Science in America: History? Hank 6:15 PM 4 comments Are Republicans at war—on science? The relationship between the GOP and the scientific community is in the news, and certain aspects of the ... Read More
Dinosaurs and Dime Museums: Exhibiting the Past Lukas 11:50 PM 2 comments Child Looking at Brontosaurus , American Museum of Natural History, 1937. HANK's posts ( here and here ) on research methods ... Read More
Using Scrivener: A Brief Overview Hank 5:30 PM 5 comments After last week's post on the tools of the trade, I got a lot of feedback (mostly offline). I think Lukas is right that there's pro... Read More
HOS methods, American history questions Dan 4:23 PM No Comments I was struck by Hank's conclusion a few posts back: To put it another way: instead of answering history-of-science questions with Ame... Read More
History of Science in America . . .and Zombies Joanna 8:47 AM 1 comment Inspired by the recent trend of adding the phrase “and zombies” to great works of literature, I want to use this post as an experiment in p... Read More
Tools of the Trade: How Historians Work Hank 6:30 PM 5 comments We're a long way from the index card. Or are we? It used to start here (or so I'm told..) Historians work a lot of different ways... Read More
Biology and the Public (Bonus Image!) Joanna 4:27 AM No Comments Darwin loomed large in Ischia and elsewhere. This apparition spotted on the streets of Kreuzberg, Berlin. Read More
Publics *As* Biology? (Part 3 of 3) Joanna 4:02 AM No Comments I like how this conversation is taking shape. It might be possible to see my contribution as taking up Lukas’ second methodological po... Read More
Biology & the Public: Actor's and Analyst's Categories (Part 2 of 3) Lukas 12:14 PM 3 comments One thing I like about HANK's post is that it questions the utility of both categories -- biology & the public -- by suggesting tha... Read More