Salim Al-Gailani
| Name: | Salim Al-Gailani |
| Affiliation: | Department of History and Philosophy of Science |
| E-mail: | (only provided to users who are logged into talks.cam) |
| Last login: | 30 May 2008, 8:21 a.m. |
Public lists managed by Salim Al-Gailani
Talks given by Salim Al-Gailani
Obviously this only lists talks that are listed through talks.cam. Furthermore, this facility only works if the speaker's e-mail was specified in a talk. Most talks have not done this.
- Folic acid between science, policy and the market: mainstreaming pre-conceptional vitamins in the 1980s and '90s
- Antenatal affairs: discourses of pregnancy and the unborn c.1900
- Private science and public morals: the diary of a late-Victorian teratologist
- The 'Great Ice Age' of anatomy: learning from frozen sections c. 1900
- Pregnancy, pathology and public morals: making antenatal care in early twentieth-century Edinburgh
- Monstrous deliveries: fetal anomalies and the making of facts in nineteenth-century obstetrics
- Tropical invalids: climate and culture in nineteenth-century British natural history
Talks organised by Salim Al-Gailani
This list is based on what was entered into the 'organiser' field in a talk. It may not mean that Salim Al-Gailani actually organised the talk, they may have been responsible only for entering the talk into the talks.cam system.
- Swinging into crip time: teenage limb loss and art making in 1960s London
- Neonates and neoliberalism in contemporary British history
- Early Soviet cinema, trauma and the psychoneuroses of revolution
- AIDS and the Naz Project: British Asian AIDS activism in the nineties
- AIDS and the Naz Project: British Asian AIDS activism in the nineties
- The global health focus on early life: origin stories
- Brain studying brain: the neuro disciplines in the early Cold War
- A postgenomic quilt: how endophenotypes came to revolutionize the meaning of genetic difference
- Skin colour assessment in the age of biological diversity
- How the fetal period became part of the life course: birth cohort studies and prenatal development from the 1960s to the present
- Plague and plantations: science, extraction, and global connections in Mauritius, 1899β1933
- Towards a social(ist) model of disability? Exploring the Soviet roots of twentieth-century disability politics
- Baby Blues and BBC Television: Postpartum psychosis narratives, stigma and support in 1970s Britain
- The campaign against leprosy in contemporary China
- Professional ethics, medical professionals and the famine of 1932β1933 in Soviet Ukraine
- Medicine workers in the mountains: upland gatherers in the Min River Valley and China's natural medicinal products trade, 1890β1960
- 'Scandinavian, safe and sanitary!' The commercialisation of menstruation in Norway and Sweden, 1940β1990
- Finding women's 'everyday health': testimonies and experiences
- Humanising genetics: changing practices, emotions and identities of clinical genetics in the late 20th century
- Eating with animals, eating animals, and eating like animals: scientific nutrition and cross-species methods in the 20th century
- How silence became 'outdated': secrecy, anonymity and artificial insemination by donor, 1950sβ1990s
- 'The Great Kanto Earthquake' and 'Doctors, patients and the two languages'
- Global actuarial science in the making of the universal healthcare system in the Republic of China, 1935β2010
- Finding women's 'everyday health': testimonies and experiences
- Insects and the infrastructure of Empire: tropical agriculture and biological control in early 20th-century Hawai'i
- Black eugenics and the politics of reproduction
- 'She's wearing it!' Gender, tinkering, and the design of hearing aids
- Technoscience in the tropics: public agricultural research and environmental imaginaries in Brazil
- 'Constipated, toothless fatties': body and diet in twentieth-century Britain
- As small as a grain of barley: the Bourbon state and the caesarean operation in New Spain, 1771β1810s
- The medical book in the Victorian pornography trade
- After the end of disease: looking past the epidemic narrative
- 'Highly coloured': race, ethnicity and the NHS
- Coping with recalcitrance: futility, frustration and failure in the history of cancer research
- Group formations: surgeons and artists in Victorian group portraiture
- A delicate alliance: aid agencies and the media in Britain since the 1960s
- Knowledge-making in southern New Zealand
- Triangulations: poetry, plants and politics in the late eighteenth century
- Spaces of geography in early nineteenth-century Paris
- Spaces of geography in early nineteenth-century Paris
- Buffon and Martinet's Natural History of Birds (1765-1783): text, images and collections
- Mary Read and Anne Bonny: two eighteenth-century pirates
- Saved by servitude: the display of horses at the Natural History Museum in London
- Locating species identity: towards a biogeography of transgenic life
- Transatlantic hum: Mexican hummingbirds and the French encyclopedic project
- Distancing animals in medieval chronicles
- Gideon Mantell, Thomas Hardy, and the politics of geological knowledge
- Cartographies of a scientific county: mapping Cornwall
- Skulls, science and the spoils of war: frontier violence and the creation of the US Army Medical Museumβs cranial collection, 1869-1900
- βWhat is meant by this system?β Charles Darwin and the visual re-ordering of nature
- Animals in medical experiments in the Middle Ages
- The hunter's gaze: establishing a 'period eye' in Charles Darwin's scientific methodology
- 'Ecological reconnaissance': expert visitors to Northern Rhodesia in the 1950s
- Practice and technique in the twentieth-century natural history museum
- 'Peripheral vision': science and Creole patriotism in eighteenth-century Spanish America
- Hippocratic bodies: Castas and temperament in the New Spain
- 'Objects, images, books'. Networks of validation in mid-nineteenth-century geology: Italy, France, England
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