In this email:
1. Pembroke Center Postdoctoral
Fellowships
2. CSHPS Call for Papers
3. History of Medicine position
announcement
--------Message 1 of 3: Pembroke Center Postdoctoral
Fellowships---------
Pembroke Center Postdoctoral Fellowships 2002-03 Theories of
Embodiment
Anne Fausto-Sterling Senior Faculty Research Fellow, Pembroke Center;
Professor of Biology and Gender Studies
In 2002-2003, the Pembroke Seminar will explore how biological
bodies become culturally expressive. Traditionally, the study of race
and gender has been subdivided into the study of biology, on the one
hand, and the study of culture, on the other. Thus, the
nature/nurture debate frames most discussions of the body, especially
with respect to gender and race. Indeed, until recently, feminist
scholarship has championed the dichotomy between sex (biology) and
gender (culture). But the body does not itself make such clear
distinctions. How can we frame the discussion of embodiment so that
biology and culture become one?
How do children develop masculine and feminine characteristics?
Why do some become more physically active than others? Why do some
become skilled in particular cognitive tasks? Why do some develop
strong interests in relationships, while others become highly
object-oriented? Why do some become more physically aggressive while
others become more verbally aggressive? How and why do these
characteristics become associated with gender? How should feminist
theorists respond to studies that suggest that prenatal hormonal
exposures account for the early emergence of masculine and feminine
characteristics or to studies that suggest male to female
transsexuals have more female-like brain structures and female to
male transsexuals have more male-like brain structures? How should
feminist scholars respond to the use of such biological findings in
court decisions?
Can feminist theory benefit from the new and expanding
knowledge of the plastic nature of brain cells, both during childhood
and adulthood? When new cultural images of the body become
incorporated into an individual's self-image, does the brain itself
actually change? Are there limits to cultural plasticity? Are there
limits to biological plasticity? How does the history of the body
affect the contemporary body? Why do men and women and people of
varied racial and ethnic backgrounds have different patterns of
disease? Does culture produce specific patterns of disease? Does
biological difference produce different patterns of disease? If
culture and biology produce disease patterns together, how do they do
so?
How do gender awareness and gender identity emerge? How does
gender become culturally specific? How do stable sexual identities
and desires form and when and why do they sometimes change over the
life cycle? How do gendered body images become incorporated into
human consciousness and why are body images at times extremely stable
and at other times quite changeable? How does racism affect early
development? Does the chronic stress of racism produce racially
weighted disease?
Varied theoretical approaches to answering the above questions
come from the fields of cultural studies, phenomenology, feminist
psychodynamic theory, socialization theory, and developmental systems
theory. Developmental systems theory seems especially versatile. It
has been applied to diverse levels of organization: biologists use
the theory to study the emergence of order as an embryo develops from
a single cell into a complex organism; cognitive scientists apply
systems theory to the understanding of brain function; developmental
psychologists use systems theory to understand the emergence of
complex motor skills and basic cognition, and political theorists use
systems theory to study complex multinational behaviors. We are
interested in the applications it might have to the study of
embodiment.
We seek applicants from all fields, but especially from
cultural studies, feminist social psychology, developmental
psychology, developmental biology, history of the body, anthropology,
cognitive psychology, and sexuality studies. As a group we will
explore theories that attempt to combine biology and culture in
flexible and imaginative ways. We are especially eager to find
scholars who are interested in applying developmental systems theory
to the study of the development of gender awareness, gender identity,
forms of sexual desire, brain and hormone development and the
cultural and historically specific expression of gendered or
racialized traits. We therefore welcome scholars who have a
background in DST even if they have not previously worked on gender
or race; similarly we welcome scholars from all fields who work on
gender and/or race and who are interested in pursuing theories that
blend biological, sociological, historical, or cultural approaches to
the problem of embodiment.
Post-Doctoral Fellowships Fellowships are open to scholars from
all disciplines. Recipients may not hold a tenured position in an
American college or university. Preference will be given to projects
in which there is significant scholarly and theoretical attention
given to the question of embodiment. This is a residential
fellowship. Fellows participate weekly in the Pembroke Seminar,
present two public papers during the year, and pursue individual
research. Brown University is an EEO/AA employer. The Center
particularly encourages third world and minority scholars to
apply.
