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Events

Workshop: Fever - Global Histories of Disease, 1750-1840

We are excited to announce the workshop “Fever: Histories of (a) Disease, c. 1750-1840” (programme below), which will take place on 10 and 11 July 2025 at the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences, Karlstraße 4, 69117 Heidelberg. 
Hosted by the ERC CoG Project FEVER based at Heidelberg University, this workshop seeks to bring together historians interested in fever(s), widely considered the period’s most common and fatal ailment, in societies within or tied to the Atlantic world.

If you would like to join us, register at: fever.project@zegk.uni-heidelberg.de.

Fever workshop, 10-11 July 2025

Programme

Thursday, 10 July 2025

Tabelle

10:00
Arrival, coffee & welcome
10:15
Opening & Introduction (Stefanie Gänger, Yijie Huang, Teresa Göltl, and Jenny Sure)
10:30–13:00
Panel I: Fevers and Difference 
Kevin Siena (Trent University)
Fevered Formations: How fever contributed to formulations of race, class and heredity in the eighteenth century
Adam Warren (University of Washington)
Fevers, Epidemics, and Medical Geography in Early Nineteenth-Century Peru
Teresa Göltl (Heidelberg University)
Managing Fever(s): Slavery and Medical Practices in the Caribbean (1820–1848)
13:00–14:30
Lunch Break 
14:30–17:00
Panel II: Causation
Margaret DeLacy (NW New York)
John Clark, contagion, and the Newcastle Fever Hospital debates
Ricardo Cabral Freitas (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro)
A torrid court in the tropics: fevers and tropical climate in Rio de Janeiro, 1808-1821
Jenny Sure (Heidelberg University)
“Von Schrecken, Furcht und Sorge werden alle Natürliche Bewegungen stockigt“. The Passions as Cause, Sign and Remedy of Fever

FRIDAY, 11 JULY 2025

Tabelle

9:00–11:30
Panel III: Temporality 
Alexander Wragge-Morley (University of Lancaster)
Fever, Periodicity and Habit in 18th Century Europe
Philippa Carter (University of Cambridge)
The death of a diagnosis: phrenitis, c. 1750–1840
Stefanie Gänger (Heidelberg University)
On Obstinate Fevers and Lingering Ailments, ca. 1750–1830
12:00
Snack break
12:15–14:45
Panel IV: Society 
Christopher Hamlin (University of Notre Dame)
Afebrility as a Human Right in Dublin, 1800-1830
Eleanor Kerfoot (University of Oxford)
Fever and the dead body in England, 1750-1800
Yijie Huang (Heidelberg University)
Febrile undercurrents between Britain and China, c. 1790-1850
15:00–15:30
Concluding remarks