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Journals British Journal for the Histor...

British Journal for the History of Science

https://read.qxmd.com/read/37655666/jodhpur-and-the-aeroplane-aviation-and-diplomacy-in-an-indian-state-1924-1952
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aashique Ahmed Iqbal
This paper is a study of the intersection between aviation and diplomacy in the semi-autonomous Indian state of Jodhpur in the final decades of British colonial rule in India. Jodhpur's Maharaja Umaid Singh established a major international aerodrome, patronized one of India's first flying clubs and collaborated with British authorities to make aviation laws for the Indian states. He would also serve in the Royal Air Force during the war and placed Jodhpur state's aviation resources at the disposal of the king-emperor...
September 1, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37608763/a-plague-of-weasels-and-ticks-animal-introduction-ecological-disaster-and-the-balance-of-nature-in-jamaica-1870-1900
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew Holmes
Towards the end of the nineteenth century, British colonists in Jamaica became increasingly exasperated by the damage caused to their sugar plantations by rats. In 1872, a British planter attempted to solve this problem by introducing the small Indian mongoose ( Urva auropunctata ). The animals, however, turned on Jamaica's insectivorous birds and reptiles, leading to an explosion in the tick population. This paper situates the mongoose catastrophe as a closing chapter in the history of the nineteenth-century acclimatization movement...
August 23, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37548192/transformations-the-material-representation-of-historical-experiments-in-science-teaching
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter Heering
Some experiments from the history of physics became so famous that they not only made it into the textbook canon but were transformed into lecture demonstration performances and student laboratory activities in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. While, at first glance, some of these demonstrations as well as the related instruments do resemble their historical ancestors, a closer examination reveals significant differences both in the instruments themselves and in the practices and meanings associated with them...
August 7, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37434446/presidential-address-some-years-of-cudgelling-my-brains-about-the-nature-and-function-of-science-museums-frank-sherwood-taylor-and-the-public-role-of-the-history-of-science
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tim Boon
Frank Sherwood Taylor was director of the Science Museum London for just over five years from October 1950. He was the only historian of science ever to have been director of this institution, which has always ridden a tightrope between advocacy of science and advocacy of its history, balancing differently at different points in its history. He was also president of the BSHS from 1951 to 1953. So what happened when a historian got his hands on the nation's pre-eminent public museum of science? To what extent did his historian's training and instincts affect his policies whilst director, and with what effect in the longer term? Taking this exceptional case, I suggest, enables us to consider how museum accounts of the past of science relate to historiographies of science otherwise available in the culture...
July 12, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37350346/introduction-power-to-the-image-science-technology-and-visual-diplomacy
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Simone Turchetti, Matthew Adamson
This special issue explores the power that images with a techno-scientific content can have in international relations. As we introduce the articles in the collection, we highlight how the study of this influence extends current research in the separate (but increasingly interacting) domains of history of science and technology, and political science. We then show how images of different types (photographs, cartoons and plots) can inform inter-state transactions through their public appeal alongside the better-studied dialogic practices of the diplomatic arena...
June 23, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37434316/dylan-mulvin-proxies-the-cultural-work-of-standing-in-london-mit-press-2021-pp-228-isbn-978-0-2620-4514-8-%C3%A2-40-00-paperback-corrigendum
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Harry Law
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
June 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37248705/what-mysteries-lay-in-spore-taxonomy-data-and-the-internationalization-of-mycology-in-saccardo-s-sylloge-fungorum
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brad Bolman
Italian mycologist Pier Andrea Saccardo is best remembered for his monumental Sylloge Fungorum , the first 'modern' effort to compile all identified fungi within a single classification scheme. The existing history of mycology is limited and has primarily focused on developments within England, but this article argues that Saccardo and his collaborators on the Sylloge supported a vital transnational expansion of mycological knowledge exchange and played a crucial role in stabilizing the tangled knot of local naming and identification among the world's amateur and professional mycologists...
May 30, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37212465/van-leeuwenhoek-the-film-remaking-memory-in-dutch-science-cinema-1925-c-1960
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mieneke Te Hennepe
This paper examines how the production, content and reception of the film Antony van Leeuwenhoek (1924) influenced the historical framing of science. The film features microcinematography by the pioneering Dutch filmmaker Jan Cornelis Mol (1891-1954), and was part of a dynamic process of commemorating seventeenth-century microscopy and bacteriology through an early instance of visual re-creation - a new way of using scientific material heritage, and of enabling audiences to supposedly observe the world of microscopic organisms in just the same way as the Dutch scientist Antoni van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723) had observed them for himself...
