Directory

Historians and allied scholars of science, medicine and technology.

Primum Mobiles

Clemency Montelle University of Canterbury Department of Mathematics

Clemency is the deputy chair of the national committee representing the country in the Division of History of Science and Technology of the International Union for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology.

Hugh Richard Slotten University of Otago Programme in Media, Film and Communication

Hugh is working with other members of the network on a bid for the International Congress of History of Science and Technology to meet in Dunedin, New Zealand in 2025. He is the chair of the national committee representing the country in the Division of History of Science and Technology of the International Union for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology.

Auckland

Ella Arbury Auckland
Research Interests: medical history; architectural history; social history; cultural New Zealand.

Ella Arbury completed a PhD in 2020 at the University of Auckland that combined medical and architectural history. Her MA thesis was a history of breastfeeding in New Zealand from 1900 to 1963. Her PhD thesis was about the influence of ideas about health on the design (both interior and exterior) of Māori and Pākehā houses in Auckland from 1918 to 1949. Her research interests include medical history, architectural history and twentieth century New Zealand social and cultural history.

Ruth Barton University of Auckland — History
Research Interests: science and culture; domestic technology; housework

My research covers three areas: science and culture in Victorian England, domestic technology and housework in 20th-century Western Australia; and the development of European science in New Zealand. The former is culminating in two books, The X Club: Power and Authority in Victorian Science (Chicago, 2018), and vol. 3 of the Correspondence of John Tyndall (edited, with Jeremiah Rankin and Michael Reidy; forthcoming Pittsburgh, 2017). My work covers biography, institutions, rhetoric, and scientific controversies and often spreads into social history and religious history. In 2012 I retired from the History Department of the University of Auckland. I had previously taught social science methodology at Curtin University of Technology in Western Australia and mathematics at Victoria University of Wellington.

Geoff Austin University of Auckland — Engineering Science
Linda Bryder University of Auckland — History
Tatjana Buklijas University of Auckland — Liggins Institute
Brian E Carpenter University of Auckland — Computer Science

I am a mainly retired computer scientist with a long-standing interest in the history of computing and networking. I have worked particularly on Turing as a computer designer, his former boss John Womersley, and on Internet history.

Grant Christie Stardome
Bob Doran University of Auckland — Computer Science
Research Interests: history of computing; totalisators.

Developed displays on the history of computing, and website, at U of Auckland. Interested in horse race gambling, the totalisator, and machinery to support it. Have a particular interest in the contributions of Alan Turing to practical computing.

JJ Elridge University of Auckland — Physics
Research Interests: astronomy; astrophysics; stars; galaxies; supernovae.

I am interested in the historical development of our understanding of astronomy and astrophysics. I am especially interested in development of stellar evolution, especially observations of historical Galactic supernovae.

Katrina Ford University of Auckland — History
Bev France University of Auckland — Education
Brian Gill Auckland Museum
Kate Hannah University of Auckland — Te Puna Matatini
Research Interests: cultural studies; gender studies; science and technology studies; cultural history of science.

I am a cultural historian with research interests in gender, science, and power. Currently, I am working on developing a novel hybrid historiography, combining network science, narrative analysis methods and approaches, and aspects of deconstructionism, seeking to test a model that might better mitigate against the camouflaging of women’s and other under-represented minorities contributions to science, in both historic and contemporary scientific discourses. I am also interested in the intersection of science, decision-making, and subjectivity, particularly with regards to science and technology during wartime, or as an aspect of nationalist discourses. I also work on the contemporary culture of science, specifically with regards to the representation of women and other under-represented minorities.

Daniel Hikuroa University of Auckland — Anthropology
Robert Nola University of Auckland — Philosophy
Research Interests: philosophy of science; metaphysics; epistemology.

Atheism and the relationship between religion and science.

Emily Parke University of Auckland — Philosophy
Meg Parsons University of Auckland — Environment
Nick Rattenbury University of Auckland — Physics
Richard Sorrenson University of Auckland — Alumni Office
Tony Spalinger University of Auckland — Classics and Ancient History
Garry Tee University of Auckland — Mathematics
Research Interests: mathematics; computing; Babbage; Darwin

I have wide interests in the history of science and technology, especially in mathematics and computing. I have found much historical scientific material in NZ, especially for Charles Babbage and Charles Darwin. I have reviewed very many books and papers on history of science and technology, with some of those reviews detailing significant errors in the publication.

