• No results found

Conference: The Laboratory Revolution

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "Conference: The Laboratory Revolution"

Copied!
2
0
0

Bezig met laden.... (Bekijk nu de volledige tekst)

Hele tekst

(1)

Conference: The Laboratory Revolution

The Rise of the Laboratory and the Changing Nature of the University, 1850-1950

26-27 October 2017, University of Groningen, The Netherlands

Laboratories are the ultimate place where knowledge is created. What originally had been the workplace of chemists and alchemists, by the end of the nineteenth century had become a standard element in the infrastructure of science. The rise of the laboratory revolutionized the sciences in many ways and continues to do so. This development has been studied over the past decades by many historians, but the tremendous impact the rise of the laboratory had on the university is less well studied. In the nineteenth century, simple lecture halls were

replaced by purpose built science laboratories, that could dominate the city scape. Even academic disciplines that on the face of it needed no laboratory space to develop, like astronomy, psychology and linguistics, each acquired their own laboratories. Also metaphorically, the laboratory became the paradigmatic site for scientific and scholarly research, as is shown by the historians, who liked to compare their libraries to laboratories.

Finally, the nature of the academic community was tremendously changed by the rise of the laboratory, each laboratory becoming a small, self-contained community of professors, technical assistants, students, and administrative personnel.

The conference ‘The Laboratory Revolution’ intends to bring together scholars from different backgrounds to study how the laboratory changed both science and the university.

By merging the expertise of historians of science and scholarship, historians of architecture, social and cultural historians, and historians of the university, the organizers hope to create a better understanding of the revolution brought about by the rise of the laboratory – a

revolution that is still going on.

For further information, go to the website: www.labrevolution2017.com

Key Note Speakers

- Antonio Garcia Belmar (Alicante University)

(2)

- Klaas van Berkel (University of Groningen) - Ernst Homburg (Maastricht University) - Alan Rocke (Case Western University) - Geert Vanpaemel (University of Leuven) - Kaat Wils (University of Leuven)

Call for Papers

We welcome abstracts for papers on topics related to the conference theme. Possible themes include: National Traditions in Laboratory Science, Planning and Construction of University Laboratories, the Design and Architecture of Laboratories, Social Life in the Laboratory, the Differentiation of Laboratory Space, Laboratories as Teaching Units, and Instruments and Laboratories. See also the provisional program on the website of the conference.

Please send the abstract of your proposal to Professor Klaas van Berkel (k.van.berkel@rug.nl) by May 15, 2017.

The abstract must be no longer than 500 words, anonymized for the sake of blind reviewing, and sent as a doc or docx file (please do not use pdf format). The autor’s name and contact information (affiliation, address and professional status) should be specified in your e- mail message. If you are not sure whether your proposal fits in the program, feel free to contact the organizers at the above e-mail address. Notification of acceptance will be send by June 23, 2017.

Practicalities

The conference fee is € 75 for early registration, which ends on 30 June. After that date, the fee is € 100 (students pay a fee of € 50)

For further information regarding accomodation, travel and registration, see the above mentioned website or contact the organizing Groningen Congres Bureau: info@gcb.nl

Conference Organization

The conference is part of the program ‘History of the University of Groningen (1614 to the present)’, funded by the Board of the University of Groningen. The conference is also supported by the Faculty of Arts of the University of Groningen. Chair of the Scientific Committee is Professor Klaas van Berkel.

Referenties

GERELATEERDE DOCUMENTEN

The flux from a point-like source analysis centred on Terzan 5 in the same energy range (see Sect.. Given the uncertainties on the correcting

In this way, it is likely, by looking to the deconstructive approach to the past in chapter five of my book (‘The Past that Is’) rather than the diagnosis of ontological realism

Global Economy in the Asian Age, which is to prove that things happening in China fed back into world trade through India and via the Indian Ocean back to Europe.. 23 But he does

But when you are studying a specific period, let's say early modern Europe or the Industrial Revolution, I think it is hardly possible to get a coherent view of it, when you are

Rankean professionalism, disseminated through seminars and by his disciples, was centred on Ranke‟s ideas of history and its actors rather than on historical method.. According to

• gemelde wetgewing verleen die kompetensie om die bepalings daarvan af te dwing (Epping Grundrechte (2012) 62). Hiervolgens kan dit dus nie anders nie as dat slegs die individu

Daar word onder andere bepaal dat Hebreërs 38 direkte aanhalings vanuit die Ou Testament bevat, dat die Hebreërskrywer, met slegs een uitsondering, elke inleidingsformule met

Barth (1958:82) stel tereg dat die idee dat die Skrif alleen gesagvol kan wees indien dit histories-letterlik spreek, onhoudbaar is en deur die Christelike kerk laat vaar moet