Bicentennial Holmes Lecture: Museums and Medical Knowledge: past, present and future
A special Bicentennial Holmes Lecture on the history and current relevance of medical museums in the university setting
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Delivered by:
Sam Alberti, PhD, FRSE
Director of Collections, National Museums Scotland
Honorary Professor, University of Stirling
Hosted by: David Eidelman, MDCM, Vice-Principal (Health Affairs) and Dean of the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences and organized by the Maude Abbott Medical Museum and the Department of Social Studies of Medicine, this lecture opens the two-day Bicentennial celebration, Maude Abbott and the Medical Museum.
For more information and registration, click here.
Speaker:
Samuel J. M. M. Alberti, PhD, FRSE, is Director of Collections at National Museums Scotland, and an Honorary Professor in Heritage Studies at the University of Stirling in Scotland. For 20 years he has worked at the intersection of museums and universities, first in Manchester, then as Director of Museums and Archives at the Royal College of Surgeons of England (including the Hunterian Museum), while holding visiting research appointments in London, Philadelphia, and Edinburgh. While his recent practice has focussed on the role of museums in the climate emergency and Cold War museology (he is currently Principal Investigator on the AHRC project, ‘Materialising the Cold War’), he maintains an affectionate interest in medical museums.
Synopsis:Ìý
Museums and Medical Knowledge: past, present, and future:ÌýAlthough populated by the dead, medical museums are for the living. From their roots in the Enlightenment, medical practitioners have gathered pathological and anatomical material for clinical and educational benefit. This practice reached its zenith around 1900, when Maude Abbott led a generation of medical curators who gathered, arranged and taught with extensive medical collections in universities and elsewhere. Over the twentieth century, their functions and audiences shifted, as the profession and public alike became more interested in medical heritage. This gave rise to the flurry of redevelopments in the past two decades, when museums and universities alike activated their collections for public benefit. This is evident not only in their galleries but also in their collecting and programming – as illustrated by one area of particular relevance, the use of medical museums to promote a deeper understanding of disability and difference. What links these curators, collections and activities is the intention to use medical collections public good: whether clinical, educational, social or cultural. The Bicentennial of À¦°óSMÉçÇø’s world-class collection is an apposite time to reflect on the past, present and future of the use of varied medical knowledge by medical museums around the world.
The Holmes Lecture will be preceded by a virtual tour premiere of the Maude Abbott Medical Museum, with an exclusive in-depth look at the Museum’s two new exhibitions, followed by a live Q&A with museum director Richard Fraser, MDCM.
On March 18, a day-long symposium will bring together individuals interested in the life and work of Maude Abbott, longtime Curator of the museum and will showcase research on Dr. Abbott’s medical innovations, museology experience, publications, teaching, exhibitions, role as a pioneering female doctor and relationships with other individuals. Please consult the full program .
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