School of History and Philosophy of Science
RESEARCH SEMINAR
[The University of Sydney]
[https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20250903/1b/a4/88/03/e95181de0f6f29ce7859bfff_1276x854.jpg]
Weaving Genetics with Silk in Japan
Lisa Onaga (Max Planck Institute)

Dates: Monday, 8/9/2025
Time: 5:30pm
Venue: F23.501. Michael Spence Building, Level 5, Room 501
How to register: Free, no registration required
Website: 
https://hps-events.sydney.edu.au/<https://t.e2ma.net/click/sjb42x/8zmgipmb/4silc2e>

Abstract: When the history of raw silk is traced by following the thread of 
commodity formation and trade, our capacity to fully grasp the interactions 
among the insects, plants, and humans responsible for silk-making can become 
limited. The enormous economic significance of export-bound raw silk 
manufactured and directly traded from Japan mainly to US American consumers 
since the mid-1800s until its peak in the 1930s is a case in point. The volume 
of raw silk unraveled from the cocoons of silk moths had peaked just before the 
Pacific War to over 40,000 tonnes per year (around 400 times the mass of a blue 
whale!). On the one hand, the low barrier to participation in 
sericulture—cocoon cultivation––spurred this scale of production in Japan, 
which enabled experts, bureaucrats, and industry leaders to organize an unruly 
multiplicity of cocoon-spinners strains and nationally reform sericultural 
practices. On the other hand, another negotation was taking place at the site 
of cocoon-spinners’ bodies. In this talk, I highlight key scientific and 
technological developments that took place as biologists and sericulturists 
strove to control the reproduction and diversity of kaiko (蚕 / Bombyx mori) at 
every stage of their metamorphosis—egg, larvae, pupae, moth. Tracing how 
sericulturists and scientists sought to improve the material properties of 
cocoons and silk, and importantly, the means to rear kaiko more than once a 
year, sheds light upon the new forms of value ascribed to cocoon spinners’ 
hereditary information. Archival materials and scientific papers are analyzed 
in this reconstruction of the institutional development of genetic research in 
Japan, enabled through attentiveness to a range of sericultural improvement 
efforts. Ultimately, diverse forms of kaiko represented more than problems to 
solve; they had become tools and above all, biological resources for the 
archipelagic nation to protect.

Bio: Lisa Onaga is a Senior Research Scholar at the Max Planck Institute for 
the History of Science, where she leads the “Proteins and Fibers: Scaffolding 
History with Molecular Signatures” Working Group.

[https://images.e2ma.net/0/images/templates/spacer.gif]


[The University of Sydney]
Keep in touch
[Facebook]<https://t.e2ma.net/click/sjb42x/8zmgipmb/kljlc2e>
[Twitter]<https://t.e2ma.net/click/sjb42x/8zmgipmb/0dklc2e>
[Instagram]<https://t.e2ma.net/click/sjb42x/8zmgipmb/g6klc2e>
[LinkedIn]<https://t.e2ma.net/click/sjb42x/8zmgipmb/wyllc2e>
[YouTube]<https://t.e2ma.net/click/sjb42x/8zmgipmb/crmlc2e>
Copyright © 2025 The University of Sydney, NSW 2006 Australia
Phone +61 2 9351 2222 ABN 15 211 513 464 CRICOS Number: 00026A

Please add [email protected] to your address book or senders safe list to 
make sure you continue to see our emails in the future.

Manage<https://app.e2ma.net/app2/audience/signup/1976084/1957350/1439152614/105406278118/?s=SnPFRwSl2cwJRi41VUEdAKTGHEkhmQOC40Hs-8GQhgM>
 your preferences | Opt 
out<https://t.e2ma.net/optout/sjb42x/8zmgipmb?s=Fh2w3SoSEhHIdjY0l-hl5FxJPBoNOb0PhgmmaARcDoI>
 using TrueRemove®
Got this as a forward? Sign 
up<https://app.e2ma.net/app2/audience/signup/1976084/1957350.1439152614/> to 
receive our future emails.
View this email online<https://t.e2ma.net/message/sjb42x/8zmgipmb>.

Disclaimer<https://t.e2ma.net/click/sjb42x/8zmgipmb/sjnlc2e> | Privacy 
statement<https://t.e2ma.net/click/sjb42x/8zmgipmb/8bolc2e> | University of 
Sydney<https://t.e2ma.net/click/sjb42x/8zmgipmb/o4olc2e>


---------
SydPhil mailing list

To unsubscribe, change your membership options, find answers to common 
problems, or visit our online archives, please go to the list information page:

https://mailman.sydney.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/sydphil

Reply via email to