“Medical Modernities” -- Call for Papers for SAM Panel at the 2025 SCS in Philadelphia (Deadline March 15)
Society of Classical Studies 156th
Annual Meeting
JANUARY 2-5, 2025
PHILADELPHIA
Call for Papers for Panel Sponsored
by the Society for Ancient Medicine
“Medical Modernities”
Organized by Aileen Das (University of Michigan) and
Calloway Scott (University of Cincinnati)
When reflecting on the causes for
the errors in Galen’s writings, the medieval Islamicate physician-philosopher
Abū Bakr al-Rāzī (d. c. 925 CE) proposes in his Doubts about Galen
(Koetschet 2019) that the ‘arts never cease progressing towards and approaching
perfection’. Additional discoveries, he continues, are more easily reached
because ‘what took the ancients a long time to find out comes to their
successors very quickly’. Al-Rāzī seems to be exceptional in his forthrightness
about the advantages contemporary, or ‘modern’, physicians have over their
forebearers in the practice of their craft. There is a rich body of scholarship
(e.g., von Staden 2009; Tieleman 2023) that has tracked how past Greco-Roman doctors
such as Galen himself choose to align themselves with famous precursors,
notably Hippocrates and Plato, to construct their expertise, even when their
own theories respond critically to these authorities. This panel invites papers
that consider how physicians across time and in various antiquities mobilize
the medical past to define their contribution to their respective medical
tradition(s). Papers could, for example, focus on how ancient doctors position
themselves in relation to their modern contemporaries as opposed to past
practitioners. For instance, a contribution could contextualize the Hippocratic
writers’ own understandings of medicine’s capacity to be completed in relation
to other fifth-century BCE notions of the nature of ‘art’ (technē). A
more expansive approach might pursue how medical traditions construct their
‘modernity’ against the perceived past of ‘Others’, such as Greek modernity as
opposed to Egyptian antiquity. Alternatively, a general line of inquiry could
explore how doctors conceive of medicine’s chronology: what constitutes the
medical past, present, and future?; is it a closed tradition capable of
reaching perfection, as al-Rāzī suggests, or is it open-ended? We also
encourage submissions that approach this topic from a presentist angle: how do
biomedical practitioners today invoke the medical past in their archaeologies
of certain diseases or methodologies? Along this line, papers could tackle the
ethically fraught issue of retrospective diagnosis, where modern physicians or
historians attempt to interpret in biomedical terms what ancient actors
suffered from based on (primarily) textual and material evidence. What
pedagogical purpose does retrospective diagnosis serve, if any, in the teaching
of the medical past? How is retrospective diagnosis an outcome of modern
divisions in the academy: does this type of scholarship replicate disciplinary
silos, in which doctors and historians produce their own separate histories of
medicine, or encourage new disciplinary configurations?
Abstracts must be no more than 500
words, not including bibliography, and should contain the following
information:
- a clear initial statement of purpose,
- a brief explanation of the abstract's relationship to
the previous literature on the topic, including direct citations of any
important literature
- a summary of the argumentation
- some examples to be used in the argumentation.
The abstract should make it clear
that the paper is suitable for oral presentation within a 20-minute time limit.
For full details, please see the SCS Guidelines for Authors of Abstracts.
Please send anonymized abstracts (no
personal details in the abstract or accompanying document) by email to Aileen
Das (University of Michigan) at ardas@umich.edu
by March 15, 2024. The organizers will review all submissions
anonymously, and their decision will be communicated to the authors of
abstracts by April 5, 2024.
Works Cited
Koetschet, Pauline (2019). Abū
Bakr al-Rāzī «Doutes sur Galien». Berlin: De Gruyter.
Tieleman, Teun (2023). ‘Galen
Between Medicine and Philosophy”, in Aileen R. Das (ed.), Galen’s Humanistic
Medicine. Göttingen, Mohr Siebeck, 127–134.
Von Staden, Heinrich (2009) ‘Staging
the Past, Staging Oneself: Galen on Hellenistic Exegetical Traditions’, in Chris
Gill, Tim Whitmarsh, and John Wilkins (ed.), Galen and the World of
Knowledge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 132–56.
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