From: Sarah Seinitzer <sarah.s...@gmail.com>
Dear colleagues,
The Centre for the History of Science at the University of Graz is organizing a workshop from young scholars for young scholars with the title Making women visible in philosophy and history of science.
The workshop takes place on the 7th. March until the 8th. March 2023 at the University of Graz. It is also possible to attend online with the attached link (https://unimeet.uni-graz.at/b/sar-y5k-ulr-k2j). Below you will find the programme for this workshop.
We are looking forward to welcoming you in Graz or virtually!
Kind regards,
The Organizing Committee
Centre for the History of Science
University of Graz
Programme of the Workshop:
Tuesday, 07. March 2023
13.00–13.30
Welcoming and Opening
Panel I: (In)visible women in science and philosophy
Chair: Tanja Eigner-Grassmugg (University of Graz)
13.30–14.00
Masha Bratishcheva (Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa):
Behind the husband: Women Scientists in the 19th
century
14.00–14.30
Ties van Gemert (Tilburg University):
Suzanne Bachelard’s Place in the Historiography of
French Philosophy of Science
14.30–15.00
Coffee Break
15.00–15.30
Mar Rivera Colomer (Universitat d'Alacant):
Women and science an issue to (just) commemorate?
15.30–16.00
Hortense Van Loock (Université libre de Bruxelles):
The Matilda Effect: When invisibilization becomes visible
16.00–16.45
Discussion
17.30–19.00
Keynote: Julia Gebke (Austrian Academy of Sciences):
“Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence”.
Unmasking and Overcoming Myths about Primary Sources in
History
19.30
Dinner
Wednesday, 08. March 2023
Panel II: Political dimension of women and invisible groups in society and science
Chair: Sarah Seinitzer (University of Graz)
09.00–09.30
Leonie Himmerich (University of Hamburg):
Is the ethics of care a feminist approach to morality?
09.30–10.00
Kaja Kröger (University of Hildesheim):
Communism and Intimacy: Alexandra Kollontai on Love and
Sexuality
10.00–10.30
Amelie Herzog (University of Vienna):
Challenging International Law as a Male Domain: Female
Contributions to International Intellectual Cooperation and
Education
10.30–11.00
Coffee break
11.00–11.30
Amara Esther Chimakonam (University of Johannesburg):
Afro-communion Feminism: Going Beyond Gender Dichotomy in
Science
11.30–12.00
Merima Omeragic (University of Sarajevo):
The Muslim Women’s Question and the role of women
intellectuals and the austro-hungarian rule in Bosniaand
Herzegovina
12.00–13.00
Discussion
13.00–14.00
Lunch break
Panel III: Women in Science and Philosophy in the Early Modern Period
Chair: Lisa Brunner (University of Graz)
14.00–14.30
Jorge Bonet Gómez (Università della Svizzera italiana, Lugano):
Olivia Sabucco: a Spanish philosopher who advanced the early
modern medicine
14.30–15.00
Rebecca Partikel (Philipps University of Marburg):
Between copy, collage and artistic adaptation: Maria
Clara Eimmart’s astronomical paintings at Museo della Specola
(Bologna)
15.00–15.30
Louisa-Dorothea Gehrke (Leipzig University):
Pineapples and Baltic birds – The naturalist
activities of Anna Renata Breyne in the 18th-century Gdańsk
15.30–16.00
Discussion
16.00–17.00
Coffee break
17.00
Jasmin Özel (Leipzig University), Andrea Reichenberger
(University of Siegen):
Briding the Gender Gap on Wikipedia - Perspectives
from Teaching Practices in Philosophy of Mathematics