Issue 1.13
This issue provides a list of the citations that were added to the CB in July. To put these in context, I talked with a member of the Bibliography’s editorial staff, Rebecca Marcolina. Our exchange sheds light on the work that goes into making this resource happen. It has been lightly edited for length.
Judy Kaplan: So how did you get involved with working on the CB in the first place? How has it fit into your career in the history of science thus far?
Rebecca Marcolina: Well, I discovered the field during my senior year of college when I took an introductory history of science survey course on a whim. I loved every second of it, and with the encouragement of my teachers, Kate Sheppard and Jeanine Bruening, I applied to the doctoral program at the University of Oklahoma (OU). I started my graduate studies there the following year. At the time, I really wasn’t thinking about the CB; I knew that Kate had enjoyed her experience on its editorial team during her time in the program, but I had my heart set on working with students, so I pursued teaching assistantships instead of research positions. I pointed my students to the Bibliography, but I really didn’t understand its broader scope or significance until Dr. Weldon invited me to join the CB editorial team in the summer of 2021.
JK: Wow, so you’ve been working on this project for a while now!
RM: Yes. I initially accepted the position to familiarize myself with the digital humanities. But it turned out to be an incredible opportunity to learn about the history of science. As a newcomer to the field, working on the CB has given me a better sense of who is publishing, what they’re publishing, and where. I have learned about my own areas of interest and the field writ large. Editorial assistants collect and classify citations that cover topics from astronomy to zoology, that cover time periods from the ancient world to current events. In doing so, we really gain a synoptic perspective on the discipline—its many priorities, disputes, and aims.
JK: That’s a strong argument for bibliography in general! I wonder, can you describe a typical week behind the scenes, so to speak?
RM: Our workload does depend on the needs of our users and the goals of our editor. That said, a typical week revolves around four basic tasks. Our first task is, unsurprisingly, to search for new citations to add to the bibliography. Dr. Weldon typically assigns a set of journals or publishers to each editorial assistant during our weekly meetings. Once I have my assignment, I start surveying the present status of a given journal or publisher in the CB so that I know where to focus my attention and time. I then scour its website for any citations—books, articles, reviews, etc.—that seem like they might be of interest to HSTM scholars, and I collect their metadata. After that, I transition to our second weekly task: to upload our collected citations, or “entries,” to the Bibliography. I link these entries to bibliographic data already present in the CB where possible, but sometimes we need to create authority pages for new authors, new publishers, and new journals as a part of this process. As soon as my entries are uploaded, I can begin the most time-consuming task of the workweek—cleaning and tagging entries.
JK: Can you say a little bit more about that?
RM: Every major entry in the Bibliography is tagged with additional information about its content. These tags function as keywords that not only describe entries, they also link entries together. A book about the construction of the Hubble Space Telescope, for example, might be tagged with authorities like “21st century,” “United States,” “Astronomy,” and so forth. Although some entries are very easy to tag, others are more difficult. Editorial assistants tend to skip troublesome entries when we come across them so that we can address them as a team in our weekly meetings.
JK: Tagging by consensus, I love it!
RM: The fourth and final task of the week is to publish the collection to the public-facing IsisCB Explore site. Editorial assistants review every entry prior to its publication to ensure that its metadata are complete and correct. As soon as the citations are live, we start the process over again for the next journal or publisher on our list. We typically aim to add anywhere from seventy-five to one hundred citations to the Bibliography each week. It is very rewarding to watch the CB grow over time!
JK: I agree! Editing this newsletter has really shown me just how fast the CB grows every month. Is there anything you’d like people who use the CB to know about how it is organized and maintained?
RM: The CB has always been—and hopefully always will be—a collaborative project. It brings together grad students, early career scholars, and established academics; it unites researchers across countries and continents; and it is genuinely interdisciplinary. Some of these relationships are longstanding, such as the contributions of OU graduate students as editorial assistants, others are far more recent.
JK: How have these workflows been changing?
RM: Well, over the past few years, a handful of scholars have officially joined the CB as contributing editors. They volunteer their energy and their expertise to expand the Bibliography’s linguistic and thematic scope as their schedules permit. The citations that they collect and classify have greatly expanded the breadth and depth of the bibliography. Their efforts are making our understanding of the field more complete, and our collaborations have been some of my favorite CB projects to date.
JK: It is so great to hear about your perspective on the CB. Any parting thoughts you’d like to share?
RM: I know some of my fellow editorial assistants and contributing editors are planning to attend HSS this year. Stop by our booth and say hello if you get the chance—we love putting faces to citations!
—Judy Kaplan and Rebecca Marcolina
Featured Books
When I asked Rebecca about how her work with the CB relates to her research interests, she said that editorial assistants are encouraged to “take ownership” of the journals and publishers closest to their own areas of study. Her interests in the history of space exploration and visual culture have informed the selection of featured titles from the July batch. “By continuously entering and editing these citations,” she told me, “I have seen the major controversies and courses of my chosen fields emerge and evolve in real time…these insights are invaluable, especially to a grad student getting ready to start the dissertation process.” Note that Philosophy of Astrophysics is open access and that all three titles are linked to reviews in the CB Explore.
Featured Articles
Rebecca is currently working on a “visual hierarchy of all the authorities in the bibliography associated with the fields of astronomy, cosmology, and climatology,” which has prompted her to review authority tags related to these topics. She has been analyzing CB data in an effort to identify “appropriate categories and sub-categories that will serve as the foundational elements” of the hierarchy. How can “bibliographic boundary work,” as she called it, serve to clarify concepts and community norms with respect to the subject terms we use? Should an authority like “Supernovae; novae; new stars,” she asks, “be considered a phenomenon or a thing? Does it even matter?”
Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage
Volume: 27
Issue: 1
source: Google Books
Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage
Volume: 24
Issue: 4
source: Google Books
Citations
Monographs and Edited Volumes
Agazzi, Evandro. La scienza e l’anima dell’occidente. Mimesis, 2024. ISBN:9791222312989.
Armando, David (ed.), Marcella Campanelli (ed.), and Pasquale Palmieri (ed.). Il meraviglioso in età moderna. Dimensioni culturali, scientifiche e religiose. Viella, 2024. ISBN:9791254695357.
Ashton, Peter and David Lee. Trees and Forests of Tropical Asia: Exploring Tapovan. University of Chicago Press, 2022. ISBN:9780226535555.
Basaglia, Franco and Marica Setaro (ed.). Fare l’impossibile. Ragionando di psichiatria e potere. Donzelli, 2024. ISBN:9788855225793.
Basini, Basinio and Anna Gabriella Chisena (ed.). Astronomicon libri duo. SISMEL edizioni del Galluzzo, 2024. ISBN:9788892903302.
Besch, Florian, Laurent Pordié (ed.), Sienna R. Craig, et al. Healing at the Periphery: Ethnographies of Tibetan Medicine in India. 2022. ISBN:9781478014454.
Betts, Jonathan. John Harrison and the Quest for Longitude: The Story of Longitude. Royal Museums Greenwich, 2021. ISBN:9781906367695.
Bonan, Giacomo. The State in the Forest: Contested Commons in the Nineteenth Century Venetian Alps. White Horse Press, 2019. ISBN:9781912186082.
Bonnell, Jennifer (ed.) and Sean Kheraj (ed.). Traces of the Animal Past: Methodological Challenges in Animal History. University of Calgary Press, 2022. ISBN:9781773853840.
Bonolis, Luisa and Juan Andres Leon. Astrophysics, Astronomy and Space Sciences in the History of the Max Planck Society. Brill, 2022.
Boyd, Nora Mills (ed.), Siska De Baerdemaeker (ed.), Kevin Heng (ed.), et al. Philosophy of Astrophysics: Stars, Simulations, and the Struggle to Determine What is Out There. Springer, 2023. ISBN:9783031266171.
Breyfogle, Nicholas B. (ed.) and Mark Sokolsky (ed.). Readings in Water History. Cognella, 2020. ISBN:9781516543991.
Broberg, Gunnar and Anna Paterson. The Man Who Organized Nature: The Life of Linnaeus. Princeton University Press, 2023. ISBN:9780691213422.
