Main Focus
- Early modern history of science and medicine
- History of the book
- Visual Culture
- Media Studies
- Digital Humanities
Research Projects
Collaborative Vision: Depicting Microscopic Observations
Translating Medicine in the Premodern World
The Alphabet of Nature: Languages, Science, and Translation in Early Modern Europe
Curriculum Vitae
Sietske Fransen is Max Planck Research Group Leader at the Bibliotheca
Hertziana. After studying biology and medieval studies at Utrecht
University, she received her MA and PhD degrees from the Warburg
Institute in London with a thesis titled Exchange of Knowledge Through Translation: Jan Baptista van Helmont and His Editors and Translators in the Seventeenth Century.
She was a postdoc researcher, first at the Max-Planck-Institute for the
History of Science in Berlin (2014–2015) and then at the University of
Cambridge (2015–2019) for the project Making Visible: the visual and graphic practices of the early Royal Society.
She has held residential fellowships at the Herzog August Bibliothek in
Wolfenbüttel, the Descartes Center in Utrecht and the Research
Institute of Erfurt University in Gotha.
Fransen has published
widely on language and translation in seventeenth-century Europe as well
as on the role of images in knowledge production. She has also worked
extensively on the Dutch seventeenth-century microscopist Antoni van
Leeuwenhoek and his use of visual communication. She is currently
working on the role, function, and application of visualizations in the
acquisition of early modern scientific and medical knowledge. She is
especially interested in the process of abstracting knowledge from
narratives in books and practical experiences and transposing it into
visual forms like tables, diagrams, and abstract images. Her current
book project discusses the changing role of translation and
visualization as mediating factors between language and science in
seventeenth-century Europe. By examining the relationship between Jan
Bapista van Helmont (1579-1644) and his son Franciscus Mercurius
(1614-1698), this book will show how language and scientific practice
are intertwined and thereby demonstrate how the communication of science
is strongly influenced by society, religion, and culture while also
bearing the imprint of the personal interests and biographies of its
practitioners.
Since October 2021 Fransen is a co-investigator on the
project Visualizing the Unknown, which is funded by the Dutch Research
Council (NWO) and which explores early modern visual and material
culture of microscopy and the fluid boundaries between science and art
during this period.
Memberships/Honorary Positions
Since 2020: Member of the editorial board of NUNCIUS, Journal of the Material and Visual Culture of Science
Since 2019: Assistant Editor of Centaurus, a journal
of the history of science and its cultural aspects
Since 2019: Member of the editorial board of Lias,
Journal of Early Modern Intellectual Culture and its Sources
Since 2018: Member of the Library Committee of the
Royal Society