May 22, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37199187/representing-noise-stacked-plots-and-the-contrasting-diplomatic-ambitions-of-radio-astronomy-and-post-punk
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Simone Turchetti
Sketched in 1979 by graphic designer Peter Saville, the record sleeve of Joy Division's Unknown Pleasures seemingly popularized one of the most celebrated radio-astronomical images: the 'stacked plot' of radio signals from a pulsar. However, the sleeve's designer did not have this promotion in mind. Instead, he deliberately muddled the message it originally conveyed in a typical post-punk act of artistic sabotage. In reconstructing the historical events associated with this subversive effort, this essay explores how, after its adoption as an imaging device utilized in radio astronomy, the stacked plot gave representation to the diplomacy agendas of two distinct groups...
May 18, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37194549/cesare-cremonini-s-non-theological-cosmology-a-contribution-to-padua-s-secular-culture-in-times-of-wars-of-religion
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pietro Daniel Omodeo
This essay deals with the cultural-political motivations behind the cosmological conceptions of the Padua Aristotelian Cesare Cremonini (1550-1631). A defender of the interests of the university against Jesuit teachings, and one of the philosophers who was most frequently scrutinized by the Inquisition, he was an important actor in Venetian cultural politics during the years of European religious conflict that culminated in the Thirty Years War. In those years, he was officially titled 'protector' of the multi-confessional German Nation of Artists, one of the largest groups of foreign students at the University of Padua, and had to act as mediator in cases of conflict...
May 17, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37139797/picturing-chinese-science-wartime-photographs-in-joseph-needham-s-science-diplomacy
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gordon Barrett
Joseph Needham occupies a central position in the historical narrative underpinning the most influential practitioner-derived definition of 'science diplomacy'. The brief biographical sketch produced by the Royal Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science sets Needham's activities in the Second World War as an exemplar of a science diplomacy. This article critically reconsiders Needham's wartime activities, shedding light on the roles played by photographs in those diplomatic activities and his onward dissemination of them as part of his self-fashioning...
May 4, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37129109/how-did-a-lutheran-astronomer-get-converted-into-a-catholic-authority-the-jesuits-and-their-reception-of-tycho-brahe-in-portugal
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Luís Miguel Carolino
This article explores the complex process of integrating Tycho Brahe's theories into the Jesuit intellectual framework through focusing on the international community of professors who taught mathematics at the College of Saint Anthony (Colégio de Santo Antão), Lisbon, during the first half of the seventeenth century. Historians have conceived the reception of the Tychonic system as a straightforward process motivated by the developments of early modern astronomy. Nevertheless, this paper argues that the cultural politics of the Counter-Reformation Church curbed the reception of Tycho Brahe within the Jesuit milieu...
May 2, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37102325/the-visual-diplomacy-of-cancer-treatments-the-mediatic-legacy-of-the-curies-in-the-early-transnational-fight-against-cancer
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Beatriz Medori
This paper analyses the role played by members of the Curie family in the visual diplomacy of cancer treatments. This relationship started in 1921, when Marie Curie travelled to the US, accompanied by her two daughters, Ève and Irène, to receive a gram of radium at the White House from President Warren Harding. In the years that followed, Ève Curie, as the biographer and natural heir of radium discoverers Marie and Pierre Curie, continued to contribute to the visual diplomacy of cancer campaigning...
April 27, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37078269/cartoon-diplomacy-visual-strategies-imperial-rivalries-and-the-1890-british-ultimatum-to-portugal
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Paula Diogo, Paula Urze, Ana Simões
This paper offers a novel interpretation of the 1890 British Ultimatum, by bringing to the front of the stage its techno-diplomatic dimension, often invisible in the canonical diplomatic and military narratives. Furthermore, we use an unconventional historical source to grasp the British-Portuguese imperial conflict over the African hinterland via the building of railways: the cartoons of the politically committed and polyvalent Portuguese artist and journalist Rafael Bordalo Pinheiro (1846-1905), published in his journal Ponto nos iis , from the end of 1889 and throughout 1890...