Bruderer, Herbert. Milestones in Analog and Digital Computing. Springer, 2021. ISBN:9783030409739.
Buonanno, Alessandra, Kip S. Thorne, Harry M. Collins, et al. Einstein Was Right: The Science and History of Gravitational Waves. Princeton University Press, 2020. ISBN:9780691194547.
Butler, Patricia. Drawn From Nature: The Flowering of Irish Botanical Art. ACC Art Books, 2023. ISBN:9781788842365.
Chisholm, Michael. Anglo-Saxon hydraulic engineering in the fens. Shaun Tyas, 2021. ISBN:9781907730917.
Clarke, Philip A. Aboriginal Peoples and Birds in Australia: Historical and Cultural Relationships. CSIRO Publishing, 2023. ISBN:9781486315970.
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor and Giordano Ghirelli (ed.). Teoria della vita. Inschibboleth Edizioni, 2024. ISBN:9788855294751.
Cottam, Stella and John E. Ventre. Cincinnati Observatory: Its Critical Role in the Birth and Evolution of Astronomy in America. Springer, 2024. ISBN:9783031460333.
Crate, Susan Alexandra. Once Upon the Permafrost: Knowing Culture and Climate Change in Siberia. University of Arizona Press, 2021. ISBN:9780816541553.
Culver, Annika A. . Japan’s Empire of Birds: Aristocrats, Anglo-Americans, and Transwar Ornithology. Bloomsbury Academic, 2022. ISBN:9781350184930.
Declercq, Robrecht (ed.), Duncan Money (ed.), and Hans Otto Frøland (ed.). Born with a Copper Spoon: A Global History of Copper, 1830–1980. University of British Columbia Press, 2022. ISBN:9780774864855.
Determann, Jörg Matthias (ed.). Islamic Theology and Extraterrestrial Life: New Frontiers in Science and Religion. I. B. Tauris, 2024. ISBN:9780755650880.
Determann, Jörg Matthias . Islam, Science Fiction and Extraterrestrial Life: The Culture of Astrobiology in the Muslim World. I. B. Tauris, 2020. ISBN:9780755601271.
Earle, Thomas Blake. The Liberty to Take Fish: Atlantic Fisheries and Federal Power in Nineteenth-Century America. Cornell University Press, 2023. ISBN:9781501770876.
Flannery, Maura C. In the Herbarium: The Hidden World of Collecting and Preserving Plants. Yale University Press, 2023. ISBN:9780300247916.
Ghosh, Amitav. The Nutmeg’s Curse: Parables for a Planet in Crisis. University of Chicago Press, 2021. ISBN:9780226815459.
Gibbard, Paul. The French Collector: Journal and Letters of Théodore Leschenault, Botanist of the Baudin Expedition. University of Western Australia Press, 2023. ISBN:9781760802165.
Glaser, Leah S. Interpreting Energy at Museums and Historic Sites. Rowman & Littlefield, 2023. ISBN:9781538150542.
Gori͡ashko, Aleksandra. Ostrova blazhennykh: istorii︠a︡ biologicheskikh stant︠s︡iĭ Belogo i Barent︠s︡eva moreĭ [The Isles of the Blessed: The History of Biological Stations of the White and Barents Seas]. Paulsen Publishing House, 2022. ISBN:9785987973127.
Govaerts, Sander. Armies and Ecosystems in Premodern Europe: The Meuse Region, 1250-1850. Arc Humanities Press, 2021. ISBN:9781641894722.
Grego, Caroline. Hurricane Jim Crow: How the Great Sea Island Storm of 1893 Shaped the Lowcountry South. The University of North Carolina Press, 2022. ISBN:9781469671352.
Grijs, Richard de and Andrew P. Jacob. William Dawes: Scientist, Governor, Abolitionist: Caught Between Science and Religion. Springer, 2023. ISBN:9783031387739.
Hamlett, Jane and Julie-Marie Strange. Pet Revolution: Animals and the Making of Modern British Life. Reaktion Books, 2023. ISBN:9781789146868.
Jameson, Conor Mark. Finding W.H. Hudson: The Writer Who Came to Britain to Save the Birds. Pelagic Publishing, 2023. ISBN:9781784273286.
Jarvis, Kimberly A. From the Mountains to the Sea: Protecting Nature in Postwar New Hampshire. University of Massachusetts Press, 2020. ISBN:9781625345004.
Keating, Jennifer. On Arid Ground: Political Ecologies of Empire in Russian Central Asia. Oxford University Press, 2022. ISBN:9780192855251.
Knapp, Neal A. Making Machines of Animals: The International Livestock Exposition. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2023. ISBN:9781421446554.
Knapp, Sandra. In the Name of Plants: From Attenborough to Washington, the People behind Plant Names. University of Chicago Press, 2022. ISBN:9780226824307.
Koch, Evelyn and Florian Kläger. World-Building and the New Astronomy in Seventeenth-Century Prose Fictions of Cosmic Voyage. Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers, 2022. ISBN:9783631862704.
Kourany, Janet A. (ed.) and Martin Carrier (ed.). Science and the Production of Ignorance: When the Quest for Knowledge Is Thwarted. MIT Press, 2020. ISBN:9780262357159.
Kuhlberg, Mark. Killing Bugs for Business and Beauty: Canada’s Aerial War against Forest Pests, 1913-1930. University of Toronto Press, 2022. ISBN:9781487508975.
Leddy, Lianne C. Serpent River Resurgence: Confronting Uranium Mining at Elliot Lake. University of Toronto Press, 2022. ISBN:9781442614376.
Lewis, Anne-Marie. Celestial Inclinations: A Life of Augustus. Oxford University Press, 2023. ISBN:9780197599648.
Linden, Eugene. Fire and Flood: A People’s History of Climate Change, from 1979 to the Present. Penguin Press, 2022. ISBN:9781984882240.
Magagnino, Mario. L’imprenditore inatteso. Marelli: i primi vent’anni (1891-1911). Cierre edizioni, 2024. ISBN:9788855202640.
Mani, Fabrizio. La storia dell’energia nell’avventura umana : il costo del progresso e l’illusione dell’energia pulita. Firenze University Press, 2024. ISBN:9791221501315.
Marinelli, Maria Caterina. Alle origini della Dottrina della Scienza: Maimon, Reinhold e Schulze. Edizioni ETS, 2024. ISBN:9788846769435.
Mason, Peter. Ulisse Aldrovandi: Naturalist and Collector. Reaktion Books, 2023. ISBN:9781789147179.
Miller, Hugh. The Old Red Sandstone: Or, New Walks in an Old Field. Legare Street Press, 2022. ISBN:9781015727939.
Monchet, Koldo Trápaga (ed.), Álvaro Aragón-Ruano (ed.), and Cristina Joanaz de Melo (ed.). Roots of Sustainability in the Iberian Empires: Shipbuilding and Forestry, 14th – 19th Centuries. Routledge, 2023. ISBN:9781003309253.
Moon, David (ed.), Nicholas B. Breyfogle (ed.), and Alexandra V. Bekasova (ed.). Place and Nature: Essays in Russian Environmental History. White Horse Press, 2021. ISBN:9781912186167.
Moore, David T. (ed.) and Alex S. George (ed.). Peter Good: Kew’s Gardener with Matthew Flinders on HMS Investigator, 1801-1803. Four Gables Press, 2022. ISBN:9780645629507.
Morice, Linda C. Nuked: Echoes of the Hiroshima Bomb in St. Louis. University of Georgia Press, 2022. ISBN:9780820363172.
Navakas, Michele Currie. Coral Lives: Literature, Labor, and the Making of America. Princeton University Press, 2023. ISBN:9780691240091.
Nelson, Megan Kate. Saving Yellowstone: Exploration and Preservation in Reconstruction America. Scribner, 2022. ISBN:9781982141332.
Palumbi, Anthony R. At the Base of the Giant’s Throat: The Past and Future of America’s Great Dams. Potomac Books, 2023. ISBN:9781640124936.
