By Rose Sebastian. The first state-run science museum to come up in independent India was the Birla Industrial and Technological Museum, Kolkata (1959). It was followed by the establishment of the Visvesvaraya Industrial and Technological Museum, Bangalore (1962) and a flurry of other science museums in various cities. All these institutions, which were initially under the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), were later brought under the purview of the National Council of Science Museums (NCSM) in 1978 to standardize and coordinate their content and outreach programmes. The unique exigencies of nation-building in postcolonial India shaped the form and function of these institutions, to achieve economic and social progress through techno-scientific modernity, and establish India as a significant presence in the postwar global politics. Yet another aim was to make science accessible and understandable to the common man, rather than confined to distant laborat...
Disseminating the Italian History of Medicine: Arturo Castiglioni and His Project at the University of Padua, 1933-1942
By Elena Maria Rita Rizzi. The contribution examines the overlooked project for a museum of the history of medicine at the University of Padua proposed by doctor and professor Arturo Castiglioni in the interwar period. Although Castiglioni’s plan was only partially realized, it sheds light on a key moment in the dissemination of Italian medicine via the musealization of its material legacies at the University of Padua and, more broadly, in Italy. While reflecting broader trends in the musealization of medicine that emerged between the nineteenth and twentieth century in Europe, Castiglioni’s project highlights the central role played by the history of medicine in shaping the public narrative of the Venetian atheneum and city in the interwar years. Embedded, in the late 1930s, in a far-ranging program of patrimonialization of the main university building, Castiglioni’s project also attests to the propagandistic uses of the material culture of medicine, and more broadly...