Call for papers: moving digital medicine and science into museums

This may appeal to some of you:

The 15th biannual conference of the European Association of Museums for the History of Medical Sciences (EAMHMS) will be held at the University of Copenhagen, 16-18 September, 2010. This year's conference focuses on the challenge to museums posed by contemporary developments in medical science and technology.

The image of medicine that emerges from most museum galleries and exhibitions is still dominated by pre-modern and modern understandings of an anatomical and physiological body, and by the diagnostic and therapeutical methods and instruments used to intervene with the body at the 'molar' and tangible level -- limbs, organs, tissues, etc.

The rapid transition in the medical and health sciences and technologies over the last 50 years -- towards a molecular understanding of human body in health and disease and the rise of a host of molecular and digital technologies for investigating and intervening with the body -- is still largely absent in museum collections and exhibitions.

As a consequence, the public can rarely rely on museums to get an understanding of the development and impact of the medical and health sciences in the last 50 years. Biochemistry and molecular biology have resulted in entirely new diagnostic methods and therapeutic regimes and a flourishing biotech industry. The elucidation of the human genome and the emergence of proteomics has opened up the possibility of personalised molecular medicine. Advances in the material sciences and information technology have given rise to a innovative and highly productive medical device industry, which is radically transforming medical practices. But few museums have so far engaged seriously and in a sustained way with these and similar phenomena in the recent history of medical sciences and technologies.

read the entire conference description and call for papers here, at Medical Museion.

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Hi Jessica,

I know itâs several days old now, but your post reminded me of considering the same questions as raised in the call for papers a number of years ago when my home town museum advertised that it was seeking a new director. In my daydreams I was going to apply, succeed (of course!) and introduce modern science to the museum I explored as a kid (my grandfather worked there). The daydream was just fantasy, but it got me to thinking about this science could be presented to the public.

Anyway, I've written a blog post with some vague thoughts in it. I hope you can forgive this pocket advertorial, but at least it's on topic! (Given it's in a comment, maybe it ought to be a commentorial?)

I've linked to the article on my name, below.

Grant