Pearson, Chris. Dogopolis: How Dogs and Humans Made Modern New York, London, and Paris. University of Chicago Press, 2021. ISBN:9780226798165.
Pieck, Sonja K. Mnemonic Ecologies: Memory and Nature Conservation along the Former Iron Curtain. The MIT Press, 2023. ISBN:9780262546164.
Poliziano, Angelo and Daniela Marrone (ed.). Panepistemon. Olschki, 2024. ISBN:9788822268969.
Rashkow, Ezra. The Nature of Endangerment in India: Tigers, ‘Tribes’, Extermination & Conservation, 1818-2020. Oxford University Press, 2023. ISBN:9780192868527.
Rector, Josiah. Toxic Debt: An Environmental Justice History of Detroit. The University of North Carolina Press, 2022. ISBN:9781469665764.
Robles, Whitney Barlow . Curious Species: How Animals Made Natural History. Yale University Press, 2023. ISBN:9780300266184.
Roe, Alan D. Into Russian Nature: Tourism, Environmental Protection, and National Parks in the Twentieth Century. Oxford University Press, 2020. ISBN:9780190914554.
Sadana, Rashmi. The Moving City: Scenes from the Delhi Metro and the Social Life of Infrastructure. 2021. ISBN:9780520383968.
Sagal, Anna Katerina. Botanical Entanglements: Women, Natural Science, and the Arts in Eighteenth-Century England. University of Virginia Press, 2022. ISBN:9780813946962.
Santoro, Daniela. Decoro della città, rifugio dei poveri. L’Ospedale Grande del Santo Spirito di Palermo (XV secolo). Viella, 2024. ISBN:9791254696866.
Saravanan, Velayutham. Environmental History and Tribals in Modern India. Palgrave Macmillan, 2018. ISBN:9789811080517.
Saravanan, Velayutham. Environmental History of Modern India: Land, Population, Technology and Development. Bloomsbury Academic, 2022.
Sgarbi, Marco. Age of Epistemology, The: Aristotelian Logic in Early Modern Philosophy 1500-1700. Bloomsbury Academic, 2023. ISBN:9781350326545.
Sheppard, Kathleen L. Women in the Valley of the Kings: The Untold Story of Women Egyptologists in the Gilded Age. St. Martin’s Press, 2024. ISBN:9781250284358.
Slater, Michael Derick. Tropes and the Literary-Scientific Revolution. Routledge, 2024. ISBN:9781032422718.
Smith, Alison K. Cabbage and Caviar: A History of Food in Russia. Reaktion Books, 2021. ISBN:9781789143645.
Sowards, Adam M. Making America’s Public Lands: The Contested History of Conservation on Federal Lands. Rowman & Littlefield, 2022. ISBN:9781442246959.
Stephenson, Craig. Periodic Orbits: F. R. Moulton’s Quest for a New Lunar Theory. American Mathematical Society, 2021. ISBN:9781470456719.
Tambassi, Timothy. Filosofia della geografia. Temi, problemi, prospettive. Carocci Editore, 2024. ISBN:9788829024223.
Trevi, Mario. Leggere Jung. Carocci Editore, 2020. ISBN:9788829001316.
Tyson, Janet Stiles and Marta McDowell (ed.). A Curious Herbal: Elizabeth Blackwell’s Pioneering Masterpiece of Botanical Art. Abbeville Press, 2023. ISBN:9780789214539.
Wheeler, William Morton. Environment and Post-Soviet Transformation in Kazakhstan’s Aral Sea Region: Sea changes. UCL Press, 2021. ISBN:9781800080331.
Wolverton, Mark . Splinters of Infinity: Cosmic Rays and the Clash of Two Nobel Prize-Winning Scientists over the Secrets of Creation. The MIT Press, 2024. ISBN:9780262048828.
Wooster, Margaret. Meander: Making Room for Rivers. Excelsior Editions, an imprint of State University of New York Press, 2021. ISBN:9781438484686.
Wu, Chia-Ling. Making Multiple Babies: Anticipatory Regimes of Assisted Reproduction. 2023. ISBN:9781800738522.
Chapters
Armando, David. “Chi è l’impostore? Ciarlatanesimo, immaginazione e la condanna del mesmerismo.” In Il meraviglioso in età moderna. Dimensioni culturali, scientifiche e religiose, edited by David Armando (2024), 77-96.
Armando, David, Marcella Campanelli, and Pasquale Palmieri. “Introduzione.” In Il meraviglioso in età moderna. Dimensioni culturali, scientifiche e religiose, edited by David Armando (2024), 7-16.
Campanelli, Marcella. “«Chillo sango s’ha da brucià e co lo fummo trovarrimme lo tesoro». Il meraviglioso e il teatro delle monache.” In Il meraviglioso in età moderna. Dimensioni culturali, scientifiche e religiose, edited by David Armando (2024), 27-183.
Campopiano, Michele. “I meravigliosi segreti del governo: politica e meraviglioso nel Secretum secretorum, XIII-XVII secolo.” In Il meraviglioso in età moderna. Dimensioni culturali, scientifiche e religiose, edited by David Armando (2024), 17-32.
Carrier, Martin. “Agnotological Challenges: How to Capture the Production of Ignorance in Science.” In Science and the Production of Ignorance: When the Quest for Knowledge Is Thwarted, edited by Kourany, Janet A. (2020), 59-87.
Ciancio, Cristina. “Carichi di meraviglia. I processi ai vampiri tra superstizione, leggenda e diritto.” In Il meraviglioso in età moderna. Dimensioni culturali, scientifiche e religiose, edited by David Armando (2024), 49-76.
Cranor, Carl F. “How the Law Promotes Ignorance: The Case of Industrial Chemicals and Their Risks.” In Science and the Production of Ignorance: When the Quest for Knowledge Is Thwarted, edited by Kourany, Janet A. (2020), 165-191.
De Ceglia, Francesco Paolo. “Giannone e san Gennaro. Filosofia naturale, teologia e politica in un episodio di primo Settecento.” In Il meraviglioso in età moderna. Dimensioni culturali, scientifiche e religiose, edited by David Armando (2024), 97-110.
Galison, Peter and Robert N. Proctor. “Agnotology in Action: A Dialogue.” In Science and the Production of Ignorance: When the Quest for Knowledge Is Thwarted, edited by Kourany, Janet A. (2020), 27-54.
Goburdhun, Marine. “Expérimenter lors des crises épidémiques: quinquina et peste de Naples (1656).” In Il meraviglioso in età moderna. Dimensioni culturali, scientifiche e religiose, edited by David Armando (2024), 33-48.
Hoyningen-Huene, Paul. “Strong Incommensurability and Deeply Opaque Ignorance.” In Science and the Production of Ignorance: When the Quest for Knowledge Is Thwarted, edited by Kourany, Janet A. (2020), 219-241.
Kitcher, Philip. “Can We Sustain Democracy and the Planet Too?.” In Science and the Production of Ignorance: When the Quest for Knowledge Is Thwarted, edited by Kourany, Janet A. (2020), 89-119.
Kourany, Janet A. and Martin Carrier. “Introducing the Issues.” In Science and the Production of Ignorance: When the Quest for Knowledge Is Thwarted, edited by Kourany, Janet A. (2020), 3-25.
Kourany, Janet A. “Might Scientific Ignorance Be Virtuous? The Case of Cognitive Differences Research.” In Science and the Production of Ignorance: When the Quest for Knowledge Is Thwarted, edited by Kourany, Janet A. (2020), 123-143.
Kremer, Richard L. “Printing Sacrobosco in Leipzig, 1488 – Ca. 1521: Local Markets and University Publishing.” In Publishing Sacrobosco’s De sphaera in Early Modern Europe: Modes of Material and Scientific Exchange, edited by Valleriani, Matteo (2022), 409-457.
Lacey, Hugh. “A View of Scientific Methodology as a Source of Ignorance in Controversies about Genetically Engineered Crops.” In Science and the Production of Ignorance: When the Quest for Knowledge Is Thwarted, edited by Kourany, Janet A. (2020), 245-269.
