Publications by authors named "Zachary Dorner"

Article Synopsis
  • The 2022 Gordon Cain Conference brought together participants to discuss the connections between the science of labor and the labor of science, focusing on themes of vulnerability, affect, and interdependence.
  • A key theme that emerged was "invisibility," leading to the creation of a collaborative syllabus aimed at examining historical and contemporary perspectives on scientific labor.
  • The syllabus features six thematic modules that aim to challenge traditional notions of invisible labor, confront gendered labor practices, and promote a more inclusive understanding of the history of science.
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By recovering the dependent, often enslaved, laborers who helped to make European medicines commercially available in the New England colonies, this article offers a new history of early American pharmaceutical knowledge and production. It does so by considering the life and labor of an unnamed, enslaved assistant who was said to make tinctures, elixirs, and other common remedies in a 1758 letter between two business partners, Silvester Gardiner, a successful surgeon and apothecary in Boston, Massachusetts, and William Jepson, his former apprentice, in Hartford, Connecticut. Using strategies from slavery and critical archive studies, as well as from social history and the history of medicine, this article emphasizes the materiality and embodiment of pharmaceutical production and follows fragmentary evidence beyond the business archive to reverse the systemic erasure of enslaved and indentured laborers from the records of eighteenth-century manufacturers of medicines.

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Tobacco, like other popular commodities, both reflected the rhythms of early modern empires and contributed to them. People, goods, and ideas crossing the Atlantic Ocean often traveled as freight in vessels bound upon other business, and much of that was tobacco business. Using a variety of historical examples, the current article explores tobacco's economic, cultural, and labor-related worlds to show how one plant shaped institutions of human enslavement, altered colonial ecologies, offered new sensory possibilities, and ruined fortunes.

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