Hagströmer Lecture 2024: Anita Guerrini, Foreign Bodies: Humans, Animals, and Vaccine Development.

How do we balance our need for advances in medical treatment and desire for scientific knowledge with ethical obligations to humans and animals alike? Starting with Jenner’s invention of the smallpox vaccine in the 1790s, medical historian Anita Guerrini looks at the intersection of debates over vivisection, vaccination, and immigration – and the deployment of animals as bodies and metaphors.
Speaker: Anita Guerrini Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Portrait of Klara Olofsdotter Lauri.
Klara Olofsdotter Lauri,, researcher at Karolinska Institutet, Photo: Martin Stenmark

Now Available Online: 
Anita Guerrini, Foreign Bodies: Humans, Animals, and Vaccine Development.

The lecture was held at Karolinska Institutet, May 7, 2024. The Hagströmer Lecture brings historical perspectives to current issues in medicine, healthcare, and the life sciences. Invited lecturers are internationally renowned scholars in the history of medicine and science, experts on the vital issues pertaining to the lecture topic. The Hagströmer Lecture is organized by the Unit for Medical History and Heritage at Karolinska Institutet, in collaboration with the Friends of the Hagströmer Library.

 

CG
Content reviewer:
30-05-2024