Raucci, Barbara. “Dagli spettacolari esperimenti per «dame, cavalieri, e persone virtuose» alla censura del “Pubblico sapiente”. Scienza e società a Napoli tra Sette e Ottocento.” In Il meraviglioso in età moderna. Dimensioni culturali, scientifiche e religiose, edited by David Armando (2024), 111-126.
Schiebinger, Londa L. “Expanding the Agnotological Toolbox: Methods of Sex and Gender Analysis.” In Science and the Production of Ignorance: When the Quest for Knowledge Is Thwarted, edited by Kourany, Janet A. (2020), 273-305.
Solomon, Miriam. “Agnotology, Hermeneutical Injustice, and Scientific Pluralism: The Case of Asperger Syndrome.” In Science and the Production of Ignorance: When the Quest for Knowledge Is Thwarted, edited by Kourany, Janet A. (2020), 145-159.
Wilholt, Torsten. “On Knowing What One Does Not Know: Ignorance and the Aims of Research.” In Science and the Production of Ignorance: When the Quest for Knowledge Is Thwarted, edited by Kourany, Janet A. (2020), 195-217.
Journal Articles
IEEE Annals of the History of Computing
Agosti, Maristella, Alberto Cammozzo, Francesco Contin, et al. “Building a Computer at the University of Padua, 1958-1961.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 01 (2023): 77-85.
Águila, Verónica Uribe del. “Making Innovation in the Mexican Silicon Valley: The Early Years of El Centro de Tecnología de Semiconductores (1981–2001).” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 46, no. 02 (2024): 24-37.
Ainsworth, Barbara. “Trevor Pearcey and the Development of CSIRAC—An Australian First-Generation Computer.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 04 (2023): 53-63.
Boell, Sebastian K. and Janet M. Toland. “Histories of Computing in Oceania.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 04 (2023): 6-10.
Boell, Sebastian K. and Peter Thorne. “Capturing an Oral History of Computing in Australia.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 04 (2023): 82-83.
Brock, David C. and Burton Grad. “Expert Systems: Commercializing Artificial Intelligence.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 01 (2022): 5-7.
Burrington, Ingrid. “From War Crystals to Ordinary Sand: Excavating Silicon Supply Chains.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 46, no. 02 (2024): 13-23.
Cignoni, Giovanni A. and Sergei P. Prokhorov. “Tracing the Origins of the First Soviet Computers, Beyond Legends.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 04 (2023): 85-91.
Cobb, Matthew. “The Representation of Knowledge and the Relevance of Biological Models at the Symposium on the Mechanization of Thought Processes, 1958.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 03 (2023): 32-47.
Copeland, B. Jack. “Early AI in Britain: Turing et al..” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 03 (2023): 19-31.
Cortada, James W. “A Hidden IT “Best Seller”: IBM Customer Engineering Maintenance Manuals, 1930s–1980s.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 46, no. 01 (2024): 48-58.
Cortada, James W. “Why Historians Should Pay More Attention to the Social Histories of Objects and What They Can Learn From These.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 03 (2022): 87-90.
Dzardanova, Elena and Vlasios Kasapakis. “Virtual Reality: A Journey From Vision to Commodity.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 01 (2023): 18-30.
Emigh, Rebecca Jean and Johanna Hernandez-Perez. “The Present of the Past: A Sociotechnological Framework for Understanding the Availability of Research Materials.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 04 (2022): 16-27.
Feichtinger, Moritz J. “Computing Counterinsurgency: The Hamlet Evaluation System (HES) and Databasing During the Vietnam War.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 04 (2022): 28-43.
Frana, Philip L. “Demographics, Inc., Computerized Direct Mail, and the Rise of the Digital Attention Economy.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 02 (2023): 15-28.
Genadek, Katie R. and J. Trent Alexander. “The Missing Link: Data Capture Technology and the Making of a Longitudinal U.S. Census Infrastructure.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 04 (2022): 57-66.
Giacobazzi, Roberto and Francesco Ranzato. “History of Abstract Interpretation.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 02 (2022): 33-43.
Gonçalves, Bernardo. “Lady Lovelace’s Objection: The Turing–Hartree Disputes Over the Meaning of Digital Computers, 1946–1951.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 46, no. 01 (2024): 6-18.
Gottwald, Emil J. “A Short History of Xerox’ Darwin Toolset for Programming Real-Time Machine Control Systems.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 02 (2023): 63-67.
Grad, Burton. “History of Computing Industry Infrastructure.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 01 (2022): 131-132.
Grindal, Karl. “Artist Collectives as the Origins of DDoS the Strano Network and Electronic Disturbance Theater.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 03 (2022): 30-42.
Harmon, Paul. “The Expert Systems Business: How It Grew and Died.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 01 (2022): 31-43.
Hayakawa, Rieko, Robert Underwood, and Jennifer Anson. “The Modern History of ICT in Oceania—PEACESAT and USPNet.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 04 (2023): 11-26.
Head, Jennifer and Dianne P. O’Leary. “The Legacy of Mary Kenneth Keller, First U.S. Ph.D. in Computer Science.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 01 (2023): 55-63.
Herrmann, Hans-Christian von. “Literature and Artificial Intelligence.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 03 (2023): 11-18.
Hockenberry, Matthew and Miriam Posner. “Logistical Histories of Computing.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 46, no. 02 (2024): 6-12.
Hockenberry, Matthew. “On Logistical Histories of Computing.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 01 (2022): 135-136.
Hossain, Anushah. “Text Standards for the “Rest of World”: The Making of the Unicode Standard and the OpenType Format.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 46, no. 01 (2024): 20 – 33.
Hudson, Petera, Hēmi Whaanga, and Te Taka Keegan. “Computing Technologies for Resilience, Sustainability, and Resistance.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 04 (2023): 27-38.
Kidwell, Peggy Aldrich. “Promoting Computing in the Postwar United States—The Case of UCLA.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 02 (2023): 43-52.
Lavington, Simon H. “Early Days of Computing at Manchester: Max Newman’s Royal Society Project, 1946–1951.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 02 (2022): 20-32.
Lea, Andrew S. . “Dissecting Data: History of Data as History of the Body.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 04 (2023): 104-106.
Lison, Andrew. “Hardware Standardization and State-Socialist Piracy: The Global Reach of the Zilog Z80.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 46, no. 02 (2024): 38-51.
Magnuson, Diana L and Steven Ruggles. “Challenges of Large-Scale Data Processing in the 1990s: The IPUMS Experience.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 04 (2022): 71-83.
McCorduck, Pamela. “The Scientific Life of Edward A. Feigenbaum.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 01 (2022): 123-128.
McJones, Paul and David Redell. “History of the CAL Timesharing System.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 03 (2023): 80-91.
McKelvey, Fenwick. “When the New Magic was New: The Claritas Corporation and the Clustering of America.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 04 (2022): 44-56.
McKenzie, Alexander A. “David Corydon Walden’s Five Careers.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 03 (2022): 70-79.
Merchant, Emily Klancher and Myron P. Gutmann. “The IT of Demography.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 04 (2022): 6-15.
Nel, Philip. ““Well Paid for a Woman”: Gloria Hardman’s 50-Year Career in Computing.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 03 (2022): 80-86.
Nisbet, Alastair. “Educational Computers in New Zealand Schools: 1977 to 1983.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 04 (2023): 39-52.
Nofre, David. ““Content Is Meaningless, and Structure Is All-Important”: Defining the Nature of Computer Science in the Age of High Modernism, c. 1950–c. 1965.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 02 (2023): 29-42.
Obayan, Kanyinsola. “Entrepreneurial Hustle and the Rise (and Fall) of Personal Computer Companies in Lagos, Nigeria: 1960–1999.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 03 (2022): 6-16.
Paloque-Berges, Camille. “How EUNET Hacked European Digital Networks and Disappeared.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 03 (2022): 43-58.
Pawson, Richard. “The Myth of the Harvard Architecture.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 03 (2022): 59-69.
