Catherine Hess, chief curator of European art, explains how the work of these two British artists resonates across centuries.
Lecture
From Duck Lane to Lazarus Seaman: Buying and Selling Old Books in England During the 16th and 17th Centuries
Wed., April 10, 2019
H.R. Woudhuysen, rector of Lincoln College, Oxford, talks about the market for old books and manuscripts in England in the time of the Tudors and Stuarts in this Zeidberg Lecture.
Lecture
A New Tool to Map Entire Galaxies
Mon., April 1, 2019
Rosalie McGurk, Fellow in Instrumentation at Carnegie Observatories, discusses how she is using the latest technological advances to build a new, custom-designed instrument for Carnegie Observatories' Magellan Telescopes that can peer into the Universe with extreme detail, making it possible to e
Lecture
Botany and the Roots of the British Conquest of Sri Lanka
Sun., March 31, 2019
Sujit Sivasundaram, director of the Centre of South Asian Studies at the University of Cambridge, discusses the historic gardens that existed in Sri Lanka before the arrival of the British and the changes they faced during the colonial period.
Lecture
The Power of Objects
Wed., March 27, 2019
Jennifer Van Horn, assistant professor at the University of Delaware, discusses the goods Anglo-Americans purchased and used in the 18th century, from dressing tables to portraits to peg legs in this Wark Lecture.
Lecture
Sino-Buddhist Medicine: A Missing Link in the Global History of Medicine
Tue., March 26, 2019
C. Pierce Salguero, associate professor of Asian History and Religious Studies at Penn State Abington, provides an introduction to the principles of Sino-Buddhist medicine, the product of centuries of cross-cultural exchange between medieval India and China, with particular focus on pharmacology and medicinal plants.