Gilbert's Magnetic Terrella (London 1600)Douglas's Dendrochronology (USA 1920s)The Phaistos Disc (Greece 1700BC) Limpid Sphere from Bosch's Garden of Eathly Delights (Antwerp 1500s)Fludd's Colour Wheel (London 1626) Weber Grothers' Wave Analysis (Saxony 1824)The Solar Sysytem by Nicholas Copernicus (Rome 1543)
• Next event: In the company of animals, 29 November 2005
• 2005 event: It's epidemic
• 2003 event: Art and Imaging
• 2002 event: Living Science, Living Art
• 2001 event: Seeing red: colour perception and feeling
• 2000 event: The First Dennis Rosen Memorial Lecture

Kircher's Subterranean Fires (Rome 1665)
Events & Reports

It's Epidemic
Arts and science perspectives on infection from Sander Gilman and John Oxford

Thursday 24 February 2005, 7.00pm-8.30pm at the Royal Institution

New diseases fuel our collective fears - just as historic plagues once did. But how do we come by our ideas about infectious diseases? Leading cultural and literary historian Sander Gilman and distinguished virologist John Oxford will share their different perspectives on efforts to understand the impact of infectious diseases. Is there a history of story - telling that allows us to understand how we deal with infectious diseases? How can studying epidemics of the past tell us about our future? Without the proper attention we may find ourselves retelling old, sad stories.

Sander Gilman is Distinguished Professor of the Liberal Arts and Medicine at the University of Illinois in Chicago. John Oxford is Professor of Virology at Barts and The London Hospital, Queen Mary's School of Medicine and Dentistry.

This event was a partnership between the Ri and the Dennis Rosen Memorial Trust.



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