Ruth Watson University of Auckland — History
Erena Wikaire University of Auckland — Population Health
Peter Wills University of Auckland — Physics
Jill Wrapson AUT University
Research Interests: social history of medicine; nineteenth and twentieth century; New Zealand.

I have a particular interest in the social history of medicine. Although my work is in the field of health-related/social science research, I find the social history of medicine frequently intersects with the present-day projects with which I am involved. I am currently collaborating as a co-author on a journal article regarding surgical gloves – involving the history and the global changes in purpose, meaning and use of surgical gloves over the past century or so. Another area of interest is the development of children’s hospitals in New Zealand since 1840.

Emma Zuroski Auckland

Canterbury

Philip Armstrong University of Canterbury — English
Jane Buckingham University of Canterbury — History
Douglas Campbell University of Canterbury — Humanities and Creative Arts
Research Interests: philosophy of science; philosophy of technology; species extinctions; de-extinction.

I am a philosopher with broad interests in metaphysics, epistemology, logic, and the mind. I teach courses on critical thinking (with a particular focus on the science/pseudoscience distinction), on the philosophy of science, and on the philosophy of technology. One of my areas of research concerns the philosophical issues and problems thrown up by de-extinction technology.

Philip Catton Independent
Garrick Cooper University of Canterbury — Aotahi
Jack Copeland University of Canterbury — Humanities and Creative Arts
Liz Cornwall University of Canterbury — Mathematics and Statistics
Jambugahapitiye Dhammaloka University of Canterbury — Mathematics and Statistics
Research Interests: history of mathematics in Sanskrit sources.
John Hannah Independent
John Hearnshaw University of Canterbury — Physics and Astronomy
Rosie Ibbotson University of Canterbury — Art History
Research Interests: visual and material cultures; representation; environment; long nineteenth century.

Rosie’s current research concerns the intersections of visual representation and environmental change in the long nineteenth century, and she has recently published on the entanglements of visual and material culture and de-extinction. She is particularly interested in the limits and potential distortions of images and other forms of visual representation, and the implications of these within scientific discourses. Rosie also has a long-standing research interest in the transnational Arts and Crafts Movement.

Carolyn Mason University of Canterbury — Philosophy
Euan Mason University of Canterbury — Forestry
Clemency Montelle University of Canterbury — Mathematics and Statistics
Research Interests: history of mathematics; history of mathematical astronomy in Sanskrit, Arabic, Greek
Annie Potts University of Canterbury — English
Andy Pratt University of Canterbury — Chemistry
Diane Proudfoot University of Canterbury — Humanities and Creative Arts
Tanya Robinson Ashburton District Council
Michael-John Turp University of Canterbury — Philosophy
Research Interests: philosophy of nature; early modern; classical Greek; Hellenistic.

Our changing understanding of nature affects both our sense of self and our conception of what it is to lead good human lives. Alongside an ongoing fascination with this topic, I have research interests in the history of emotions and Early Modern animal studies.

Heather Wolffram University of Canterbury — History
Research Interests: forensic medicine and science; psychology; psychiatry; spiritualism; occultism; psychical research; parapsychology

Manawatu

Matthew Henry Massey University — People, Environment and Planning
Mike Roche Massey University — People, Environment and Planning
Research Interests: geographical sciences; colonial/imperial forestry; agriculture; New Zealand.

I have longstanding interests in forestry, currently focussing on the spread of forestry practices through the British Empire as well as the meat industry in NZ and on the establishment of geography as a university discipline in NZ.

