成人VR视频

Upcoming Seminars & Events

Seminars will take place live and in person on Wednesdays

2:30PM 鈥 4:00PM

Room 101, 3647 Peel Street


Seminars and Events - Winter 2026


Department Seminar

January 21, 2026 [POSTPONED]

Elise Burton (University of Toronto)
鈥淎 Gene That Tells the Parsi Story:鈥 Medical Genetics and Transnational Community Identity

A deficiency of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) is one of the world鈥檚 most common inherited enzyme disorders. While individuals with G6PD deficiency can be found across the globe, in some locales, it has become a genetic marker signifying communal identity. This talk explores the history of medical genetic research on the Parsi communities of India from the 1950s to the early 2000s, showing how this research shaped Parsis鈥 sense of relationship to their ancestral homeland in Iran and the Zoroastrians who remained there. Between the 1960s and 1980s, G6PD deficiency emerged as the condition that dominated Parsi discourses around genetic counseling, population health, and migration history between Iran and India. I examine how the gene for G6PD deficiency came to be perceived as 鈥渁 gene that tells the Parsi story,鈥 considered a biological confirmation of the community鈥檚 origins as well as a medical liability connected to the community鈥檚 historical strategies for survival.



Margaret Lock Seminar

February 4, 2026

Emily Yates-Doerr (Oregon State University)
鈥淭he Biologies of Memory: Generational half-life and the Inheritance of Affliction鈥

In September 1954, twenty-one-year-old Minnie Doerr developed sudden-onset lymphoma 鈥 one of several cancer cases reported in her small South Dakota town that fall. Her family and neighbors blamed nuclear testing, pointing to three days of red dust that had blanketed their farming community the previous summer. Seventy years later, memories of this cancer cluster continue to feed into distrust of federal authority and scientific expertise. This talk, based on archival and family ethnography, situates the story of Minnie's premature death within sciences linking ionizing radiation to cancer. By comparing the biologies of history (Landecker 2016) to present-day controversies about the safety of radiation exposure, the talk illustrates how memory embeds itself in bodies and communities. I conclude by discussing what Minnie鈥檚 short life can teach us about the entanglement of rumors and truth, and point to how situating biologies (Lock 1995, Niew枚hner and Lock 2018) can reshape the landscape of biopolitics.听



Dr. Martin A. Entin Lecture in the History of Medicine

March 11, 2026

Pablo F. G贸mez (University of Wisconsin鈥揗adison)
"The Early Atlantic Slave Trade and the Invention of Modern Corporeality"

This talk examines how early Atlantic slave trading communities made human corporeality articulable with a new set of ideas about finance, facts, objectivity, and measurable risk that emerged in the early modern era. These communities drew on centuries of legal, commercial, financial, and maritime material customs and ideas. Through their violent procedures, Iberian Atlantic slave trading communities abstracted and assimilated groups of human bodies to numbers. They did so to protect their financial interests rather than caring for enslaved people. The ruthlessness inherent in these practices became ingrained in the modern corporeal mathematics that emerged from the early slave trade and diffused through its vast political, financial, logistical, and intellectual networks. The model for understanding human bodies these communities created foreshadows and shares basic notions with those sustaining the intellectual edifice of disciplines as varied as political arithmetic, economics, population health, demographics, epidemiology, and contemporary biomedicine.



Roundtable

April 1, 2026
2:30pm - 5:00pm
McIntyre Medical Building, Room 208/9
3655 Promenade Sir William Osler
成人VR视频 Downtown Campus


Uncomfortable Remains:听A roundtable on discomfort in the medical museum

Medical museums provoke strong emotional responses鈥攔esponses that sharpen in the presence of human remains, now widely characterized as听uncomfortableor as听difficult听collections. Collections of听uncomfortable remains听compel medical museums to reflect critically on their pasts and to confront the difficult choices woven into practices of care, interpretation, and display.a

The SSoM roundtable听Uncomfortable Remains听treats this unease not as something to resolve or avoid, but as a starting point for conversation. Rather than asking what makes human remains uncomfortable in museum settings, we ask: what can be done with that discomfort? Should difficult, uncomfortable histories be shown in museums? Can unease open up new ways of learning or reflecting? Can curiosity, learning experiences, and discomfort coexist in the same visitor, at the same moment? And what, more broadly, feels uncomfortable about the experience of discomfort?

Participants:
Erin McLeary, Senior Director of Collections & Research, M眉tter Museum
Arizona O鈥橬eill, Illustrator, author of听Opioids and Organs
Cara Krmpotich, Professor of Museum Studies, University of Toronto
Richard Fraser, Director, Maude Abbott Medical Museum, 成人VR视频

Moderated by Hugo Rueda Ram铆rez, Post-Doctoral Researcher, SSoM

Poster:听PDF icon Roundtable Poster April 1 2026


SSOM workshop

Writing on Medicine in Climates of Controversy听

April 22, 2026 听1:00 pm -
Thomson Hall Ballroom, 3rd听floor
3650 Rue McTavish听



Workshop in honour of George Weisz

May 13, 2026
Thomson Hall Ballroom, 3rd floor
3650 Rue McTavish


Seminars and Events - Fall 2025

Department Seminar:听Headshot Maduka Pai

September 3, 2025

Madhukar Pai (成人VR视频)

Reimagining global health in an era of polycrisis and nationalism

Book Launch:听Book Cover

September 18, 2025,听Lobby 3647, 4:00pm

Bruner Strasser and Thomas Schlich听(成人VR视频)

Comments by听Thomas Schlich (SSoM), Ramona Rodrigues (Ingram School of Nursing), Jill Baumgartner (成人VR视频 Centre for Climate Change and Health), Prativa Baral (Dept. of Global and Public Health)

