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Paola Bertucci

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Professor

Biography

My work focuses on science, technology, and medicine in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Europe. I am also broadly interested in the visual and material cultures of science and technology and the politics of display. I have published on artisanal cultures and the politics of encyclopedism in Old Regime France, on the social history of experimental physics in Italy and England, on the silk industry and industrial espionage within Europe and across the Atlantic. Most recently, my research and publications have addressed the intersections between HSTM and the history of craft and labor.

I am the author of three monographs:

My most recent book, In the Land of Marvels. Science, Fabricated Realities, and Industrial Espionage in the Age of the Grand Tour (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2023) explores the relationship between science and eighteenth-century information cultures through the lens a medical controversy and its life on the printed page. I show that reputed experimenters and academicians, along with travel writers, eagerly manipulated facts to create fabricated realities. These fabrications in print, just like fake news circulating in the cybersphere, had real life effects: they secured or started careers, promoted new medical treatments, spread long-lasting stereotypes, and created imagined pasts. In the Land of Marvels received the 2025 Paul Bunge prize for best book on the history of scientific instruments.

My second book, Artisanal Enlightenment: Science and the Mechanical Arts in Old Regime France (Yale University Press, 2017) argues for the centrality of the mechanical arts and the world of making in the French Enlightenment. With a radical shift of historical actors, it foregrounds the figure of the artiste, a period term for learned artisans who defined themselves in contrast to savants and routine-bound craftsmen. I show that early encyclopedic projects on the arts and crafts – which paved the way to Diderot’s and d’Alembert’s Encyclopédie – were information gathering activities designed to support the colonial and commercial schemes of the French state. I place the artiste as a central actor in these efforts and, more generally, in the changing landscape of France’s political economy. Artisanal Enlightenment was awarded the 2019 Louis Gottschalk prize for best book in eighteenth-century studies by the American Society for Eihteenth-Century Studies.

My first book, Viaggio nel paese delle meraviglie. Scienza e curiosità nell’Italia del Settecento is a study of the social spaces in which eighteenth-century electrical science flourished in Italy.

I have been active in bringing insights from the History of Science to the broader public through collaborations with museums. Since 2012, I have served as the curator-in-charge of the History of Science and Technology Division of the Yale Peabody Museum, an activity that has most notably resulted in the first History of Science and Technology gallery at Yale (now open in the renovated Peabody Museum). In 2023, I co-curated Crafting Worldviews. Art and Science in Europe, 1500-1800 a temporary exhibition at the Yale Art Gallery that showcased a selection of objects from the HST collection, addressing the intextricable connections among science, art, and European colonialism. Betweeen 2004 and 2007 I collaborated on the renovation of the Museum of the History of Science in Florence, now Galileo Museum, where I curated two permanent galleries: The Spectacle of Science and Science at Home.

My work has been acknowledged with the 2025 Paul Bunge prize for best book on the history of scientific instruments, the 2019 Louis Gottschalk prize for best book in eighteenth-century studies, the 2016 Margaret W. Rossiter Prize for best article on the history of women in science awarded by the History of Science Society, and the 2015 Clifford Prize for best article in 18th-century studies awarded by the American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies. In 2012 I received the Poorvu Family Award for Interdisciplinary Teaching from Yale College.

In 2024-2025, I served as the President of the American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies.

Last Updated on October 07, 2025.

Appointments

Other Departments & Organizations

Education & Training

MSc
University of Oxford, History of Science
DPhil
University of Oxford, History

Research

Overview

  • Science and the mechanical arts in eighteenth century France
  • Collections of scientific instruments and material culture of science in the 18th century
  • Electrical experiments on human bodies: gender and sexual metaphors in the Age of Enlightenment

Publications

2017

  • Artisanal Enlightenment. Science and the Mechanical Arts in Old Regime France
    Yale University Press
    Peer-Reviewed Original Research

2016

2015

  • Artisanal Knowledge, Expertise, and Patronage in Early 18th-Century Paris: The Société des Arts
    Eighteenth-Century Studies 48 (2015), 159-179 (with Olivier Courcelle)
    Peer-Reviewed Original Research

2013

  • Architecture of knowledge: Science, collecting and display in 18th-century Naples
    "Architecture of knowledge: Science, collecting and display in 18th-century Naples", in Helen Hills, Melissa Calaresu (eds.), New cultural approaches on Neapolitan culture, Aldershot: Ashgate (2013)
    Peer-Reviewed Original Research
  • Designing the house of knowledge in 18th-century Naples: the ephemeral museum of Ferdinando Spinelli, Prince of Tarsia
    “Designing the house of knowledge in 18th-century Naples: the ephemeral museum of Ferdinando Spinelli, Prince of Tarsia”, in Jim Bennett, Sofia Talas (eds), Making Science Public in the Eighteenth Century: The role of Cabinets of Experimental Philosophy, Brill (2013)
    Peer-Reviewed Original Research
  • Enlightened Secrets: Silk, Industrial Espionage, and Intelligent Travel in 18th-century France
    “Enlightened Secrets: Silk, Industrial Espionage, and Intelligent Travel in 18th-century France”, Technology and Culture, October 2013
    Peer-Reviewed Original Research

2009

  • Enlightening Towers: Public Opinion, Local Authorities and the Reformation of Meteorology in Eighteenth Century Italy
    “Enlightening Towers: Public Opinion, Local Authorities and the Reformation of Meteorology in Eighteenth Century Italy”, in Playing with Fire: The cultural History of the Lightning Rod, P. Heering, O. Hochadel, D. Rhees (eds.), Philadelphia: The American Philosophical Society, 2009
    Peer-Reviewed Original Research

2008

  • Domestic Spectacles: electrical demonstrations between business and conversation
    “Domestic Spectacles: electrical demonstrations between business and conversation”, in Christine Blondel, Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent (eds.), Science and Spectacle in the European Enlightenment, Aldershot: Ashgate, 2008
    Peer-Reviewed Original Research

2007

  • A journey in wonderland. Science and curiosity in eighteenth-century Italy
    Viaggio nel paese delle meraviglie. Scienza e curiosità nell’Italia del Settecento [A journey in wonderland. Science and curiosity in eighteenth-century Italy]. Torino: Bollati Boringhieri, 2007
    Peer-Reviewed Original Research

Academic Achievements & Community Involvement

Honors

  • honor

    Margaret Rossiter Prize for best article on the history of women in science

  • honor

    Clifford Prize for best article in 18th-century studies

  • honor

    Poorvu Family Award for Interdisciplinary Teaching

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