James Watson Massey University — School of Humanities

Otago

Tony Ballantyne University of Otago — History
Barbara Brookes University of Otago — History
Tom Brooking University of Otago — History
Rosi Crane Otago Museum
Research Interests: zoology; evolution; museums; nineteenth century.
  1. The origins of Otago Museum the curators (FW Hutton FRS (1836-1905), TJ Parker FRS (1850-1897) and WB Benham FRS (1860-195)) and the early collections they assembled
  2. The Parker family (William Kitchen Parker FRS (1823-1890), TJ Parker, William Newton Parker (1854-1925)) and their relationships with the Royal Society of London, TH Huxley FRS (1825-1895) and his circle. 3. Taxidermists and ornithologists who contributed to the Otago Museum, the major ones include Edwin Jennings (1835-1910), Dr Otto Finsch (1839-1915), Henry Ogg Forbes (1851-1932), William Smyth (1838-1913) and a whole host of other characters. 1. The origins of Otago Museum the curators (FW Hutton FRS (1836-1905), TJ Parker FRS (1850-1897) and WB Benham FRS (1860-195)) and the early collections they assembled 2. The Parker family (William Kitchen Parker FRS (1823-1890), TJ Parker, William Newton Parker (1854-1925)) and their relationships with the Royal Society of London, TH Huxley FRS (1825-1895) and his circle.
  3. Taxidermists and ornithologists who contributed to the Otago Museum, the major ones include Edwin Jennings (1835-1910), Dr Otto Finsch (1839-1915), Henry Ogg Forbes (1851-1932), William Smyth (1838-1913) and a whole host of other characters.
Lea Doughty University of Otago — Pharmacy
Research Interests: Research Interests: medicines; WWI; military pharmacy; emergency pharmacy; vaccination.

I am a current PhD candidate investigating the development of military pharmacy practice and profession, and the supply of medicines to the ANZAC forces during WWI. My research interests include the history of health commodities (medicines in particular) during times of adversity, locating pharmaceutical products within a wider context of emergency medicine. I am also interested in the intersections between the philosophies of the dedicated health professional (health and wellbeing), and the military structure and purpose (state-sanctioned violence), charting the change over time of the development of the profession. Vaccination, the antivaccination movement, and the right of refusal by captive populations are also part of my research area.

Terence Doyle University of Otago – Radiology
Sue Heydon University of Otago — Pharmacy
Research Interests: Social pharmacy; medicines and society in developed and developing countries
Donald Kerr Dunedin
Research Interests: collecting; print culture; book history; history of libraries.

Dr Donald Kerr has been Special Collections Librarian at the University of Otago, Dunedin. In between writing books on the formation of private libraries, he has curated exhibitions and organised the Printer in Residence Programme at the University of Otago. He is currently working on a book about twelve prominent New Zealand book collectors.

Angela McCarthy University of Otago — History
Research Interests: migration; mental health; migrants and health.

Angela has published widely on migration, including ‘madness’ and migration in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. She is currently developing research on health issues for migrants.

Hugh Slotten University of Otago — Media, Film and Communication
Research Interests: media and communication history, the history of science and technology, global media, science and technology studies, science communication, media and communication industry studies, and communication and media policy.
Hamish Spencer University of Otago — Zoology
Research Interests: eugenics; evolution; genetics.

My primary research interests are in evolution and population genetics, but I am also interested in the history of these subjects and how they have impacted society. I have worked for many years with the eugenic historian, Diane Paul. Together we have published on the history of eugenics as well as the laws and attitudes surrounding cousin marriage.

Paul Star Independent, Dunedin
Research Interests: New Zealand environmental history.

I am particularly interested in New Zealand environmental history during the period 1850-1920 - especially South Island attitudes to the indigenous environment and to exotic introductions, and early examples of conservation and of acclimatisation. More generally, I seek to compare evidence on these topics with a wider field of information relating to North Island, Australia and other overseas countries, and to a wider time frame (up to the present). Insofar as environmental transformation increasingly relied upon the application of western science and technology, and was increasingly understood through the lens of ecology, the history of science in New Zealand is an intrinsic component of my area of study.

