What is it about the weather? Measuring “meteorosensitivity”

What is it about the weather? Measuring “meteorosensitivity”

Maximilian Gregor Hepach introduces the (historical) conceptual problems accompanying the measurement of weather’s impact on health.

By Institute for Medical Humanities

Date and time

Location

Institute for Medical Humanities • Confluence Building • Durham University

Stockton Road #Building, Lower Durham DH1 3LE United Kingdom

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour 30 minutes

The Measurement Lab is pleased to invite you to this hybrid seminar featuring Dr Maximilian Gregor Hepach, Assistant Professor (Research) in Geography, Wellcome Trust Early Career Fellow, and Fellow at the Institute for Medical Humanities.

What is it about the weather that impacts human health and well-being? How might these impacts be measured? I will present some early ideas and responses to both these questions, engaging with the long history of ideas around weather (and the human body) as well as the more recent history of research in medical meteorology and human biometeorology. Central to my argument will be how attempts at measurement, at securing weather as a measurable object in order to scientifically assess weather-health impacts, are generative of complicated conceptual problems that foreground the limits of knowledge and experience. “Meteorosensitivity”, the vulnerability or exposure of the mind and body to changes in weather, keeps these problems in focus.

About the speaker

Maximilian Gregor Hepach is Assistant Professor (Research) in Geography at Durham University. His current project titled ‘Under pressure: a historical and cultural geography of meteorosensitivity’ examines the different ways weather’s impact on health and well-being have been understood historically, and how those differences play into present day weather-health warning practices under pressure from climate change. Previously, he was project coordinator and postdoctoral research with Weather Reports (2022-2024, Potsdam, AHRC & DFG).

His recent publications include “Reading Wind Diffractively: Elemental Chiasmus as Theory and Method”: exploring, amongst other aspects, the relationship between measurement and experience with relation to wind: https://doi.org/10.1525/001c.127960

https://hepach.org/

This event is free to attend. The virtual link will be shared closer to the date.

This seminar is part of the Measurement in the History of Medicine Speaker Series, co-hosted by the Discovery Research Platform for Medical Humanities and the Centre for the History of Medicine and Disease at Durham University.

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Based at Durham University, we are the UK's first Institute for Medical Humanities. Our research explores human experiences of health and ill-health using an interdisciplinary arts and humanities approach.