Pfau, Dinah, Helen Piel, Florian Müller, et al. “The “KI-Rundbrief,” Its Editors, and Its Community: A Perspective on West German AI, 1975–1987.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 03 (2023): 48-65.
Piel, Helen and Rudolf Seising. “Perspectives on Artificial Intelligence in Europe.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 03 (2023): 6-10.
Prieto-Ñañez, Fabian. “Assembling a Colombian-Cloned Computer: National Development and the Transnational Trade of Electronics Parts in the 1980s.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 02 (2022): 55-64.
Reid, T. Alex. “Computer Networking Initiatives in One of the World’s Remote Cities.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 04 (2023): 72-80.
Reid, T. Alex. “Monte Sala’s Cryptographic Achievements.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 04 (2023): 65-71.
Schmitt, Martin. “Socialist AI? Societal Use, Economic Implementation, and the Tensions of Applied Computer Science in Late Socialist GDR.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 03 (2023): 66-79.
Sharples, Mike. “John Clark’s Latin Verse Machine: 19th Century Computational Creativity.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 01 (2023): 31-42.
Stevens, Hallam. “The Business Machine in Biology—The Commercialization of AI in the Life Sciences.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 01 (2022): 8-19.
Stine, Kyle. “The Logistics of Labor and Life at Signetics.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 46, no. 02 (2024): 52-64.
Vagts, Brian K. “Telenet, the 1983 Hacking Incidents, and the Construction of Network Security in the United States.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 46, no. 01 (2024): 34-47.
Vinsel, Lee Jared and Andrew Lawrence Russell. “Introductory Note to “Seeking High IMP Reliability in Maintenance of the 1970s ARPAnet”.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 02 (2022): 6-7.
Walden, David Corydon, Alexander A. McKenzie, and W. Ben Barker. “Seeking High IMP Reliability in Maintenance of the 1970s ARPAnet.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 44, no. 02 (2022): 8-19.
Zhao, Yue and Rebecca Slayton. “Tool, Doctor, and Hooligan: History of Antivirus Software in China, 1989–2010.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 45, no. 01 (2023): 43-54.
Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage
Agnė, Poškienė and Carlos Viscasillas Vázquez. “The Bulletin of the Vilnius Astronomical Observatory: A Comprehensive Overview (1960–1992).” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 2 (2024): 329-350.
Anderson, Peter and Wayne Orchiston. “John Beebe and the Development of Astronomy in Queensland, Australia.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 25, no. 3 (2023): 481-502.
Blåsjö, Viktor. “Galileo Could Have Simulated His Early Data on the Phases of Venus.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 993-1000.
Chyży, K. T., Jaroslaw Kijak, Andrzej Kus, et al. “The History of Radio Astronomy in Poland: From Solar Patrols to Pulsars and VLBI.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 957-980.
Cunningham, Clifford J. “The Origins and Legacy of ‘Kepler’s Gap’.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 25, no. 3 (2023): 439-456.
Cunningham, Clifford J. “Tycho’s Conversation with Urania, and Other Engagements with the Muse.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 1 (2024): 105-126.
Davoust, Emmanuel. “Dating a Latin Astrolabe.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 2 (2024): 351-362.
Del Santo, Paolo. “Notes for a Chronology of the Telescope-Making Activities of the Neapolitan Optician Francesco Fontana.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 25, no. 3 (2023): 503-510.
Dorch, Bertil F. and Jørgen Otzen Petersen. “The History of the Observatory Library at Østervold in Copenhagen, Denmark.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 1090-1102.
Engvold, Oddbjørn and Jean-Claude Vial. “The Role of Prominences in the History of Solar Physics.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 1 (2024): 3-27.
Foukal, Peter. “Some Developments in Observational and Theoretical Solar Astronomy Since 1970.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 1059-1062.
Gislén, Lars. “Four Instruments in Martín Cortés’ breve Compendio De La Sphera and a Rule for Finding the Age of the Moon.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 1 (2024): 53-62.
Gislén, Lars. “Longitudes, Syzygies, and Instruments in Regiomontanus’ Calendar for 1475–1531.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 1 (2024): 91-104.
Gislén, Lars. “Seventeenth Century French Jesuit Longitude Determinations in Asia: On the Art of Rectifying the Clocks.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 770-775.
Graney, Christopher M. “Galileo and Buonamici on the Tides of the Sea: Was Something Omitted from the Dialogue?.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 1 (2024): 200-208.
Graur, Or. “The Ancient Egyptian Personification of the Milky Way as the Sky-Goddess Nut: An Astronomical and Cross-Cultural Analysis.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 1 (2024): 28-45.
Gray, Robert. “Ozma Ii: The Biggest Targeted Search for Interstellar Radio Signals in the Twentieth Century.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 981-992.
Grijs, Richard de. “European Longitude Prizes. 3: The Unsolved Mystery of an Alleged Venetian Longitude Prize.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 728-738.
Grijs, Richard de. “European Longitude Prizes. 4: Thomas Axe’s Impossible Terms.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 739-750.
Hoffmann, Susanne. “Standing and Sitting Gods in Mul.apin.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 2 (2024): 261-272.
Jones, Jonathan Spencer. “The 1922 Solar Eclipse at Christmas Island: “Our Disappointment It Is Impossible to Describe”.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 25, no. 3 (2023): 469-480.
Kapoor, R. C. “Fixing the Chronology in Tai-Ahom Chronicles by Using Astronomical References.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 665-687.
Kapoor, R. C. “Tales from India. 1: Meteor Showers in Classical and Colonial Sources.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 25, no. 3 (2023): 518-552.
Kapoor, R. C. “Tales from India: The Great March Comet of 1843 (c/1843 D1).” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 703-727.
Kapoor, R. C. “The Kurtakoti Grant: The Earliest Known Indian Record of a Total Solar Eclipse.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 2 (2024): 273-289.
Kapoor, R. C. “The Total Solar Eclipse in the Bhagavata: Its Depiction in Words and in Images.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 935-956.
Kinns, Roger, Paul Fuller, and Douglas Bateman. “Exploring the Portsmouth Time Balls.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 751-769.
Kruit, Pieter C. van der. “Pannekoek’s Galaxy.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 1 (2024): 135-199.
Kruit, Pieter C. van der. “Pieter Johannes Van Rhijn, Kapteyn’s Astronomical Laboratory and the plan of Selected Areas.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 25, no. 3 (2023): 341-438.
Lequeux, James. “Henri Deslandres: From Molecular to Solar Physics.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 25, no. 3 (2023): 553-575.
Lockwood, G. Wesley and William Sheehan. “The Early Years of the Solar Variations Project at Lowell Observatory: Birth Pangs of a Decades-Long Research Endeavor.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 563-584.
Lomb, Nick. “Australian Eclipses: Three “Men of Science” and the Sydney Eclipse of 1857.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 619-628.
Malherbe, Jean-Marie. “Lucien and Marguerite D’azambuja, Explorers of Solar Activity (1899–1959).” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 2 (2024): 303-328.
Marché, Jordan D. “Why the Projection Planetarium Was Not Conceived or Invented During the Late Nineteenth Century.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 1031-1032.
Molaro, Paolo. “On the Origin of the Keplerian Telescope.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 25, no. 3 (2023): 511-517.
Muller, Richard, Thierry Roudier, and Jean-Marie Malherbe. “Five Decades of Solar Research at the Pic Du Midi Turret Dome (1960-2010). Part 2: High Spatial Resolution Imagery.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 921-934.
Nath, Biman and Wayne Orchiston. “Norman Robert Pogson and Observations of the Total Solar Eclipse of 1868 from Masulipatam, India.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 629-651.
Orchiston, Wayne and Glen Rowe. “New Zealand’s First Scientific Observatories: The Tent Observatories Used on Cook’s Second and Third Voyages to the Pacific.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 1033-1056.
Orchiston, Wayne and R. C. Kapoor. “Indian Initiatives to Establish ‘Western’ Astronomical Observatories Prior to Independence. 2: Colleges and Universities.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 2 (2024): 363-386.
Orchiston, Wayne, John Drummond, and Michael Luciuk. “Ronald A. Mcintosh: Pioneer Southern Hemisphere Meteor Observer.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 789-817.
