Today on The HPS Podcast, Thomas Spiteri speaks with Dr. Surekha Davies, historian of science, art and ideas, and author of the new book Humans: A Monstrous History (University of California Press). Surekha’s research explores how ideas about humanity have been shaped by encounters with what did not seem to fit. She draws on visual, material and textual sources to show how people have imagined and defined the human across time.
In this episode, Surekha:
Traces her path into HPS, from Star Trek dreams to Renaissance studies
Explains why visual and material sources are crucial to understanding early modern science
Introduces her book Humans: A Monstrous History
Tell us about how monstrosity functioned as an epistemic tool for organising knowledge and drawing conceptual boundaries
Examines how these ideas influenced concepts of gender, race and empire
If you’ve ever wondered how the strange and unfamiliar shaped science, culture, and our understanding of humanity, this episode is for you.
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