The term of appointment is September 1, 2002-May 31, 2003. The
stipend is $30,000.
For application forms contact Elizabeth Barboza. Phone:
401-863-2643. E-mail:
[log in to unmask] The mailing address of the Center
is Box 1958, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912. The deadline for
applications is December 11, 2001. Selection will be announced in
February.
Affiliation for Visiting Scholars Scholars with
independent support who are interested in the 2002-03 research topic
and who wish to take part in the Pembroke Seminar are invited to
apply for affiliation with the Center. For more information, contact
Elizabeth Barboza (see above for phone and addresses).
--------Message 2 of 3: CSHPS Call for Papers ---------
HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
CALL FOR PAPERS
The Canadian Society for History and Philosophy of Science
(CSHPS) is holding its annual conference at University of Toronto,
26-28 May 2002. The program committee invites historians,
philosophers and other scholars of the social sciences and humanities
to submit paper, panel or workshop proposals.
The proposals and papers may be in English or French, and should have
a title, a brief abstract of 150 to 250 words, and the complete
information for correspondence. Proposals must be received by 31
January 2002 and may be sent by e-mail, fax or post to one of the
members of the program committee.
We strongly encourage email submissions. Information about Congress
registration and accommodation can be found at the Humanities and
Social Sciences Federation of Canada web site.
Please note that the CSHPS meeting, which takes place as part of the
Congress of the Social Sciences and Humanities, overlaps with the
meeting dates of a number of other societies, including the Canadian
Society for the History of Medicine (24-26 May), the Canadian
Philosophical Association May 25-28), the Canadian Society for the
History and Philosophy of Mathematics (May 24-26), and the Canadian
Historical Association (May 27-29). The CSHPS program committee
welcomes suggestions for joint sessions with these and other
societies.
Programm Web Site :
http://www.er.uqam.ca/nobel/r20430/schps_
toronto_2002/
Canadian Society for History and Philosophy of Science:
http://www.ukings.ns.ca/cshps/
Congress of the Social Sciences and Humanities:
http://www.hssfc.ca/
Programme Committee :
Ernst HAMM
Science and Technology Studies
York University
4700 Keele Street
Toronto ON M3J 1P3 Canada
Email :
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Alan RICHARDSON
Department of Philosophy
University of British Columbia
1866 Main Mall E370
Vancouver BC V6T 1Z1 Canada
Email :
[log in to unmask]
Jean-François AUGER
Centre interuniversitaire de recherche
sur la science et la technologie
Université du Québec à Montréal
CP 8888, Succ. Centre-ville
Montréal (Québec) H3C 3P8 Canada
--------Message 3 of 3: History of Medicine position
announcement ---------
History of Medicine
The Department of Social Studies of Medicine of McGill
University seeks an assistant professor in the history of medicine
(tenure track) in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The
Department is an interdisciplinary unit within the Faculty of
Medicine and includes historians, anthropologists and
sociologists. It places strong emphasis on research and
graduate supervision, but is also responsible for considerable
teaching in the Faculties of Arts and Medicine. The successful
candidate must have a Ph.D and publications (an MD would be an
additional asset) and must be able to function in both the medical
milieu and an interdisciplinary social science environment. We
will consider all areas of research interest compatible with the core
strengths of the Department in comparative medical systems and
medical knowledge in the 20th century. Curriculum vitae and
three letters of reference should be sent by December 31,2001, to
Faculty Search Committee; Department of Social Studies of Medicine;
McGill University; 3655 Sir-William-Osler Street; Montreal, P.Q. H3G
1Y6; Canada. In accordance with Canadian immigration
requirements, priority will be given to Canadian citizens and
permanent residents of Canada. McGill University is committed to
equal opportunity in employment.
--------End of messages---------
--
Professor Roberta L. Millstein
Listserv Moderator, International Society for
History, Philosophy, and Social Studies of Biology
<http://www.phil.vt.edu/ISHPSSB/>
Snail mail:
Department of
Philosophy
California State University, Hayward
25800 Carlos Bee Blvd.
Hayward, CA 94542
Email: <
[log in to unmask]>
Phone: 510-885-3546
Fax: 510-885-2123
Home page: <http://www.isis.csuhayward.edu/alss/als
s/phil/rmillste/>