Catarina Madruga | Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (original) (raw)

Papers by Catarina Madruga

Research paper thumbnail of Madruga 2023 Review for Nuncius

Nuncius, 2023

Felix Driver, Mark Nesbitt, and Caroline Cornish, eds., Mobile Museums Collections in Circulation... more Felix Driver, Mark Nesbitt, and Caroline Cornish, eds., Mobile Museums Collections in Circulation. London: ucl Press, 2021. xx, 352 pp.: ill. isbn: 9781787355088.

Current debates on the often-convoluted provenance of Western collections, especially concerning practices of acquisition outside of Europe in the last 200 years, also concern the pasts and futures of natural historical collections and museums. Indeed, the past decade produced positive indications of how curators and historians of this collection-based knowledge have opened up paths to a more contextualized, historicized, and postcolonial understanding of just how these collections have been conceptualized, managed, and utilized from within a variety of political meanings.

Research paper thumbnail of 360º Ciência Descoberta. Um Esboço Historiográfico

Research paper thumbnail of Taxonomy and Empire. Zoogeographical research on Portuguese Africa, 1862-1881

Research paper thumbnail of Hugh Cagle. Assembling the Tropics: Science and Medicine in Portugal’s Empire, 1450–1700. (Studies in Comparative World History.) xix + 364 pp., illus., bibl., index. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018. £35.99 (cloth). ISBN 9781107196636

Research paper thumbnail of 360º Ciência Descoberta. Um Esboço Historiográfico

Broteria Cristianismo E Cultura, May 1, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of EXPERT AT A DISTANCE BARBOSA DU BOCAGE AND THE PRODUCTION OF SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE ON AFRICA

The career of José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823‒1907) as director of the Zoological Section of... more The career of José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823‒1907) as director of the Zoological Section of the Museu Nacional de Lisboa (National Museum of Lisbon) followed by the presidency of the Society of Geography of Lisbon is presented in this paper as an example of transfer of expertise between scientific fields, specifically from zoology to geography. Additionally, it explores the connection between scientific credit and political recognition, in the sense of the conflation of Bocage's taxonomical and zoogeographical work with the colonial agenda of his time. Although Bocage himself never visited Africa, he was part of a generation of Africanists who were members of the Portuguese elite dedicated to African matters and considered exemplary custodians of the political and diplomatic Portuguese international position regarding its African territories.

Research paper thumbnail of (portuguese) O Museu Nacional de Lisboa como Centro e como Periferia

E-Book, 2013

Methodological description of work in progress

Research paper thumbnail of Book Review: O Laboratorio Chimico da Escola Politécnica de Lisboa. História, Colecções, Conservaçao e Musealização

Research paper thumbnail of 360º Ciência Descoberta. Um esboço historiográfico

Brotéria, 2013

Associados à Revolução Científica encontram-se, tradicionalmente, os nomes de grandes personalida... more Associados à Revolução Científica encontram-se, tradicionalmente, os nomes de grandes personalidades como Copérnico, Galileu, Kepler e Newton. Os contributos destes cientistas para o desenvolvimento da astronomia, da física e da matemática são, ainda hoje, mundialmente reconhecidos. Porém, os historiadores das ciências têm salientado, recentemente, que a ciência moderna não se construiu exclusivamente a partir dos trabalhos de grandes génios. A exposição 360º Ciência Descoberta, que se encontra nas instalações da Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, em Lisboa, até dia 2 de Junho, relembra que não é possível entender o surgimento da nova ciência na Europa, no século XVII, sem se compreenderem os avanços técnicos e científicos associados aos descobrimentos ibéricos. Organizada por Henrique Leitão e Teresa Nobre de Carvalho, esta exposição pretende mostrar que, nos séculos XV e XVI, à medida que os portugueses e espanhóis iam descobrindo novas terras, novos mares, novos povos, novos céus, novas estrelas e novas espécies se ia construindo uma nova visão científica do mundo.