Özel, M. E. and E. Budding. “Ibn Sina’s Observation of a Transit of Venus in 1032.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 1 (2024): 46-52.
Pasachoff, Jay M., Andrea K. Dupree, Peter Foukal, et al. “The Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration of the Solar Physics Division of the American Astronomical Society.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 1057-1058.
Roudier, Thierry, Jean-Marie Malherbe, J.-P. Rozelot, et al. “Five Decades of Solar Research at the Pic Du Midi Turret-Dome (1960-2010). Part 1: Overview of Instrumentation and Observations.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 585-606.
Saisó, Ernesto Priani, Rosa A. González-Lópezlira, and L. Loinard. “Observations of the Comet of 1652 (c/1652 Y1) from New Spain: Between Empirical Measurements and Theory.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 1 (2024): 73-90.
Sauter, Jefferson, Irakli Simonia, and Wayne Orchiston. “Cultural and Historical Astronomy in a Brontologion from Georgia.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 1001-1016.
Sekanina, Zdenek. “Enigmatic Nebulous Companions to the Great September Comet of 1882 as Soho-Like Kreutz Sungrazers Caught in Terminal Outburst.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 905-920.
Shi, Yunli. “The Astronomical Meaning of Some Jade Artifacts Unearthed at the Lingjiatan Site. 1: The Jade Tortoise and the Jade Tablet.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 2 (2024): 245-260.
Shylaja, B. S. and Venketeswara Pai. “Unambiguous Identification of the Star Ārdrā.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 1 (2024): 127-134.
Shylaja, B. S. “Record of a Solar Eclipse in an Eighteenth-Century Painting from Kangra, India.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 607-618.
Smith, Horace A. and Keith Snedegar. “Before the Planetarium: The Astral Lantern and Cosmosphere of Franklin Henry Bailey.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 1017-1030.
Staubermann, Klaus B., Johan Kärnfelt, and Gustav Holmberg. “Intangible Heritage: Connecting Astronomical Telescopes and Their Users.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 3 (2023): 776-788.
Tobin, William and James Lequeux. “In Search of the Promontorium Somnii.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 25, no. 3 (2023): 457-467.
Usher, Peter D. and Enrico Massaro. “The Sixteenth-Century Empirical Disproof of Ptolemaic Geocentrism: Paper Ii.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 1 (2024): 63-72.
Vasilyev, V. and E.I. Yagudina. “G.A. Krasinsky: From Classical Celestial Mechanics to High-Precision Relativistic Numerical Theories of the Orbital Motion of Bodies in the Solar System.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 2 (2024): 387-396.
Weart, Spencer R. “Solar Physics and the Climate Problem.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 24, no. 4 (2023): 1075-1079.
Zongbei, Huang. “The Astronomy of Isidore of Seville: Transforming an Area of Knowledge from Late Antiquity into the Early Christian Middle Ages.” Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 27, no. 2 (2024): 290-302.
Environment and History
Aldous, Christopher Michael. “Replenishing the Soil: Food, Fertiliser and Soil Science in Occupied Japan (1945-52).” Environment and History 28, no. 2 (2022): 311-337.
Baker-Médard, Merrill. “Of Whales and Dugongs: Examining the Rise of Colonial Conservation as Development in Madagascar’s Marine History.” Environment and History 28, no. 1 (2022): 53-81.
Beaven, Lisa. “Trees and Disease: The Ecology of the Roman Campagna in the Seventeenth Century.” Environment and History 28, no. 3 (2022): 453-472.
Bello, David Anthony. “A Trickle of Authority: The Arid Conditions of Empire in Eighteenth-Century Xinjiang.” Environment and History 29, no. 2 (2023): 285-308.
Bennett, Judith A. “Growing Coconut Palms in the Pacific Islands: Colliding Knowledge and Values.” Environment and History 28, no. 1 (2022): 17-52.
Boyle, Cameron. “When the Parrot Returns to its Perch: Contestation of Place and Nature in Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand.” Environment and History 29, no. 2 (2023): 177-184.
Brett, André and Simon Ville. “Coping with Climate Extremes: Railways and Pastoralism During Australia’s Federation Drought.” Environment and History 28, no. 2 (2022): 285-310.
Cabral, Diogo de Carvalho. “Creatures of the Clearings: Deforestation, Grass-Cutting Ants and Multispecies Landscape Change in Postcolonial Brazil.” Environment and History 29, no. 4 (2023): 565-589.
Çelik, Semih, Christina Luke, and Christopher H. Roosevelt. “Ottoman Lakes and Fluid Landscapes: Environing, Wetlands and Conservation in the Marmara Lake Basin, Circa 1550–1900.” Environment and History 30, no. 1 (2024): 53-76.
Cooper, Timothy. “‘A Kind of Sensory, Strange Thing to Experience’: Speaking Environmental Disaster in the Sea Empress Project Archive.” Environment and History 29, no. 4 (2023): 489-512.
Ekberg, Kristoffer and Martin Hultman. “A Question of Utter Importance: The Early History of Climate Change and Energy Policy in Sweden, 1974-1983.” Environment and History 29, no. 3 (2023): 399-421.
Galesi, Loren. “Maize on the Move: The Diffusion of a Tropical Cultivar across Europe.” Environment and History 29, no. 2 (2023): 211-237.
Gaynor, Andrea, Susan Broomhall, and Andrew Flack. “Frogs and Feeling Communities: A Study in History of Emotions and Environmental History.” Environment and History 28, no. 1 (2022): 83-104.
Halevy, Dotan. “Sand and the City: On Colonial Development and its Evasive Enemies in Twentieth-Century Palestine.” Environment and History 29, no. 4 (2023): 537-564.
Handley, Sasha and John Emrys Morgan. “Environment, Emotion and Early Modernity.” Environment and History 28, no. 3 (2022): 355-361.
Heydinger, John. “Eserewondo Rozongombe: Livestock as Sites of Power and Resistance in Kaokoveld, Namibia.” Environment and History 29, no. 1 (2023): 79-107.
Humphrey, Neil. “Working Like a Dog: Canine Labour, Technological Unemployment, and Extinction in Industrialising England.” Environment and History 30, no. 1 (2024): 27-52.
Hunter, R. Alexander. “Cod, Colonialism, and the Anthropocene.” Environment and History 28, no. 3 (2022): 369-374.
Jackson, Sue. “Caring for Waterscapes in the Anthropocene: Heritage-making at Budj Bim, Victoria, Australia.” Environment and History 29, no. 4 (2023): 591-611.
Jacob, Henry. “Scarcity at Summit: The Arc of Environmental Attitudes at a Panamanian Botanical Garden.” Environment and History 29, no. 2 (2023): 169-176.
Kirk, Robert G. W., Neil Pemberton, and Thibaut Serviant-Fine. “The Birth of Hirudiculture: Parisian Medicine, Leech Farming and the Transformation of Marshland in Nineteenth-Century France.” Environment and History 30, no. 1 (2024): 77-103.
Krasnodębski, Marcin. “The Social Construction of Pine Forest Wastes in Southwestern France During the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries.” Environment and History 28, no. 1 (2022): 155-183.
Lee, John S. “Sylvan Anxieties and the Making of Landscapes in Early Modern Korea.” Environment and History 28, no. 3 (2022): 415-433.
Macfarlane, R. Ashton. “The Many Pollutant Identities of Carbon Dioxide: Global Climate Monitoring and Air Pollution Research in New Zealand, 1968–1975.” Environment and History 30, no. 1 (2024): 131-155.
Meredith, Tayler. “Summer, Sun and SAD in Early Modern England.” Environment and History 28, no. 3 (2022): 473-490.
Morgan, John Emrys. “An Emotional Ecology of Pigeons in Early Modern England and America.” Environment and History 28, no. 3 (2022): 435-452.
Nowak, Zachary. “Theorising the Natural Archive.” Environment and History 28, no. 1 (2022): 105-127.
Okauchi, Kazuki. “Slow Development Towards Park Creation: A History of the Black Forest in Post-War Germany.” Environment and History 28, no. 2 (2022): 229-258.
