Dear colleagues,
 
I am delighted to invite you to a lecture by Dr. Sonia Wigh (University of 
Cambridge) at the Max Planck Institute for History of Science. It will be our 
second event in the ASTRA Colloquium series “Occult Sciences in South Asia: A 
Non-Western History”.
Dr. Sonia Wigh (University of Cambridge) will present a lecture entitled 
“Turning Tables: Tracking Movement of Desire in Early Modern South Asia” on 12 
March 2026 from 13:30-15:00 in the Villa Seminar Room (MPIWG Villa, 
Harnackstraße 5, 14195 Berlin, GERMANY). The lecture will also be accessible 
online (Zoom link below).

https://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/event/turning-tables-tracking-movement-desire-early-modern-south-asia
https://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/event/turning-tables-tracking-movement-desire-early-modern-south-asia

The full program of this spring’s ASTRA colloquium series is available here 
<https://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/page/astra-colloquium-occult-sciences>.

Abstract: 
Several erotological manuals in early modern South Asia contained a chapter 
detailing how the movement of desire in the female body can be tracked by the 
corresponding movement of the moon. While the movement of the moon could not be 
controlled, through following the instructions laid out in these erotological 
texts such as Kokaśāstra and Laẕẕat al-nisā’, a discerning man could, in 
theory, control a woman’s pleasure. Through a critical analysis of erotological 
manuals produced in Persian and Braj Bhasha (early Hindi) in South Asia between 
1640–1800, this paper will track two interconnected phenomena: one, the 
creation of astronomical tables that tabularized the movement of desire to 
various body parts with corresponding fortnightly movement of the waxing and 
waning of the moon. This change was probably due to an effort to create a 
simple, scannable diagram that efficiently conveyed information that would 
otherwise be covered over two to three pages in prose or poetry within the 
text. Two, by the eighteenth century these tables were further converted into 
concentric circles. What does the movement from the prose to tabular to circle 
signify? During this change of form, it is interesting to see what information 
is retained, discarded, and transformed.    

Biography: 
Sonia Wigh is a British Academy Postdoctoral fellow at the Department of 
History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Cambridge. Her current 
research project “Sex, Medicine, and Manuscripts in Early Colonial South Asia” 
explores the medicalisation of sex through Persian sexual-medical manuscripts 
produced between 1750 and 1857. She is currently working on her monograph A 
Body of Words: A History of Sex and the Body in Early Modern South Asia, which 
is based on her thesis which received the C.A. Bayly Best Dissertation Award 
(2022). Her research focuses on the history of sexuality, medicine, and 
material culture in early modern South Asia. She is also part of the editorial 
team in leading journals such as Osiris and Medical History.
 
Zoom link: 
https://eu02web.zoom.us/j/63767435011?pwd=oFXYIniUuTLZb3fQ3eDLbczRmIBqx5.1 
<https://eu02web.zoom.us/j/63767435011?pwd=oFXYIniUuTLZb3fQ3eDLbczRmIBqx5.1#success>
Please feel free to reach out to me if you have any question.

Best wishes,
Jean Arzoumanov

Postdoctoral Scholar
FG ASTRA
Max Planck Institute for the History of Science (MPIWG)
Boltzmannstr. 22
14195 Berlin
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