Book Launch:听Book Cover

October 15, 2025, Lobby 3647, 4:00pm

Laurence Kirmayer (成人VR视频)

Department Seminar:听听Photo Geoffroy Carpier

October 22, 2025

Geoffroy Carpier (成人VR视频)

Staging early phase cancer trials on the spot: how institutional review boards navigate the interface of science and ethics

Osler Lecture听听Photo Kim TallBear

November 5, 2025 6:00PM

(University of Minnesota)

THE INDIAN WHO REFUSES TO VANISH 鈥 RACE, GENOMICS, AND INDIGENOUS THRIVING

Location: Charles F. Martin Amphitheatre (room 504) McIntyre Building

Recent Scholarship Roundtable听 听Photo Krista Maxwell

November 26, 2025

(University of Toronto)听 to discuss Indigenous Healing as Paradox: Re-Membering and Biopolitics in the Settler Colony听(University of Alberta Press 2025)

With听Tuyaa Montgomery (Anthropology, 成人VR视频), Wanda Gabriel (Social Work, 成人VR视频), Leslie Sabiston (Anthropology, 成人VR视频), Dennis C. Wendt (Education, 成人VR视频)

Previous Seminars and Events

Winter 2025

Department Seminar:Photo Sophie Bjork-James

January 22, 2025听听

听(Vanderbilt University)听听

Race and Abortion Politics in the US

This talk covers the racial politics of the pro-life movement from Roe v. Wade (1973) to the Dobbs decision (2022). In doing so, it explores how opposing abortion changed from a primarily Catholic position to become an evangelical one, uniting evangelical values voters and helping to reshape US politics nationally. Beginning in the 1970s, white evangelicals across the United States began to politically organize against abortion by framing fetuses as the most persecuted group in history. Using language like the 鈥渁bortion holocaust鈥 and 鈥渢he Civil Rights issue of our time,鈥 evangelicals attempted to turn abortion, rhetorically, into a new racial justice issue. This talk shows how race has remained central to abortion politics in the United States.


Margaret Lock Seminar听听Photo Anthony Stavrianakis

February 5, 2025

(CNRS)

"What鈥檚 therapeutic about a 鈥club th茅rapeutique鈥? On the functions and effects of a particular form of institutional psychotherapy


Recent Scholarship Roundtable听 听Book Cover photo

February 6, 2025

(CNRS), to discuss Crucible of the Incurable: Facing ALS鈥 (Cornell University Press, 2024)


The Dr. Martin A. Entin Lecture in the History of Medicine听 听Photo Monica Green

March 12, 2025

听(Independent Scholar)

How Genetics Has Changed the History of the Black Death, And How History Has Changed Genetics

Leacock Building, room 232 (Senate room)
855 Sherbrooke St W


Themed Roundtable听听Mental Institution

April 2, 2025 2:30 to 4:30pm

Place and Psyche

With Elena Vogman (Bauhaus-Universit盲t, Weimar), Coline Fournout (成人VR视频, Anthropology), Alexandra Bacopoulos-Viau (Cornell University), Ramzi Nimr (成人VR视频, Anthropology), and Todd Meyers (Moderator: 成人VR视频, Social Studies of Medicine)

more info...


Recent Scholarship Roundtable听 听Book cover

April 23, 2025

, to discuss Psychiatric Contours: New African Histories of Madness鈥, Nancy Rose Hunt and Hubertus B眉schel, editors (Duke University Press, 2024).

PDF icon roundtable.psychiatric_contours.april_23.pdf


Book Launch听听Book Cover

May 1, 2025,听Lobby 3647, 4:00pm

Edited by Rachel Elder and Thomas Schlich (成人VR视频)

Panelists: Thomas Schlich, Rachel Elder, Lawrence Rosenberg, Cynthia L. Tang.


Book Launch:Book Launch Poster

May 7, 2025, Lobby 3647, 4:00pm

Todd Meyers听(成人VR视频)

(Duke University Press, 2025).听 听

Comments by Ramzi Nimr, Marie Lecuyer, and Setrag Manoukian.

PDF icon Gone Gone Book Launch Poster


Previous Seminars and Events

Fall 2024

Department Seminar:Theresa Ventura

September 11, 2024

, (Concordia University)

When Breast Isn't Best: Infant Mortality and the Undoing of Tropical Medicine in the American Colonial Philippines, 1898-1945


Department Seminar:Ayangma Bonoho

October 9, 2024

(Universit茅 de Montr茅al)

The WHO in Central Africa: History of International Health Colonialism (1956-2000)


Osler Lecture听听Headshot Roger Kneebone

November 6, 2024 6:00PM

(Imperial College London)

Medicine - the art of the expert performer. What clinicians can learn from the performing arts

The Jonathan C. Meakins Amphitheatre Room 521: McIntyre Building


Themed Roundtableillustration ofpeople in museum with glass display cases historic

November 27, 2024

Collections of Human Remains in the Medical Museum: Problematic Pasts, Challenging Futures

With Dominic Hall (Harvard, Warren Anatomical Museum), Catherine Turgeon (成人VR视频, Redpath Museum), Annie Lussier (成人VR视频, Redpath Museum), Richard Fraser (成人VR视频, Maude Abbott Medical Museum), Alyssa Bader (成人VR视频, Department of Anthropology) and Hugo Rueda (成人VR视频, Social Studies of Medicine).

Faculty Council Room (M48)
Strathcona Anatomy and Dentristry Building
3640 Rue University


Would you like join our seminar list? E-mail us at ssom [at] mcgill.ca

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