Olšáková, Doubravka. “Environmental Journalism? Radio Free Europe, Charter 77 and the Making of an Environmental Agenda.” Environment and History 28, no. 2 (2022): 203-227.
Pál, Viktor . “Toward Socialist Environmentalism? Scientists and Environmental Change in Modern Hungary.” Environment and History 29, no. 2 (2023): 239-259.
Peša, Iva. “Mining, Waste and Environmental Thought on the Central African Copperbelt, 1950-2000.” Environment and History 28, no. 2 (2022): 259-284.
Quasem, Saad. “Hujog: The Disaster Years in Pre- and Post-1971 Chilmari, Bangladesh.” Environment and History 30, no. 1 (2024): 13-18.
Rankin, William. “The Accuracy Trap: The Values and Meaning of Algorithmic Mapping, from Mineral Extraction to Climate Change.” Environment and History 29, no. 1 (2023): 15-47.
Riekkinen, Tanja. “Envisaging Energy Futures: Past and Present.” Environment and History 28, no. 3 (2022): 362-368.
Rozwadowski, Helen M. “Wild Blue: The Post-World War Two Ocean Frontier and its Legacy for Law of the Sea.” Environment and History 29, no. 3 (2023): 345-376.
Ruíz, Adi Estela Lazos and Claudio Garibay Orozco. “The Great Chichimeca Landscape: Pre-Hispanic Natural Resources Use.” Environment and History 29, no. 1 (2023): 49-77.
Silva, Claiton Marcio da and Claudio de Majo. “The Making of a Pastureland Biome: American Scientists, Miracle Grasses and the Transformation of the Brazilian Cerrado.” Environment and History 29, no. 2 (2023): 185-210.
Sree, Nandini. “Nature and the British Raj: The Paradoxes of Forest Policy in Colonial India.” Environment and History 29, no. 4 (2023): 483-487.
Szabó, Péter. “The Horka Litter Raking Incident: On Foresters and Peasants in Nineteenth-Century Moravia.” Environment and History 29, no. 3 (2023): 323-343.
Tarantino, Giovanni. “‘The Sky in Place of The Nile’: Climate, Religious Unrest and Scapegoating in Post-Tridentine Apulia.” Environment and History 28, no. 3 (2022): 491-511.
Vasile, Monica. “From Reintroduction to Rewilding: Autonomy, Agency and the Messy Liberation of the European Bison.” Environment and History 30, no. 1 (2024): 105-129.
Winchcombe, Rachel. “Foodways and Emotional Communities in Early Colonial Virginia.” Environment and History 28, no. 3 (2022): 397-414.
Winder, Jon. “Reimagining the Playful, Healthy and Sustainable City.” Environment and History 29, no. 1 (2023): 10-14.
Would, Alice. “Tactile Taxidermy: The Revival of Animal Skins in the Early Twentieth Century Museum.” Environment and History 29, no. 1 (2023): 133-158.
Social Studies of Science
Carboni, Chiara, Rik Wehrens, Romke van der Veen, et al. “Eye for an AI: More-than-seeing, fauxtomation, and the enactment of uncertain data in digital pathology.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 5 (2023): 712-737.
Chevallier, Martin. “Staging Paro: The care of making robot(s) care.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 5 (2023): 635-659.
Cuevas-Garcia, Carlos, Federica Pepponi, and Sebastian M. Pfotenhauer. “Maintaining innovation: How to make sewer robots and innovation policy work in Barcelona.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 3 (2024): 352-376.
Dahlin, Emma. “And say the AI responded? Dancing around ‘autonomy’ in AI/human encounters.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 1 (2024): 59-77.
Delgado, Abigail Nieves. “Race and statistics in facial recognition: Producing types, physical attributes, and genealogies.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 6 (2023): 916-937.
Demortain, David. “How scientists become experts—or don’t: Social organization of research and engagement in scientific advice in a toxicology laboratory.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 3 (2024): 405-428.
Falkenberg, Ruth, Lisa Sigl, and Maximilian Fochler. “From ‘making lists’ to conducting ‘well-rounded’ studies: Epistemic re-orientations in soil microbial ecology.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 1 (2024): 78-104.
Granja, Rafaela and Helena Machado. “Forensic DNA phenotyping and its politics of legitimation and contestation: Views of forensic geneticists in Europe.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 6 (2023): 850-868.
Greiffenhagen, Christian. “Checking correctness in mathematical peer review.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 2 (2024): 184-209.
Henriksen, Anne and Lasse Blond. “Executive-centered AI? Designing predictive systems for the public sector.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 5 (2023): 738-760.
Hopman, Roos. “The face as folded object: Race and the problems with ‘progress’ in forensic DNA phenotyping.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 6 (2023): 869-890.
Hunter, Hannah. “Listening for the Ivory-billed Woodpecker: Sonic geography and the making of extinction knowledge.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 3 (2024): 325-351.
Jaton, Florian and Philippe Sormani. “Enabling ‘AI’? The situated production of commensurabilities.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 5 (2023): 625-634.
Jaton, Florian . “Groundwork for AI: Enforcing a benchmark for neoantigen prediction in personalized cancer immunotherapy.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 5 (2023): 787-810.
Jong, Lisette. “On the persistence of race: Unique skulls and average tissue depths in the practice of forensic craniofacial depiction.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 6 (2023): 891-915.
Landström, Catharina, Eric Sarmiento, and Sarah J. Whatmore. “Stakeholder engagement does not guarantee impact: A co-productionist perspective on model-based drought research.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 2 (2024): 210-230.
Lipp, Benjamin. “Caring for robots: How care comes to matter in human-machine interfacing.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 5 (2023): 660-685.
M’charek, Amade and Irene van Oorschot. “The politics of face and the trouble with race: Exploring relations at the interface between the individual and the collective in forensic practice.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 6 (2023): 813-825.
M’charek, Amade. “Curious about race: Generous methods and modes of knowing in practice.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 6 (2023): 826-849.
Molldrem, Stephen and Anthony K J Smith. “Health policy counterpublics: Enacting collective resistances to US molecular HIV surveillance and cluster detection and response programs.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 3 (2024): 451-477.
Nafus, Dawn. “Unclearing the air: Data’s unexpected limitations for environmental advocacy.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 2 (2024): 163-183.
Ozden-Schilling, Thomas Charles . “Trust in numbers: Serious numbers and speculative fictions in rare earth elements exploration.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 2 (2024): 281-304.
Philipps, Axel and Laura Paruschke. “Inside regular lab meetings: The social construction of a research team and ideas in optical physics.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 2 (2024): 257-280.
Pinel, Clémence and Mette N. Svendsen. “Domesticating data: Traveling and value-making in the data economy.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 3 (2024): 429-450.
Plájás, Ildikó Zonga. “InterFaces: On the relationality of vision, face and race in practices of identification. A multimodal intervention.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 6 (2023): 938-953.
Pullen-Blasnik, Hannah, Gil Eyal, and Amy Weissenbach. “‘Is your accuser me, or is it the software?’ Ambiguity and contested expertise in probabilistic DNA profiling.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 1 (2024): 30-58.
Rella, Ludovico. “Close to the metal: Towards a material political economy of the epistemology of computation.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 1 (2024): 3-29.
Sadowski, Jathan . “Total life insurance: Logics of anticipatory control and actuarial governance in insurance technology.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 2 (2024): 231-256.
Smith, Robert DJ, Stefan Schäfer, and Michael J Bernstein. “Governing beyond the project: Refocusing innovation governance in emerging science and technology funding.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 3 (2024): 377-404.
Sormani, Philippe. “Interfacing AlphaGo: Embodied play, object agency, and algorithmic drama.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 5 (2023): 686-711.
Suchman, Lucy A. “Imaginaries of omniscience: Automating intelligence in the US Department of Defense.” Social Studies of Science 53, no. 5 (2023): 761-786.
Swallow, Julia. “Enrolling the body as active agent in cancer treatment: Tracing immunotherapy metaphors and materialities.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 2 (2024): 305-321.
