The Grid Dan 11:31 AM 1 comment I had no idea how developed our historiography of the American power grid has become. That is, until, I finished reading this week's H-S... Read More
An Act of Curation: HSS 2010 Dan 3:49 PM No Comments Below (after the "read more" bit), you will find a listing of all papers from the upcoming History of Science Society's Annual... Read More
Manifesto (beta version, b/c that's what we do online) Dan 12:45 PM No Comments One of my fondest hopes for this blog---and for the Forum for the History of Science in America generally---is that it will help us build a ... Read More
You're Shirley Jackson! Dan 7:15 AM No Comments I spent some time teaching elementary school before heading back to grad school. One of the favorite games at our after-school program was ... Read More
New to the HOS Blogosphere Dan 3:53 PM No Comments There's a new arrival on the scene and it looks promising for our crowd. The Bubble Chamber traces the thought lines (and decay paths?)... Read More
Stories of Ideas/Science in America Dan 4:30 PM 2 comments A colleague shared this podcast with me earlier this summer. In it, Louis Menand gives the short version of his pulitzer prize-winning Th... Read More
HSS mentorship, for young scholars Dan 3:38 PM No Comments For those young scholars among Americanscience readers, take note of the opportunity to benefit from HSS veterans' wisdom at November... Read More
What have you been reading this summer? Dan 2:18 PM No Comments Historians of science in America, what have you been reading? What was worth the effort so far this summer? Share some recommendations. ... Read More
"a symbol of American technological verisimilitude" Dan 2:03 PM No Comments This may wrap up our "Scuttling the Shuttle" series. Historian Roger Launius puts in his two cents on his terrific blog. He's ... Read More
Because Ether Doesn't Propagate Itself Dan 12:51 PM No Comments Or who knows, maybe it does. At any rate, our History of Science blogging friends at Ether Wave Propaganda are on vacation. That provides... Read More
Laserfest! Dan 10:12 AM No Comments Seriously, laserfest ! I'm digging this fantastic history of the laser , courtesy of the American Institute of Physics . You should to... Read More
Science and Spills Dan 10:05 AM 2 comments While we anxiously await a closer telling of the geologists in Afghanistan tale, there are some fascinating moments of science in action to... Read More
Bankrupted by Scientific Complexity? Dan 9:46 AM No Comments I glanced over the scientific/medical dichotomy in my last post. Now I see that Atul Gawande has attacked it head on . Science has made medi... Read More
"Rare books on their way to the Internet Archive scanning pod" Dan 9:27 AM No Comments That's right: we live in a world with scanning pods . How magical. Those scanning pods are doing good work, too. The Center for the Hi... Read More
Even the Canadians Claim Edison Dan 10:03 AM No Comments Thomas Edison may have only come in ninth on the Atlantic's list of the top 100 most influential Americans , but amongst Victorians ensh... Read More
US Geologists Discover Soviet Documents, Lithium Exploitation Ensues. Dan 10:55 AM 3 comments The New York Times gives the barest outline to a truly momentous piece of archival work, albeit one done by historians of another sort tha... Read More
Decentering National Narratives and Historicizing the Shuttle Dan 11:13 AM 7 comments Our Scuttle the Shuttle series continues with a fortuitous offering from Asif Siddiqi, whose wide-ranging, thoughtful historiographic essay... Read More
American Birds Dan 10:30 AM 2 comments The Lloyd Library and Museum in Cincinnati has posted a wonderful little exhibit full of illustrations from ornithological illustrators. It... Read More
Drivers of American Space Policy Dan 9:31 AM 1 comment We began our "Scuttle the Shuttle" series with the question: how can we use history to better understand the recent decision to en... Read More
Shuttle Primer Dan 9:16 AM No Comments Don't know much about the shuttle program's history? MIT's OpenCourseWare provides the perfect place to start: a guest lecture f... Read More
Historicizing the Decision to Scuttle the Shuttle Dan 11:20 AM 4 comments This marks the first in what I hope will be a series of historical comments on NASA's transition away from the Space Shuttle. Robert R. ... Read More
But how much will it cost? Dan 10:28 AM No Comments The HSS newsletter notes that the University of Chicago Press has joined other presses in JSTOR's Current Scholarship Program , which p... Read More
Primary Source Challenge #1: "I just might be in there." Dan 10:27 AM No Comments In the tradition of the great mathematical problem challenges of the last four centuries, Americanscience is kicking off a series of challen... Read More
What a difference 45 years makes. Dan 10:49 PM No Comments Today's headline: Shuttle Atlantis Lifts Off for Final Planned Mission Compare that to this video showing highlights from NASA's ... Read More
Science, American Petroleum Institute Style Dan 9:59 PM No Comments This is the first of a series of posts this week drawn from wonderful resources available to us thanks to the Prelinger Library's vast... Read More
A postman, a streetsweeper,... Dan 2:15 PM 3 comments ...all that was missing were the Bridges of Königsberg . A few days ago I was strolling around our quiet neighborhood with my infant son. ... Read More
Novel Historiography Dan 10:03 AM No Comments I celebrated the end of the semester by cracking open Katherine Howe's delightful novel, The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane . I pick... Read More