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Histories of Knowledge (HEC-AS-HISKNO-22)

HEC-AS-HISKNO-22


Department HEC
Course category HEC Area Seminar
Course type Seminar
Academic year 2022-2023
Term 1ST TERM
Credits 1 (EUI History seminars)
Professors
Contact Parrini, Alba
  Course materials
Sessions

06/10/2022 11:00-13:00 @ Sala del Torrino, Villa Salviati

13/10/2022 11:00-13:00 @ Sala degli Stemmi, Villa Salviati

20/10/2022 11:00-13:00 @ Sala del Torrino, Villa Salviati

27/10/2022 11:00-13:00 @ Sala del Consiglio, Villa Salviati

03/11/2022 11:00-13:00 @ Sala del Consiglio, Villa Salviati

10/11/2022 11:00-13:00 @ Sala del Consiglio, Villa Salviati

17/11/2022 11:00-13:00 @ Sala del Consiglio, Villa Salviati

24/11/2022 11:00-13:00 @ Sala degli Stemmi, Villa Salviati

29/11/2022 9:00-11:00 @ Sala del Consiglio, Villa Salviati

08/12/2022 11:00-13:00 @ Sala degli Stemmi, Villa Salviati

Description

The history of science and the history of the social sciences have been traditionally kept distinct. The former is a well-established field, with its literature, its institutions, and its principled divisions. The former has been a fragmented and uneven development, mostly written by representatives of the disciplines under scrutiny. Of late, however, historians have increasingly questioned this separation, often under the banner of the history of knowledge (or knowledges). By exploring the history of knowledge broadly conceived, this seminar will address the principles of periodization and classification that have structured our understanding of science. It will examine hybrid scientific or epistemic practices that fall somewhere between the natural and the social sciences, such as medicine, psychology, epidemiology or astrology, as well as the construction of distinctions between science, pseudo-science and charlatanism. It will attend to how the construction of information, archives and data inflect the histories we write. It will also address the boundary work that goes into maintaining a distinction between “nature” and “society” at a time when their imbrication seems to require an overhaul of our cognitive, social and political models. 

 

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