All Stories

  1. Alchemical Practice: Looking Towards the Chemical Humanities
  2. Making the body politic through medicine: taste, health and identity in the Dutch Republic, 1636–1698
  3. Taste and the history of science: introduction
  4. Rethinking Performative Methods in the History of Science
  5. Building the ARTECHNE Database: How to Develop a Multi-Purpose Database for an Interdisciplinary Project
  6. Technique in Early Modern Science and Philosophy
  7. Technology: Critical History of a Concept
  8. Casting life, casting death: connections between early modern anatomical corrosive preparations and artistic materials and techniques
  9. Animal Bodies between Wonder and Natural History: Taxidermy in the Cabinet and Menagerie of Stadholder Willem V (1748–1806)
  10. Gems in the Early Modern World
  11. The Structures of Practical Knowledge
  12. Boerhaave’s Mineral Chemistry and Its Influence on Eighteenth-Century Pharmacy in the Netherlands and England
  13. Criticizing Chrysopoeia? Alchemy, Chemistry, Academics, and Satire in the Northern Netherlands, 1650–1750
  14. Kimberly Anne Coles; Ralph Bauer; Zita Nunes; Carla L. Peterson (Editors). The Cultural Politics of Blood, 1500–1900. xvi + 274 pp., figs., index. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015. $95 (cloth).
  15. “Art and Technique Always Balance the Scale”: German Philosophies of Sensory Perception, Taste, and Art Criticism, and the Rise of the Term Technik, ca. 1735–ca. 1835
  16. Elizabeth Hallam (ed), Designing Bodies. Models of Human Anatomy from Wax to Plastic
  17. Book reviews
  18. Necessary, Not Sufficient
  19. Consumer Culture, Self-Prescription, and Status: Nineteenth-Century Medicine Chests in the Royal Navy
  20. Elegant Anatomy
  21. Anatomical Mercury: Changing Understandings of Quicksilver, Blood, and the Lymphatic System, 1650–1800
  22. The Fabric of the Body: Textile in Anatomical Models and Preparations, ca. 1700-1900