Print

Print


reminder...


Scientific Communication and its History – III

Climate and Weather: Science as Public Culture

Conference at the Maison Française d’Oxford

7 – 9 January 2013




Call for Papers

This is the third conference in a series devoted to historical and  
contemporary perspectives on the communication of science and  
technology.

Climate and weather provide a particularly rich and challenging case  
study to complete the conference series. The climate sciences are  
characterised by complexity: in their professional networks; their  
conceptual models; and the logistics of their large-scale data and  
computing needs. Yet few modern scientific disciplines attract the  
same level of public engagement, in both everyday life and passionate  
debate on the future of the planet. Moreover, their status at the  
intersection of policy, scientific controversy and the public sphere  
is not a recent development: the same issues and fault lines ran  
through meteorology from the 18th-century onwards.

Shifting interests within the history of science and the development  
of environmental history have greatly expanded the field in recent  
years. The conference will provide an opportunity to reflect on these  
historiographical developments via a specific focus on the  
communication of weather and climate from the 18th to the 21st  
centuries. Papers are invited to address three themes in particular:



Commodification of meteorological knowledge - The recent period has  
been rich in new connections between meteorology and the market:  
weather derivatives and weather insurances to manage the ‘cost’ of  
weather, as well as wind mapping for the installation of wind farms  
and wind modelling for energy trading, among other things. Can we  
trace a long history of the nexus between meteorology and the economy  
broadly conceived? For instance: the study of price cycles, the  
anticipation of harvests, agricultural insurance for storms and  
gales, weather forecast for maritime companies, the selling of  
meteorological instruments, calendars and almanacs, the climate as a  
commodity in the context of the rise of tourism practices.


Media – The diversity and transformation of means to represent and  
present weather, from the central aggregation of dispersed data in  
numerical tables to innovative cartographical strategies, and from  
new broadcast media such as radio and television to the use of  
museums as venues for public communication, are key features. Special  
attention could be paid here to the public controversies raised by  
the gap between demands for reliable prediction (weather forecasts,  
climate simulations) and uncertainties in data and models.


Historicizing climate history – In relation to climate change, the  
history of climate and weather events is receiving increasing  
attention. However, the practices of collecting and assessing data  
concerning extreme seasons, meteorological disasters and atmospheric  
parameters (temperature, rainfall etc.) has a long history. These  
practices were widespread in the 18th century within the scholarly  
tradition of “chronology” and in the community of natural philosophy,  
and from the early 19th century onwards among historians,  
orientalists, natural historians and practitioners of the new  
discipline of ‘climatology’. The conference will explore this long- 
term history of weather and climate reconstruction and history.  
Special attention will be paid to the construction of thermometric  
memory: in addition to the new media of registration, how was an  
instrumental regime created to assure the continuity of thermometric  
measures? What kind of architectural settings, gestural knowledge and  
instrumental protection allowed the comparability of measurement  
across time? How has public engagement with climate history developed  
and been negotiated?


Offers of papers should include a title and an abstract of up to 300  
words, and be sent to Thomas Le Roux ([log in to unmask])  
by 15 September 2012. The programme will be announced at the  
beginning of October 2012.

Funding for travel and accommodation will be available, in particular  
for doctoral students. The conference will last from Monday 7th,  
evening – with a reception at the Museum of the History of Science  
including a private view of the exhibition “Atmospheres:  
Investigating the Weather from Aristotle to Ozone”– to Wednesday 9th,  
beginning of the afternoon.


Organised by the Maison Française d’Oxford, in collaboration with the  
Museum of the History of Science, and with the support of the French  
Embassy, London.

Organising Committee
Pietro Corsi, Oxford University
Jean-Baptiste Fressoz, Imperial College, London
Robert Fox, Oxford University
Stephen Johnston, Museum of the History of Science, Oxford
Muriel Le Roux, ENS/IHMC, Paris – Maison Française d’Oxford
Thomas Le Roux, Maison Française d’Oxford
Fabien Locher, CRH (CNRS/EHESS), Paris
John Perkins, Oxford Brookes University
Viviane Quirke, Oxford Brookes University