Workshop: 'Consumers of the exotic, 1670-1730,' April 5-6 2017, University of Cambridge

Workshop: 'Consumers of the exotic: European commerce and the consumption of materia medica, 1670-1730'

April 5-6, 2017

University of Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, NCR

 

The workshop will explore the ways in which exotic plant materials were processed, bought and consumed in European metropoles and at royal courts, in the decades around 1700. Why did European consumers buy—and more significantly ingest—exotic plant materials? How did they understand their properties and significance? How was their consumption shaped hospital trials, advertising, and the behavior of high-profile trend-setters, particularly at royal courts? When and why was the efficacy and even safety of given exotic drugs questioned or cast into doubt? And which experts could credibly pronounce upon their effects on the European body?

 

Please find the programme below. All are welcome, but please inform Dr Justin Rivest (jr723@cam.ac.uk) if you wish to attend, as numbers may be limited for reasons of space.

 

April 5

 

COFFEE

10:30-10:45

Emma Spary and Justin Rivest

WELCOME AND INTRODUCTION

10:45-11:00

 

Session I CONSUMPTION CASE STUDIES

11:00-12:30

G. A. Cook University of Hong Kong

Consuming the exotic in Switzerland: Garcin’s ‘Maduran pills’

 

Irene Fattacciu  University of Turin Reasons and implications of changes in food consuming patterns: the appropriation and diffusion of chocolate between Spain and New Spain

 

 

LUNCH BREAK

12:30-14:00

 

Session II NETWORKS OF KNOWLEDGE

14:00-16:00

Samir Boumediene  CNRS Lyon Jesuits’ recipes, Jesuits’ receipts: the Society of Jesus and the introduction of exotic drugs in 17th century Europe.

 

Šebestián Kroupa  University of Cambridge  Producing and consuming drugs in Manila at the turn of the eighteenth century

 

Victoria Pickering  British Museum Contributors and connections: exotic material in Hans Sloane’s botanical collection

 

 

COFFEE BREAK

16:00-16:15

 

Session III DECENTERING THE EXOTIC

16:15-18:15

B. Harun Küçük University of Pennsylvania

Ali Münşi (d.1750) and American exotica

 

Clare Griffin Max Planck Institute for the History of Science

What is ‘exotic’ anyway? The view from Moscow

 

Paula De Vos San Diego State University

Appropriation of the exotic in the Palestra pharmaceutica (Madrid, 1706) of Félix Palacios

 

 

DINNER

20:00

 

Session IV KNOWING AND EXPERIENCING THE EXOTIC

09:30-11:30

Emma Spary University of Cambridge

The inscrutability of cinnamon: how to prove when you had the right drug

 

Hjalmar Fors Karolinska Institutet

The exotic in the here and now of early modern European experience

 

Laia Portet University of Cambridge

Choosing drugs and naming the exotic in Paris

 

 

April 6

 

COFFEE BREAK

11:30-11:45

 

Session V REACHING THE CONSUMER

11:45-13:15

Wouter Klein Universiteit Utrecht

Exotic drugs and the intricate balance of the early modern medical market: a case study of Peruvian bark and negative publicity, c. 1730

 

Justin Rivest University of Cambridge

Medicating the French foot soldier, 1689-1714: The role of exotic drugs

 

 

LUNCH

13:15-14:45

PLANNING SESSION FOR VOLUME

14:45-15:30

CLOSE

15:30

 

Emma Spary and Justin Rivest, University of Cambridge

 

NB: The workshop immediately follows Dr Valentina Pugliano's conference on 'Medicine, Environment and Health in the Eastern Mediterranean World, 1400-1750' on 3-4 April, which may be of interest to participants. Please don't contact Justin about this, as it is a separate event—contact Valentina at valentina.pugliano@gmail.com.

 

Justin Rivest, PhD

Research Associate

Faculty of History

University of Cambridge

phone: 07514 160602

e-mail: jr723@cam.ac.uk 

Announcements: