This handbook expands the history of science through attention to connections, exchanges, and networks of science and empire, with a global coverage. The original essays examine: scientific disciplines, networks of imperial science, and decolonized science.
This handbook expands the history of science through attention to connections, exchanges, and networks of science and empire, with a global coverage. The original essays examine: scientific disciplines, networks of imperial science, and decolonized science.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Andrew Goss is Professor of History at Augusta University, Georgia.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction: an imperial turn in the history of science 2. Situating the empire in history of science 3. Cartography and empire from early modernity to postmodernity 4. Racial science 5. Meteorology and empire 6. Colonial psychiatry 7. Anthropology and empire 8. Natural history collections and empire 9. Non-Western collectors and their contributions to natural history, c. 1750-1940 10. Energy and empire 11. Science, empire, and the old Society of Jesus, 1540-1773 12. Networks of knowledge in the Indo-Pacific, 1600-1800 13. Between transimperial networking and national antagonism: German scientists in the British Empire during the long nineteenth century 14. Iberian science, Portuguese Empire, and cultures of inquiry in early modern europe 15. The dynamic trajectory of French colonialism and science 16. Another empire: science in the Ottoman lands 17. The planting of "colonial" science in Russian soil 18. Scientific knowledge in the Qing Empire: engaging with the world, 1644-1911 19. Empire, cultivation, and the environment in Southeast Asia since 1500 20. Science and its publics in British India 21. From history of science to history of knowledge?: themes and perspectives in colonial Australasia 22. Empires and science: the case of the sixteenth-century Iberian Empire 23. Science in early North America 24. Science, the United States, and Latin America 25. Arctic science 26. Science and decolonization in UNESCO 27. Decolonizing science and medicine in Indonesia
1. Introduction: an imperial turn in the history of science 2. Situating the empire in history of science 3. Cartography and empire from early modernity to postmodernity 4. Racial science 5. Meteorology and empire 6. Colonial psychiatry 7. Anthropology and empire 8. Natural history collections and empire 9. Non-Western collectors and their contributions to natural history, c. 1750-1940 10. Energy and empire 11. Science, empire, and the old Society of Jesus, 1540-1773 12. Networks of knowledge in the Indo-Pacific, 1600-1800 13. Between transimperial networking and national antagonism: German scientists in the British Empire during the long nineteenth century 14. Iberian science, Portuguese Empire, and cultures of inquiry in early modern europe 15. The dynamic trajectory of French colonialism and science 16. Another empire: science in the Ottoman lands 17. The planting of "colonial" science in Russian soil 18. Scientific knowledge in the Qing Empire: engaging with the world, 1644-1911 19. Empire, cultivation, and the environment in Southeast Asia since 1500 20. Science and its publics in British India 21. From history of science to history of knowledge?: themes and perspectives in colonial Australasia 22. Empires and science: the case of the sixteenth-century Iberian Empire 23. Science in early North America 24. Science, the United States, and Latin America 25. Arctic science 26. Science and decolonization in UNESCO 27. Decolonizing science and medicine in Indonesia
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