History of Science Society Elizabeth Paris Lecture with Dr. Rana A. Hogarth

History of Science Society Elizabeth Paris Lecture with Dr. Rana A. Hogarth

By New Orleans Pharmacy Museum

The HSS and NOPM welcome Dr. Rana A. Hogarth for a lecture on medicine and slavery, specifically the practice of dirt/clay eating.

Date and time

Location

New Orleans Pharmacy Museum

514 Chartres Street New Orleans, LA 70130

Good to know

Highlights

  • 2 hours
  • all ages
  • In person
  • Doors at 1:15 PM

About this event

Science & Tech • Science

Descriptions of Cachexia Africana or dirt eating, a mysterious affliction of enslaved populations, peppered medical treatises and plantation guidebooks that circulated throughout slave societies of the Atlantic World. Dirt eating was notorious for leaving slaves so debilitated that they could no longer work; it caused panic among planters concerned with productivity and left white physicians largely powerless to treat it. Competing theories about dirt eating abounded, alongside suspicions of slaves’ who fell victim to it. Aside from sounding alarm over dirt eating’s alleged prevalence on plantations and frustration over its refractory nature, treatises on plantation health and on diseases of the tropics, provide insights into slaves’ own understanding of the practice. By reading these sources against the grain, with an eye towards centering enslaved people’s own visions of wellbeing, this talk seeks to answer questions about the motivations for dirt eating. Was it a means of resistance, an act of desperation, an articulation of spiritual practices with the power to heal and harm, or a manifestation of something else? Definitive answers to such questions are elusive but raising them and interrogating the circumstances behind dirt-eating orients us towards imagining slaves’ resourcefulness and expertise in managing the ills of their own bodies and communities. Attentiveness to the types of earths, clay, and substances white physicians associated with this slave affliction highlight enslaved communities’ potent materia medica, as well as practices related to the preservation of their wellbeing that posed palpable challenges to medical authorities and the slave system broadly speaking.

The Elizabeth Paris Endowment for Socially Engaged History and Philosophy of Science was established by the History of Science Society to honor the life and values of Elizabeth Paris (1968–2009), a scholar devoted to connecting the intellectual study of science with its social, institutional, and policy dimensions. Paris earned her Ph.D. at the University of Pittsburgh, taught at Harvard, held a postdoctoral fellowship at MIT, and contributed to the history of Argonne National Laboratory. Beyond her academic work, she was deeply engaged in her Nashville community, family life, and parenting advocacy. The Endowment reflects her passion for bringing people together and using history and philosophy of science to illuminate how cultural, ethical, and political contexts shape science. It will support public events at HSS annual meetings—such as lectures, forums, or family programs—that foster dialogue and highlight the broader social relevance of science, carrying forward Paris’s legacy of scholarship and community engagement.

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New Orleans Pharmacy Museum

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Free
Nov 16 · 1:30 PM CST