Research paper thumbnail of José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823-1907). A construção de uma Persona Científica”

Research paper thumbnail of 360º Ciência Descoberta. Um Esboço Historiográfico

Brotéria, 2013

Associados à Revolução Científica encontram-se, tradicionalmente, os nomes de grandes personalida... more Associados à Revolução Científica encontram-se, tradicionalmente, os nomes de grandes personalidades como Copérnico, Galileu, Kepler e Newton. Os contributos destes cientistas para o desenvolvimento da astronomia, da física e da matemática são, ainda hoje, mundialmente reconhecidos. Porém, os historiadores das ciências têm salientado, recentemente, que a ciência moderna não se construiu exclusivamente a partir dos trabalhos de grandes génios. A exposição 360º Ciência Descoberta, que se encontra nas instalações da Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, em Lisboa, até dia 2 de Junho, relembra que não é possível entender o surgimento da nova ciência na Europa, no século XVII, sem se compreenderem os avanços técnicos e científicos associados aos descobrimentos ibéricos. Organizada por Henrique Leitão e Teresa Nobre de Carvalho, esta exposição pretende mostrar que, nos séculos XV e XVI, à medida que os portugueses e espanhóis iam descobrindo novas terras, novos mares, novos povos, novos céus, novas estrelas e novas espécies se ia construindo uma nova visão científica do mundo.

Research paper thumbnail of Networks of scientific correspondence and exchange (1858-1898)

"In 1858, the royal zoological collections hosted in Lisbon became part of the Polytechnic School... more "In 1858, the royal zoological collections hosted in Lisbon became part of the Polytechnic School (1837-1911) to be of assistance to the classes in Zoology. The previous «Museu de Lisboa» at the Royal Academy of Sciences was now to be organized following proper scientific and up-to-date knowledge. José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823-1907), as the head professor in Zoology, became in 1859 the Director and first organizer of the “Zoological Section of the Museum of Lisbon”. Through his work and direction the royal collections became a museum designed as part of the exchange network of specimens and the scientific knowledge within.
To discover, collect and send home to Europe natural objects and images of the new world was a comprehensive task held by many naturalists whether with an academic, military or religious background. Nevertheless, the understanding of the knowledge held in all the thousands of specimens being brought to European collections and exchanged between European societies, academies and universities was now being completed inside the collections storage rooms.
In this paper we analyse the correspondence of Barbosa du Bocage to his foreign peers aiming to contribute for a clearer picture of the importance of the network established between private collections, universities and museums in the construction of new knowledge in the study of nature at the second half of the nineteenth century. We argue that some influential authors were organizing knowledge about nature from inside the museum’s walls and that the way the trade of specimens inside Europe was made is of major importance for the production of knowledge. Analysing the relationships established between these authors (their institutions and nations) and other professors, collectors, patrons, diplomats, naturalists and taxidermists may facilitate in the study of scientific knowledge production.

{Keywords} José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823-1907); Natural History Museums and Collections; Zoological Specimen Exchange Networks; Scientific Epistolary Networks; Polytechnic School of Lisboa (1837-1911).
"

Research paper thumbnail of Presentation and Representation: the Diorama in the Natural History Museum

Thesis Chapters by Catarina Madruga

Research paper thumbnail of Colonial Administration and Scientific Expertise

Drafts by Catarina Madruga

Research paper thumbnail of "Situated Nature" Call for Papers for collective thematic issue

Situated Nature: Field collecting practices and the construction of scientific locality in the lo... more Situated Nature: Field collecting practices and the construction of scientific locality in the long nineteenth-century

Field collecting is a political gesture. Sampling nature is a combined result of specific gestures of the hand, the use of dedicated tools, a reliance on intermediaries, on-site negotiations of natural history knowledge, and the mobilisation of agencies that are not neutral. The context of nation and empire building in the nineteenth century paralleled a soaring accumulation of natural objects supporting naturalist trade and both private and institutional collections. Practices of field collecting resonated with social and political stakes that were intertwined with matters of appropriation of the land and the environment. In the nineteenth century, experience of the field was key in the legitimation of science, and we propose a close-up approach of outdoor practices of collecting in order to better understand the localised, and situated, production of knowledge about nature. Twenty-five years after the publication of a special issue on "Science in the field" (Kuklick and Kohler, 1996) in Osiris, we intend to cast new light on the matter of field collecting of nature. We feel there is ample space for a new interrogation on the implications of the act of gathering a specimen, and we believe that issues of sourcing for intermediaries and prospect localities of collation, processes and logistics of transportation and conservation of specimens, as well as issues of the personal agendas behind collecting can benefit from the comparative approach between diverse case studies that a special issue can provide. Our proposal on the topic of "Situated Nature: Field collecting practices and the construction of scientific locality in the long nineteenth-century," follows the organisation of panels and workshops on the topic of Nineteenth-Century Practices of Collecting Nature, and will result in a submission for the open call of the British Journal for the History of Science-Themes for the 2022 issue. We are looking for researchers who investigate natural history collections in the long nineteenth-century and whose interest may fall within one or more of the following thematic and historiographical parameters: ▪ Manual labour, instructions, and logistics: collecting and collating in the field required informants, boxes and glass containers, insect pins as well as rifles. Specialized tools and recipes for preserving specimens were either transported to the field or improvised on site; ▪ Sociability, hierarchies, and identities: collecting was carried out by professional and non-professional practitioners whose individual lives, agendas and interests provide noteworthy case-studies. Issues of class, gender, race, authority, and identity were frequently a function of natural history exchanges,

