Event

May 16, 2018
Proteins & Fibers Inquiry I: Animal Histories on the Proteomic Horizon

This micro-workshop is the first of a series of cross-disciplinary inquiries designed to identify new approaches in the study of animals in history. By forging a conversation around the historical and scientific studies of animal fur, hair, keratin, and silk, the possibilities for reading animal materiality as historical sources are explored. State of the craft biomolecular methods used to characterize ancient to contemporary animal-derived proteinaceous objects are discussed relative to historical challenges that have informed the reliability of, and relatedly, trust in various scientific dating practices. The fruition of new proteomic methods especially prompts workshop participants to explore how new historical puzzles have arisen in animal evolutionary history, textile history, or in the history of scientific analyses of animal proteins.

 

Address

MPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Germany

Room
Room 265
Contact and Registration

To register and access the pre-circulated readings and papers that will be discussed in this micro-workshop, please email event_dept3@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de. Please include your name and affiliation in your email.

Programme and Abstracts
2018-05-16T10:00:00SAVE IN I-CAL 2018-05-16 10:00:00 2018-05-16 16:00:00 Proteins & Fibers Inquiry I: Animal Histories on the Proteomic Horizon This micro-workshop is the first of a series of cross-disciplinary inquiries designed to identify new approaches in the study of animals in history. By forging a conversation around the historical and scientific studies of animal fur, hair, keratin, and silk, the possibilities for reading animal materiality as historical sources are explored. State of the craft biomolecular methods used to characterize ancient to contemporary animal-derived proteinaceous objects are discussed relative to historical challenges that have informed the reliability of, and relatedly, trust in various scientific dating practices. The fruition of new proteomic methods especially prompts workshop participants to explore how new historical puzzles have arisen in animal evolutionary history, textile history, or in the history of scientific analyses of animal proteins.   Lisa Onaga Lisa Onaga Europe/Berlin public