Thank you my lovely! Hope you had a good journey to Italy!
Posts by Zara Kesterton
Thanks so much Alex!
Thank you Grace! đ»
Excel queens for the win đâ€ïž
Thrilled to have been recognised in this lovely award by @historicaljnl.bsky.social!
Huge thanks to @marloavidon.bsky.social for being an excellent camerawoman on a cold and rainy day đ
Hot off the press â our reading list for the coming term. Join us every other Wednesday, 12-1pm, at Gonville and Caius to discuss cities in the long eighteenth century đ
Our mini-symposium will follow our termly discussion group â this term, on Cities. We meet fortnightly and lunchtimes at a central Cambridge location. To stay abreast of any news, you can subscribe to our mailing list here: lists.cam.ac.uk/sympa/subscr...
This is a call for Papers Poster for the 'Salon'. Call for Papers: Mini-Symposium on Cities in the Long Eighteen Century (4 March, with 12 February Deadline) Keynote Speaker: Professor Miles Ogborn, Queen Mary, University of London The Long Eighteenth Century Salon and Workshop is releasing its call for papers for next term's mini-symposium on the theme of Cities. The symposium will take place on the afternoon of Wednesday 4 March, at a central Cambridge location. We therefore invite applications for 20-minute papers from postgraduates and ECRs on the following themes, from any geography and any time period between the mid-seventeenth and mid-nineteenth centuries: Speech, sound, and other senses in cities Changing mobilities in urban areas Subaltern experiences in cities The natural and built environment in cities Reassessing urban centres and peripheries Any other theme that speaks to the unique urban dynamics in this period To apply, or should you have any questions, please send a 250-word abstract and brief bio by 12 February to the following email address: 18thcenturycam@gmail.com. Please note that the symposium will follow three discussion group sessions on âcitiesâ (provisionally 21 January, 4 February, 18 February, lunchtimes, at a central Cambridge location). For more on the discussion group, you can sign up to our mailing list here, as we will be releasing the reading list shortly. We especially welcome submissions that speak to the concerns of the discussion group, for which we will discuss some of Professor Ogbornâs work. We'll release a brief reading list in early January â all are welcome to join, regardless of whether you've been involved in the reading group before!
We're excited to announce our CFP for our Lent term mini-symposium on the theme of Cities! We're thrilled to have Professor Miles Ogborn as our keynote speaker. If you are a Cambridge-based postgraduate, recent postgraduate, or ECR do think of applying by 12 February!
Symposium programme: Wednesday 26 November 2025 Location: Vivien Stewart Room, Murray Edwards College, 1.30â4.30pm Keynote: Dr Anna Maerker (King's College London): Title TBC Presentations: Eleanor Peebles (MPhil in Early Modern History): âTo Know Themselvesâ: Touch, Vision, and the Paper Body in Johann Remmelinâs âCatoptrum Microcosmicumâ Hettie Marsden (PhD candidate in Art History): âA System of Minor Actionsâ? Recreational Embroideries, Aesthetic Affection and Female Agency in Early Victorian Britain Mika Hyman (PhD candidate in History of Science) and Dr Stephane Crayton (Faculty of Music): Instruments of Sensation: Marin Maraisâ âLe Tableau de lâOpĂ©ration de la Tailleâ and the Embodied Archive
A reminder that our Salon symposium is tomorrow afternoon, Wednesday 26 November! Our theme is âThe Sensesâ and weâre taking an embodied, medical history, musical, and craft-based approach to the long eighteenth century.
The Salon got off to a fantastic start last week when we discussed smell! This week, itâs Taste, and weâll be meeting 12-1pm tomorrow in the Junior Parlour at Caius. Weâll discuss Roblesâ chapter on âSquidâ in Natural Things in Early Modern Worlds + the online exhibition kitcheninthecabinet.com
Our first session of the term takes place tomorrow (Wednesday 15th) at 12 noon! Please note the updated location in the Junior Parlour, Gonville & Caius
Many thanks to @zarakesterton.bsky.social for a very generous review of Shoes and the Georgian Man in the new issue of Selvedge. Much appreciated!
www.selvedge.org/products/iss...
It was such a pleasure! Spoiler alert: I loved the book đ
Calling all Cambridge postgrads! Come to our discussion group and symposium
Excited to see this published @frenchhistory.bsky.social! âOnly illusions are amusing âŠâ: nature, artifice and femininity in eighteenth-century France through the lens of Louis de Carmontelle' by @zarakesterton.bsky.social đŒđșđžđš
academic.oup.com/fh/article/d...
đčI was so lucky to take part in an incredible conference: âPlants & People: the Cultivation and Propagation of Botanical Knowledge Among Non-Professional Communities, c. 1600-1800" (8-9 July 2025) at Cambridge; organised by @zarakesterton.bsky.social and @lucyjhavard.bsky.social đ± đż đș
Thatâs a wrap on #plantsandpeople! Thanks to all of our wonderful speakers, keynotes, artists, and attendees for two days of fantastic discussion and hands-on experimentation. Over and out from @zarakesterton.bsky.social and @lucyjhavard.bsky.social !
Now for the final paper of the day! We hear from Christina Welch from the University of Winchester on âPeople and Plants in the Colonial Caribbean: Indigenous and Enslaved African Peopleâs Medicinal and Horticultural Knowledgeâ đ± đ đș #peopleandplants
Next up is a paper by Margaux Shraiman entitled 'A Surinamese Butterfly Among Cape Flowers: Maria Sibylla Merianâs Copies of botanical illustrations from the Cabinet of Johanna Breda and Levinus Vincent' đŒđŠ #plantsandpeople
âŠand a glimpse into our earlier study session at the Fitzwilliam Museum, a tour of the botanical highlights of the prints and drawings collection led by Catherine Powell Warren đ·đïž #plantsandpeople
Our final panel of the conference on âEmpire and Knowledgeâ begins with Joseph Bienkoâs paper on 'Baconian Buccaneering: William Dampierâs Excursion to Panama' â”ïžđż #plantsandpeople
And now for the final paper of this panel on Medical Knowledge⊠Lauren Owenâs from Florida State University speaks to us about recipes for health and wellness in 18thC France! #plantsandpeople
Our third panel of the conference on Medical Knowledge kicks off with a paper from Nikolas Brusletto on âBotanical Knowledge in the Norwegian Black Books: Folk Medicine, Embodied Experience, and Social Networksâ! #plantsandpeople
We have two workshops running in tandem this morning at the #plantsandpeople conference - one on botanical images at the Fitzwilliam Museum, and a practical workshop on early modern dye production with Nabil Ali! Thanks to @jesuscollegecam.bsky.social for the use of your greenhouses!
Thank you so much Leonie! Itâs such a delight to have you here as our keynote đż
Thanks so much Grace! Your paper was a real highlight today đż
Our second and final keynote of the day, @leoniehannan.bsky.social now speaking on âPlants as Process: Embodied Knowledge and the âLiberty of Airââ! #plantsandpeople
And moving to the final paper of this panel, âGardening as Knowledge Practice: Historical Handbooks for Kitchen Gardensâ by Sanne Steen đȘđȘŽđ #plantsandpeople
And now itâs time for Janet Stiles Tysonâs paper, âA Curious Herbal in the Commercial Book Marketâ, examining Elizabeth Blackwellâs famous illustrated work #plantsandpeople
And weâre back, fuelled after a lovely lunch break! đ„ đŻđ„Ș We begin our panel on âBooks and Knowledgeâ with a paper from Grace Murray from Birkbeck entitled âMarginalia and Memory Books: Writing Garden Labour in Eighteenth-Century Londonâ #plantsandpeople