Research paper thumbnail of Collectors and collections: Connecting the hinterland with the museum

This paper follows the trajectories of explorer-collectors who were appointed by the Portuguese g... more This paper follows the trajectories of explorer-collectors who were appointed by the Portuguese government to study, collect, and ship back specimens from Portuguese Africa to natural history collections in Lisbon, Coimbra, and Oporto in the second half of the 19th century. The data they provided was managed, standardized, and given meaning and publicity when it reached metropolitan institutions. By studying their contracts, instructions, practices, and results, this paper addresses how actors with direct experience of field conditions became also agents in the co-construction of metropolitan scientific agendas and political representations of Africa. As a case-study, this paper focusses on the relationship between José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823-1907), the director of the zoological section of the Museu Nacional de Lisboa, and his network of collectors that provided him with African collections, and with new species to describe. It further argues that collectors such as Bayão (1833-1883), Anchieta (1832-1897), Newton (1864-1909), among others, were, at the same time, mediators of knowledge about nature, and of political circumstances between the distant African hinterland and the museum.

Talks by Catarina Madruga

Research paper thumbnail of Appropriating Africa. Taxonomic knowledge as a means of political legitimation of the Portuguese colonial agenda in the late 19th century

(2016, September) 7th International Conference of the European Society for the History of Science... more (2016, September) 7th International Conference of the European
Society for the History of Science, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC.

Research paper thumbnail of A Zoologist's Political Agenda: Research on African Fauna in the late 19th century

(2017, April) presented at the British Society for the History of Science Post-Graduate Conferenc... more (2017, April) presented at the British Society for the History of Science Post-Graduate Conference. FLORENCE, ITALY.

Research paper thumbnail of Madruga 2023 Review for Nuncius

Nuncius, 2023

Felix Driver, Mark Nesbitt, and Caroline Cornish, eds., Mobile Museums Collections in Circulation... more Felix Driver, Mark Nesbitt, and Caroline Cornish, eds., Mobile Museums Collections in Circulation. London: ucl Press, 2021. xx, 352 pp.: ill. isbn: 9781787355088.

Current debates on the often-convoluted provenance of Western collections, especially concerning practices of acquisition outside of Europe in the last 200 years, also concern the pasts and futures of natural historical collections and museums. Indeed, the past decade produced positive indications of how curators and historians of this collection-based knowledge have opened up paths to a more contextualized, historicized, and postcolonial understanding of just how these collections have been conceptualized, managed, and utilized from within a variety of political meanings.

Research paper thumbnail of 360º Ciência Descoberta. Um Esboço Historiográfico

Research paper thumbnail of Taxonomy and Empire. Zoogeographical research on Portuguese Africa, 1862-1881

Research paper thumbnail of Hugh Cagle. Assembling the Tropics: Science and Medicine in Portugal’s Empire, 1450–1700. (Studies in Comparative World History.) xix + 364 pp., illus., bibl., index. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018. £35.99 (cloth). ISBN 9781107196636

Research paper thumbnail of 360º Ciência Descoberta. Um Esboço Historiográfico

Broteria Cristianismo E Cultura, May 1, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of EXPERT AT A DISTANCE BARBOSA DU BOCAGE AND THE PRODUCTION OF SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE ON AFRICA

The career of José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823‒1907) as director of the Zoological Section of... more The career of José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823‒1907) as director of the Zoological Section of the Museu Nacional de Lisboa (National Museum of Lisbon) followed by the presidency of the Society of Geography of Lisbon is presented in this paper as an example of transfer of expertise between scientific fields, specifically from zoology to geography. Additionally, it explores the connection between scientific credit and political recognition, in the sense of the conflation of Bocage's taxonomical and zoogeographical work with the colonial agenda of his time. Although Bocage himself never visited Africa, he was part of a generation of Africanists who were members of the Portuguese elite dedicated to African matters and considered exemplary custodians of the political and diplomatic Portuguese international position regarding its African territories.

