STS Circle at Harvard
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Henry Turner
Rutgers, Radcliffe Institute

on
Corporations in the Scientific and Political Life of Early Modern England


Monday, April 15
12:15-2:00 p.m.
Pierce Hall, 29 Oxford Street, Room 100F

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Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to 
sts<mailto:[email protected]>@hks.harvard.edu<mailto:[email protected]> 
by 5pm Today, April 10.

Abstract: This talk provides an overview of a book on the history of 
corporations in England in the 16th and 17th centuries, from Thomas More to 
Thomas Hobbes.  It introduces the variety of activities for which corporations 
might be formed; it situates the corporation, as both an institution and an 
idea, in the history of political thought and in the history of technology, 
using it to offer some provisional definitions of these two domains of activity 
and to examine how they condition one another.  If time allows, the paper will 
also take up the idea of "fiction" in the classical and early modern periods, 
esp. in relation to theater, to see if it can usefully be viewed as a 
quasi-technological category.




Biography: Henry S. Turner is Associate Professor in the Department of English 
at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, where he specializes in the history of 
theater, literary theory, and intellectual history, especially the history of 
science and of political thought.  He is the author of The English Renaissance 
Stage: Geometry, Poetics, and the Practical Spatial Arts, 1580-1630 (Oxford, 
2006), of Shakespeare's Double Helix (Continuum, 2008).  He is the editor of 
The Culture of Capital: Property, Cities, and Knowledge in Early Modern England 
(Routledge, 2002), co-editor of a special issue of Configurations on 
"Mathematics and the Imagination," and co-editor of the book series "Literary 
and Scientific Cultures of Early Modernity" (Ashgate Press).  His essays have 
appeared in Shakespeare Quarterly, Renaissance Drama, ELH, and Isis, among 
other venues; he is spending the 2012-13 academic year at the Radcliffe 
Institute for Advanced Study on an ACLS Burkhardt Fellowship.  More information 
and downloads of his essays can be found at 
www.henrysturner.com<http://www.henrysturner.com>.  Members of the STS Circle 
may be particularly interested in "Lessons from Literature for the Historian of 
Science (and Vice Versa): Reflections on 'Form'" Isis 101.3 (2010): 578-89.

A complete list of STS Circle at Harvard events can be found on our website:
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
Follow us on Facebook: STS@Harvard<http://www.facebook.com/HarvardSTS>




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