Tanweer, Anissa and James Steinhoff. “Academic data science: Transdisciplinary and extradisciplinary visions.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 1 (2024): 133-160.
Turnhout, Sander and Willem Halffman. “Readjusting observational grids in dragonfly field guides.” Social Studies of Science 54, no. 1 (2024): 105-132.
Environmental History
Akerman, Isobel. ““A Great Responsibility”: Biodiversity Crisis in the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.” Environmental History 29, no. 3 (2024): 447-473.
Bont, Raf de. “The Economy of Rarity: Animal-Catching, Cryptozoology, and the Mid-Twentieth-Century Zoo.” Environmental History 29, no. 1 (2024): 29-55.
Bouchard, Jack. “Fishwork Is for the Birds: Humans and Birds in the Sixteenth-Century Northwest Atlantic.” Environmental History 29, no. 3 (2024): 420-446.
Fisher, Colin. ““Green Is the Color of the Luxuriant Vegetation of Our Motherland”: Marcus Garvey, Temporality, and Wilderness as a Repeating Phase.” Environmental History 29, no. 3 (2024): 500-525.
Knight, William and Kiethen Sutherland. “The Pacific Salmon Experiment in Northern Ontario and the “Indian Problem”.” Environmental History 28, no. 2 (2023): 389-414.
Leonardi, Cherry. ““Extraordinarily Inconspicuous” Elephants: The Interspecies Constitution and Contestations of the Ivory Commodity Frontier in Nineteenth-Century South Sudan.” Environmental History 29, no. 2 (2024): 254-280.
Linzer, Joanna. “Upstream, Downstream: Iron Mining in Early Modern Japan and the Uneven Spread of Environmental Protection.” Environmental History 28, no. 3 (2023): 495-521.
Lundsteen, Sebastian. “Shadow Places, Environmental Justice, and the Submergence of Pollution.” Environmental History 29, no. 2 (2024): 281-306.
Negrin, Hayley. “Return to the Yeokanta/River: Powhatan Women and Environmental Treaty Making in Early America.” Environmental History 28, no. 3 (2023): 522-553.
Pei, Guangqiang. “Environmental Practices in a Colonial Context: The Mitigation of Soot Pollution in the Shanghai International Settlement, 1863–1943.” Environmental History 29, no. 1 (2024): 150-173.
Popovkina, Anastasia B. “Alexandra Goryashko, The Isles of the Blessed: The History of Biological Stations of the White and Barents Seas.” Environmental History 28, no. 3 (2023): 588-591.
Pospiszyl, Michał. “The Fifth Element: The Enlightenment and the Draining of Eastern Europe.” Environmental History 28, no. 2 (2023): 361-388.
Schroeder, Emma. ““Brave New Home”: Gendering Alternative Technology in the 1970s.” Environmental History 28, no. 3 (2023): 554-581.
Slavin, Philip. “The Birth of the Black Death: Biology, Climate, Environment, and the Beginnings of the Second Plague Pandemic in Early Fourteenth-Century Central Asia.” Environmental History 28, no. 2 (2023): 300-334.
Tarr, Joel A. and David S. Stradling. “Cities and the Mobility of Nature: Landslide Hazards in Cincinnati and Pittsburgh.” Environmental History 29, no. 1 (2024): 118-149.
Williams, Johnathan K. “Targeting Reform: Superfund, Industri-Plex, and Pollution Remediation in the United States.” Environmental History 29, no. 2 (2024): 307-333.
East Asian Science, Technology and Society
Adams, James, Tim Schütz, and Kim Fortun. “Late Industrialism, Advocacy, and Law: Relays Toward Just Transition.” East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal 17, no. 4 (2023): 462-493.
Chen, Hsin-Hsing. “Field Report: Taiwan’s RCA Litigation and Its Multiple Outreaches: The Experience of an STS Community, 2011–2023.” East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal 17, no. 4 (2023): 494-520.
Chen, Hsin-Hsing. “Introduction: Science, Law, and Industrial Toxic Exposure.” East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal 17, no. 4 (2023): 404-408.
Jeong, Hanbyul and Chihyung Jeon. “Can Coding Education Go Completely Online? Time, Work, and Relationship in Online Courses.” East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal 18, no. 1 (2024): 4-21.
Jobin, Paul. “The Valuation of Contaminated Life: RCA in Taiwan and the Compensation of Toxic Exposure.” East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal 17, no. 4 (2023): 409-434.
Kim, Eun-Sung. “The Birth of Digital Epidemiology in South Korea.” East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal 18, no. 1 (2024): 22-46.
Lee, Jung. “Cranes, Cultivating a New Knowledge Practice in Late-Chosŏn Korea: Knowledge Transformations Connected by Things.” East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal 18, no. 1 (2024): 47-69.
Pradheksa, Pratama Yudha, Putri Cahya Arimbi, and Dian Tamitiadini. “Public Engagement in Micro-hydro Technology in Central Java: A Call to Decentralize the Energy System.” East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal 18, no. 1 (2024): 70-86.
Tu, Wen-Ling. ““Invisible” Pollution? Knowledge Gridlock in Regulatory Science on Electronics Toxics.” East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal 17, no. 4 (2023): 435-461.
Wu, Harry Yi-Jui. “Impersonal Presence: Kazuo Hara’s Sennan Asbestos Disaster and Minamata Mandala.” East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal 17, no. 4 (2023): 521-527.
Archives of Natural History
Barber, Cameron. “‘Biological jewels’: the glass models of Herman Oscar Mueller and the role of the specialist museum glassblower.” Archives of Natural History 51, no. 1 (2024): 1-19.
Cook, Laurence M. “Arthur Cain and ecological genetics in the Oxford Zoology Department.” Archives of Natural History 51, no. 1 (2024): 73-85.
France, Robert L. “A ‘sea monster’ depicted in the 1585 map of Iceland may exemplify spy-hopping behaviour in cetaceans.” Archives of Natural History 51, no. 1 (2024): 139-145.
Hancock, E. Geoffrey. “Evidence for a remarkable survival of invertebrates from the teaching collection of William MacGillivray (1796–1852), Marischal College, Aberdeen.” Archives of Natural History 51, no. 1 (2024): 86-94.
Hodkinson, Ian D. “Samuel Holker Haslam FLS (1797–1856), gentleman naturalist.” Archives of Natural History 51, no. 1 (2024): 110-120.
Nelson, E. Charles. “Ethnobotany and Irish nationalism: an early contribution by Dr Michael F. Moloney (Micheál P. Ó Máoldhomhnaigh) of Dungarvan.” Archives of Natural History 51, no. 1 (2024): 20-36.
Noltie, Henry J. “The ‘Moving Plant of Bengal’: introduction to Western gardens, naming and early representation, poetic and graphic.” Archives of Natural History 51, no. 1 (2024): 95-109.
Noltie, Henry J. “Zoffany’s ‘monkey’ and other early depictions of the western hoolock gibbon.” Archives of Natural History 51, no. 1 (2024): 37-46.
Pietsch, Theodore W. and Béatrice D. Marx. “Charles Plumier’s descriptions and drawings of Antillean birds (1687–1697).” Archives of Natural History 51, no. 1 (2024): 121-138.
Reid, Geraldine and John Edmondson. “Henry Gustave Hiller (1864–1946): British stained glass artist, naturalist and illustrator.” Archives of Natural History 51, no. 1 (2024): 61-72.
Urbani, Bernardo and Eckhard W. Heymann. “Late eighteenth-century depictions of Peruvian primates in the Codex Martínez Compañón and the Quadro de la Historia Natural Civil y Geográfica del Reyno del Perú.” Archives of Natural History 51, no. 1 (2024): 146-170.
Dionysius
Moro Tornese, Sebastian F. “Music as Therapy: the Analogy Between Music and Medicine in Neoplatonism.” Dionysius 33 (2015): 118-131.
Stanbury, Michèle Anik. “The Metaphysical Origin of the Principles of Logical Thought in Plotinus’ Emanative System.” Dionysius 37 (2019): 60-86.
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