Research paper thumbnail of (portuguese) O Museu Nacional de Lisboa como Centro e como Periferia

E-Book, 2013

Methodological description of work in progress

Research paper thumbnail of Book Review: O Laboratorio Chimico da Escola Politécnica de Lisboa. História, Colecções, Conservaçao e Musealização

Research paper thumbnail of 360º Ciência Descoberta. Um esboço historiográfico

Brotéria, 2013

Associados à Revolução Científica encontram-se, tradicionalmente, os nomes de grandes personalida... more Associados à Revolução Científica encontram-se, tradicionalmente, os nomes de grandes personalidades como Copérnico, Galileu, Kepler e Newton. Os contributos destes cientistas para o desenvolvimento da astronomia, da física e da matemática são, ainda hoje, mundialmente reconhecidos. Porém, os historiadores das ciências têm salientado, recentemente, que a ciência moderna não se construiu exclusivamente a partir dos trabalhos de grandes génios. A exposição 360º Ciência Descoberta, que se encontra nas instalações da Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, em Lisboa, até dia 2 de Junho, relembra que não é possível entender o surgimento da nova ciência na Europa, no século XVII, sem se compreenderem os avanços técnicos e científicos associados aos descobrimentos ibéricos. Organizada por Henrique Leitão e Teresa Nobre de Carvalho, esta exposição pretende mostrar que, nos séculos XV e XVI, à medida que os portugueses e espanhóis iam descobrindo novas terras, novos mares, novos povos, novos céus, novas estrelas e novas espécies se ia construindo uma nova visão científica do mundo.

Research paper thumbnail of José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823-1907). A construção de uma Persona Científica”

Research paper thumbnail of 360º Ciência Descoberta. Um Esboço Historiográfico

Brotéria, 2013

Associados à Revolução Científica encontram-se, tradicionalmente, os nomes de grandes personalida... more Associados à Revolução Científica encontram-se, tradicionalmente, os nomes de grandes personalidades como Copérnico, Galileu, Kepler e Newton. Os contributos destes cientistas para o desenvolvimento da astronomia, da física e da matemática são, ainda hoje, mundialmente reconhecidos. Porém, os historiadores das ciências têm salientado, recentemente, que a ciência moderna não se construiu exclusivamente a partir dos trabalhos de grandes génios. A exposição 360º Ciência Descoberta, que se encontra nas instalações da Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, em Lisboa, até dia 2 de Junho, relembra que não é possível entender o surgimento da nova ciência na Europa, no século XVII, sem se compreenderem os avanços técnicos e científicos associados aos descobrimentos ibéricos. Organizada por Henrique Leitão e Teresa Nobre de Carvalho, esta exposição pretende mostrar que, nos séculos XV e XVI, à medida que os portugueses e espanhóis iam descobrindo novas terras, novos mares, novos povos, novos céus, novas estrelas e novas espécies se ia construindo uma nova visão científica do mundo.

Research paper thumbnail of Networks of scientific correspondence and exchange (1858-1898)

"In 1858, the royal zoological collections hosted in Lisbon became part of the Polytechnic School... more "In 1858, the royal zoological collections hosted in Lisbon became part of the Polytechnic School (1837-1911) to be of assistance to the classes in Zoology. The previous «Museu de Lisboa» at the Royal Academy of Sciences was now to be organized following proper scientific and up-to-date knowledge. José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823-1907), as the head professor in Zoology, became in 1859 the Director and first organizer of the “Zoological Section of the Museum of Lisbon”. Through his work and direction the royal collections became a museum designed as part of the exchange network of specimens and the scientific knowledge within.
To discover, collect and send home to Europe natural objects and images of the new world was a comprehensive task held by many naturalists whether with an academic, military or religious background. Nevertheless, the understanding of the knowledge held in all the thousands of specimens being brought to European collections and exchanged between European societies, academies and universities was now being completed inside the collections storage rooms.
In this paper we analyse the correspondence of Barbosa du Bocage to his foreign peers aiming to contribute for a clearer picture of the importance of the network established between private collections, universities and museums in the construction of new knowledge in the study of nature at the second half of the nineteenth century. We argue that some influential authors were organizing knowledge about nature from inside the museum’s walls and that the way the trade of specimens inside Europe was made is of major importance for the production of knowledge. Analysing the relationships established between these authors (their institutions and nations) and other professors, collectors, patrons, diplomats, naturalists and taxidermists may facilitate in the study of scientific knowledge production.

