Contact
Phone: +44 1784 443401
Organisation profile
The focus of the Centre is the history of bodies and their material dimension, and more precisely the study of the changing relationship between the body and the surrounding material world from the Antiquity to the present day. The Centre launched in autumn 2010, and is part of the History Department at Royal Holloway University of London. The Centre brings together scholars of health and intimacy, politics and identity, consumption and urban planning and visual and material culture with the intention of promoting intellectual exchange and collaboration in this new field. The Centre is currently running a seminar series on ‘Fashioning the Body’.
The Centre currently covers a broad range of themes and a wide geographical scope. They include the study of:
- Byzantine medical texts as artefacts and their impact on therapies
- The body in its relationship to the physical environment, especially the disease environment, and to the provision of health care across late antiquity and the Middle Ages
- Changing ideas and practices of healthy lifestyles and salubrious houses in Italy between 1500 and 1700
- The royal and aristocratic body in early modern Europe
- The study of the body as a microcosm of the universe and politics in the Middle Eastern and Islamic perspective
- The material culture of the homes and gardens in Victorian and Edwardian England
- The impact of the design, decoration and furnishing of residential institutional spaces on the experiences of their inmates in early modern Europe and 19th century Britain
- The development of networks for the transmission of goods in modern China
- Middle-class housing and consumption in Muslim South Asia
- The impact of urban development and city planning on people’s experience in post-colonial Pakistan
- Women’s holocaust experiences with particular reference to rape and sexual abuse
- The body and medicine in twentieth-century Britain, especially professional bodies
- The cultural transmission of values and beliefs in memory, especially in relation to the consumption of food
- The origins and development of family photographs and the material and visual cultures of the photographic postcard in modern Britain.
FASHIONING THE BODY
Seminar Series 2011-12
The History Department, Royal Holloway University of London
Seminars will take place at Royal Holloway, 11 Bedford Square, London WC1, Room F1, on Wednesday at 5.00pm.
Convenors: Sandra Cavallo, Jane Hamlett, Weipin Tsai , Anna Whitelock.
2011 Autumn Term
26 October. Suzy Knight, ‘Fashioning Faith: the Renaissance Rosary as Fashionable Amulet and Devotional Tool’.
23 November. Giulia Calvi (EUI), ‘Across three Empires. Balkan Costumes in Sixteenth-Century Europe’.
14 December. Lesley Hoskins (RHUL), 'Clothing, Control and Identity in the Lunatic Asylum, 1840-1914'
2012 Spring Term
25 January. Lizzy Currie (RHUL), 'Ganymede's Hose and Cupid's Doublet: Fashion and Effeminacy in Late Renaissance Italy'.
15 February. Juliet Ash (RCA), 'Seams of Change: From Uniforms and Treadmills to Intimations of Rehabilitative Reform in Prison Clothing in Britain 1860s - 1900's'.
21 March. Ina Zweiniger-Bargielowska (Illinois), '"Healthier and Better Clothes for Men”: Men’s Dress Reform in Interwar Britain'.
If you are coming from outside RHUL please send an email to Weipin Tsai weipin.tsai@rhul.ac.uk or in advance so that we can let security know that you will be coming.
AND...
Centre for the History of Bodies and Material Cultures and Centre for Victorian Studies: Joint Seminar
Nigel Jeffries (Museum of London), 'Examining the lifecycle of households, people and archaeological assemblages in Victorian London'
3rd November 3-5pm The Bedford Library Seminar Room, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham.
ALL WELCOME!
Publications
(101)- Forthcoming
Anatomy of an Assassination Attempt: Shahrukh and the Timurid Intellectuals in 830/1426
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article
- Published
Being Middle Class in late colonial Punjab
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter
- Forthcoming
Paul Wittek: A Man in Dark Times
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter
Activities
(6)Simon Online
Activity: Public engagement, outreach and knowledge exchange › Other
Reflecting on practice and pain: Problems of sympathy and empathy in oral histories of trauma
Activity: Conference contribution › Participation in workshop, seminar, course
Toward an oral history of European urology – a workshop
Activity: Conference contribution › Participation in workshop, seminar, course
Projects
(3)Exploring the re-use of life history data in understanding health and identity
Project: Funded Project › Research
At Home in the Institution? Asylum, School and Lodging House Interiors in London and South East England, 1845-1914
Project: Funded Project › Research
Healthy Homes, Healthy Bodies. Domestic Culture and the Prevention of Disease in Renaissance and Early Modern Italy
Project: Funded Project › Research
ID: 23639