April 20, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37039487/showcasing-the-international-atom-the-iaea-bulletin-as-a-visual-science-diplomacy-instrument-1958-1962
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew Adamson
When the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) began operations in 1958, one of its first routine tasks was to create and circulate a brief non-technical periodical. This article analyses the creation of the IAEA Bulletin and its circulation during its first years. It finds that diplomatic imperatives both in IAEA leadership circles and in the networks outside them shaped the form and appearance of the bulletin. In the hands of the IAEA's Division of Public Information, the bulletin became an instrument of science diplomacy, its imagery conveying the motivations for member states to strengthen ties with the IAEA, while simultaneously persuading them to accept the hierarchies and geopolitical logics implicit in those relations, as well as to endorse the central position of the IAEA as a clearing house and authority of globally circulating nuclear objects and information...
April 11, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36843498/from-museumization-to-decolonization-fostering-critical-dialogues-in-the-history-of-science-with-a-haida-eagle-mask
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Efram Sera-Shriar
This paper explores the process from museumization to decolonization through an examination of a Haida eagle mask currently on display in the Exploring Medicine gallery at the Science Museum in London. While elements of this discussion are well developed in some disciplines, such as Indigenous studies, anthropology and museum and heritage studies, this paper approaches the topic through the history of science, where decolonization and global perspectives are still gaining momentum. The aim therefore is to offer some opening perspectives and methods on how historians of science can use the ideas and approaches relating to decolonization in other fields, and apply them constructively to the history of science, particularly in museum settings...
February 27, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36843497/transnational-scientific-advising-occupied-japan-the-united-states-national-academy-of-sciences-and-the-establishment-of-the-science-council-of-japan
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kenji Ito
Given that the practices and institutions of knowledge production commonly referred to as 'science' are believed to have 'Western' origins, their apparent proliferation entails negotiations and power dynamics that shape both science and diplomacy in specific locales. This paper investigates a facet of this co-production of science and diplomacy in the emergence of knowledge infrastructure in Japan during the Allied Occupation. It focuses on the 1947 delegation from the United States National Academy of Sciences to Japan and its role in creating the Science Council of Japan (SCJ)...
February 27, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36776108/satellite-images-as-tools-of-visual-diplomacy-nasa-s-ozone-hole-visualizations-and-the-montreal-protocol-negotiations
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sebastian V Grevsmühl, Régis Briday
On 16 September 1987, the main chlorofluorocarbon-producing and -consuming countries signed the Montreal Protocol, despite the absence of a scientific consensus on the mechanisms of ozone depletion over Antarctica. We argue in this article that the rapid diffusion from late 1985 onwards of satellite images showing the Antarctic ozone hole played a significant role in this diplomatic outcome. Whereas negotiators claimed that they chose to deliberately ignore the Antarctic ozone hole during the negotiations since no theory was able yet to explain it, the images still loomed large for many of the actors involved...
February 13, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36762459/the-winter-of-raw-computers-the-history-of-the-lunar-and-planetary-reductions-of-the-royal-observatory-greenwich
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Belteki
In 1839 the working hours of the computers employed on the lunar and planetary reductions of the Royal Observatory, Greenwich were reduced from eleven hours to eight hours. Previous historians have explained this decrease by reference to the generally benevolent nature of the manager of the reductions, George Biddell Airy. By contrast, this article uses the letters and notes exchanged between Airy and the computers to demonstrate that the change in the working hours originated from the computers as a reaction to their poor working conditions...
February 10, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36636807/colouring-flowers-books-art-and-experiment-in-the-household-of-margery-and-henry-power
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christoffer Basse Eriksen, Xinyi Wen
This article examines the early modern household's importance for producing experimental knowledge through an examination of the Halifax household of Margery and Henry Power. While Henry Power has been studied as a natural philosopher within the male-dominated intellectual circles of Cambridge and London, the epistemic labour of his wife, Margery Power, has hitherto been overlooked. From the 1650s, this couple worked in tandem to enhance their understanding of the vegetable world through various paper technologies, from books, paper slips and recipe notebooks to Margery's drawing album and Henry's published Experimental Philosophy ...
January 13, 2023: British Journal for the History of Science
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