{Keywords} José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823-1907); Natural History Museums and Collections; Zoological Specimen Exchange Networks; Scientific Epistolary Networks; Polytechnic School of Lisboa (1837-1911).
"

Research paper thumbnail of Presentation and Representation: the Diorama in the Natural History Museum

Research paper thumbnail of "Situated Nature" Call for Papers for collective thematic issue

Situated Nature: Field collecting practices and the construction of scientific locality in the lo... more Situated Nature: Field collecting practices and the construction of scientific locality in the long nineteenth-century

Field collecting is a political gesture. Sampling nature is a combined result of specific gestures of the hand, the use of dedicated tools, a reliance on intermediaries, on-site negotiations of natural history knowledge, and the mobilisation of agencies that are not neutral. The context of nation and empire building in the nineteenth century paralleled a soaring accumulation of natural objects supporting naturalist trade and both private and institutional collections. Practices of field collecting resonated with social and political stakes that were intertwined with matters of appropriation of the land and the environment. In the nineteenth century, experience of the field was key in the legitimation of science, and we propose a close-up approach of outdoor practices of collecting in order to better understand the localised, and situated, production of knowledge about nature. Twenty-five years after the publication of a special issue on "Science in the field" (Kuklick and Kohler, 1996) in Osiris, we intend to cast new light on the matter of field collecting of nature. We feel there is ample space for a new interrogation on the implications of the act of gathering a specimen, and we believe that issues of sourcing for intermediaries and prospect localities of collation, processes and logistics of transportation and conservation of specimens, as well as issues of the personal agendas behind collecting can benefit from the comparative approach between diverse case studies that a special issue can provide. Our proposal on the topic of "Situated Nature: Field collecting practices and the construction of scientific locality in the long nineteenth-century," follows the organisation of panels and workshops on the topic of Nineteenth-Century Practices of Collecting Nature, and will result in a submission for the open call of the British Journal for the History of Science-Themes for the 2022 issue. We are looking for researchers who investigate natural history collections in the long nineteenth-century and whose interest may fall within one or more of the following thematic and historiographical parameters: ▪ Manual labour, instructions, and logistics: collecting and collating in the field required informants, boxes and glass containers, insect pins as well as rifles. Specialized tools and recipes for preserving specimens were either transported to the field or improvised on site; ▪ Sociability, hierarchies, and identities: collecting was carried out by professional and non-professional practitioners whose individual lives, agendas and interests provide noteworthy case-studies. Issues of class, gender, race, authority, and identity were frequently a function of natural history exchanges,

Research paper thumbnail of Collectors and collections: Connecting the hinterland with the museum

This paper follows the trajectories of explorer-collectors who were appointed by the Portuguese g... more This paper follows the trajectories of explorer-collectors who were appointed by the Portuguese government to study, collect, and ship back specimens from Portuguese Africa to natural history collections in Lisbon, Coimbra, and Oporto in the second half of the 19th century. The data they provided was managed, standardized, and given meaning and publicity when it reached metropolitan institutions. By studying their contracts, instructions, practices, and results, this paper addresses how actors with direct experience of field conditions became also agents in the co-construction of metropolitan scientific agendas and political representations of Africa. As a case-study, this paper focusses on the relationship between José Vicente Barbosa du Bocage (1823-1907), the director of the zoological section of the Museu Nacional de Lisboa, and his network of collectors that provided him with African collections, and with new species to describe. It further argues that collectors such as Bayão (1833-1883), Anchieta (1832-1897), Newton (1864-1909), among others, were, at the same time, mediators of knowledge about nature, and of political circumstances between the distant African hinterland and the museum.

Research paper thumbnail of Appropriating Africa. Taxonomic knowledge as a means of political legitimation of the Portuguese colonial agenda in the late 19th century

(2016, September) 7th International Conference of the European Society for the History of Science... more (2016, September) 7th International Conference of the European
Society for the History of Science, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC.

Research paper thumbnail of A Zoologist's Political Agenda: Research on African Fauna in the late 19th century

(2017, April) presented at the British Society for the History of Science Post-Graduate Conferenc... more (2017, April) presented at the British Society for the History of Science Post-Graduate Conference. FLORENCE, ITALY.