Frances Steel University of Otago — History
Research Interests: Research Interests: history of the Pacific world, with a particular focus on colonial networks, oceanic mobilities and transnational labour cultures. She has an ongoing interest in the interlinked colonial histories of New Zealand, Australia and the United States in the Pacific and their unfolding implications.
John Stenhouse University of Otago — History
Research Interests: the interconnections between science, religion, race, politics and gender in the modern world, using New Zealand as the major site of study.
Tim Stokes University of Otago — Schl of Medicine
Darryl Tong University of Otago — Dental School

Wellington

Catherine Abou-Nemeh Victoria University — History
James Beattie Victoria University — Science in Society
Claire Bretherton Carter Observatory
Alexander Brown Network for Learning
Pauline Harris Victoria University — Science in Society
Ben Jaffares Whitireia Polytechnic
Jacqueline Leckie Victoria University Wellington — Stout Research Centre for New Zealand Studies
Simon Nathan GNS Science
Research Interests: history of geology; James Hector; Harold Wellman.

In 2015 Rebecca Priestley and I convened a conference at VUW on the history of New Zealand science. A selection of 19th century papers from this conference has just been published in the latest issue of the Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, which is freely available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/tnzr20/47/1?nav=tocList

Sascha Nolden Alexander Turnbull Library
Research Interests: Germanic connections with New Zealand and the Pacific; Sir Julius von Haast (1822-1887); Ferdinand von Hochstetter (1829-1884); Andreas Reischek (1845-1902). I am interested in the history of science and related biographical research, especially based on archives, manuscripts and other unpublished source documents. My primary research interests are around the themes of the Germanic connections with New Zealand, especially the life and work of Sir Julius von Haast (1822-1887), Ferdinand von Hochstetter (1829-1884), and Andreas Reischek (1845-1902). Scholarly and professional interests in writing, editing, translation (German-English), and archival arrangement and description.
Rebecca Priestley Victoria University — Science in Society
Research Interests: New Zealand science history; Antarctic science history; nuclear histories; history of science communication.

I have a broad interest in New Zealand and Antarctic science history, with a focus on the second half of the twentieth century. My interest in nuclear history spans the early use of radiation technologies in New Zealand to national responses to the Fukushima disaster in Japan. As a link with my science communication practice, I am also interested in the history of science communication in New Zealand.

Simon Thode Office of the Ombudsman New Zealand
Jonathan West Office of Treaty Settlement

Waikato

Joanna Bishop Social Policy Ecological Research Institute - Vietnam
Research Interests: Ethnobotanist
Hemi Whaanga University of Waikato — Te Pua Wānanga ki te Ao

Other Locations

Ross Galbreath Independent
Rosalie Hosking University of Yakkaichi
Research Interests: history of mathematics in Japan
Alistair Kwan Nelson
Research Interests: scientific practise; science education; material culture; scientific instruments; medical instruments; architecture; university heritage.

Alistair studies scientific practice including the practices of science education. He writes in ways that treat instruments, tools, specimens, buildings, furniture, students and technicians as principal protagonists, and treats material, visual and spatial evidence as primary sources. He uses critical replication as both a research method and a pedagogy, so has learnt how to do things like construct astrolabes, make iron gall ink, write in old scripts, bind books. Alistair holds International Scholar status in the Society for History of Technology and is keen to connect New Zealand researchers with historians of technology elsewhere, via SHoT.

Shae Trewin Nelson Provincial Museum
Pamela Wood Eastern Institute of Technology
Research Interests: nursing history, health history, dirt.

My research focuses on the way nurses trained and worked in hospitals, and created new ways of nursing in the marginal settings of backblocks, slums and war. I am also particularly interested in the meaning of 'dirt' and how notions of dirt have shaped public health policy, medical and nursing practice, and the idea of a civilised society. My research also examines historical lay health beliefs and practices, captured especially in home nursing texts and domestic health guides, and the blurred lay-professional boundaries of knowledge and care for the sick.

Vaughan Wood Independent
Research Interests: fertilizers; agricultural chemistry; economic botany; introduced grasses.

I am an environmental historian, and I am the current editor of e-journal Environment and Nature in New Zealand (ENNZ). My main areas of research interest relative to the history of science are agricultural science in the 19th and early 20th centuries, and more particularly agricultural chemistry and economic botany. In 2014, Canterbury University Press published my history of the Akaroa cocksfoot grass seed industry. I am also interested in nineteenth century New Zealand cartography and resource exploration. Prior to starting my PhD in History, I completed a BSc(Hons) in Chemistry.

David Young Independent
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