-
Danielle Skjelver started the topic Call for Peer Reviewers in the discussion
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoThe History of Applied Science & Technology Open Access Textbook editors seek peer reviewers for all regions and all periods.
-
Dominik Hünniger deposited Policing Epizootics. Legislation and Administration during Outbreaks of Cattle Plague in Eighteenth-Century Northern Germany as Continuous Crisis Management in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoThis chapter analyzes administrative efforts to control epizootic disease in eighteenth-century Schleswig-Holstein as disaster management. It points to the importance of quarantine, slaughter, and the control of trade as the principal methods adopted by governments and draws links with the methods used to control plague in humans. The chapter…[Read more]
-
Marco Heiles deposited Ritualmagische Wahrsagerei in der Handschrift 3227a des Germanischen Nationalmuseums Nürnberg in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoRitual-magical divination in manuscript Hs. 3227a of the Germanische Nationalmuseum Nuremberg
-
Rizal Akbar Aldyan deposited The Commodification of Religious Tourism in the Tomb of Sunan Kudus in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoThe tomb of Sunan Kudus is one of the walisongo monuments. The development of tourism caused a shift in the function and value of the tomb. The purpose of the study was conducted to explain the commodification of religious tourism in the Sunan Kudus Grave with research problems including: (1) the causes of commodification of the Sunan Kudus tomb,…[Read more]
-
Rebecca Ruth Gould deposited “The Persianate Cosmology of Historical Inquiry in the Caucasus: ʿAbbās Qulī Āghā Bākīkhānūf’s Cosmological Cosmopolitanism,” Comparative Literature (2019) in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoThis article engages with cosmopolitan conceptions of culture that flourished in the nineteenth century Caucasus with a view to clarifying the relevance of these legacies today. I focus in particular on the polymath writer ʿAbbās Qulī Āghā Bākīkhānūf (1794–1847). As I explore Bākīkhānūf’s historical writing, I consider how the Persianate liter…[Read more]
-
Cristina León Alfar started the topic New publication in the discussion
Renaissance/ Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoAlfar, Cristina León “Speaking Truth to Power as Feminist Ethics in Richard III.” Social Research: An International Quarterly, vol. 86, no. 3, Nov. 2019, pp. 789–819. (Available through ProjectMuse muse.jhu.edu/article/741025.)
-
Yan Brailowsky deposited Ab ovo or in medias res? Rewriting History for the Early Modern Stage Or, How Elizabethan History Plays Collapsed Referentiality in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoShakespeare’s representations of history often have replaced history itself in the popular imagination: Julius Caesar, Margaret of Anjou, Henry V, Richard III — popular recollections of their lives and deaths are intimately linked with Shakespeare’s accounts of their stories, despite the playwright’s deviations from historical facts. In order t…[Read more]
-
Yan Brailowsky deposited La nuit genrée ou l’obscure clarté des scènes anglaises in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoGendered night, or the nocturnal brightness of the early modern English stage
In French, critics speak of the night using feminine terms, but the term is grammatically neutral in English. Despite this neutrality, night may be gendered. In Romeo and Juliet, virgins hide their shame from their lovers by hiding in the dark. If night is consecrated…[Read more] -
Yan Brailowsky deposited Reconnaissance et « acknowledgment » sur la scène élisabéthaine in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoFor poets like Sir Philip Sidney, the numerous incongruities found in Elizabethan drama fly in the face of Aristotelian theory. London audiences in 1580-1600 would have been hard pressed to recognize the time and place of the action represented on stage from one scene to the next. By comparing Greek theory and Elizabethan practice, this paper…[Read more]
-
Yan Brailowsky deposited ‘My bliss is mixed with bitter gall’: gross confections in Arden of Faversham in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoWhat might strike some as Arden of Faversham’s faulty construction may perhaps be ascribed to the fact that Arden’s murderers, as well as the play’s audience, had to learn how to “temper poison” (i.229). Poison is not simply a means to commit murder, its use also requires great dexterity, one which must be interpreted within a historical and metat…[Read more]
-
Marco Heiles deposited HWGL-Neuerscheinungen 2019 in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 5 years, 12 months agoListe der Neuerscheinungen zur deutschsprachigen historischen Wissens- und Gebrauchsliteratur 2019.
-
Francesco Luzzini deposited In Reply to Marco Beretta in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years agoOn scholarly traditions, quantitative assessments, and academic malpractices in Italy – and how someone disagreed (Isis, Vol. 110, n. S1, pp. 15-17 https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/pdfplus/10.1086/707594)
-
Enrico Pasini deposited Kinds of Unity, Modes of Union. in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoKinds of unity, modes of union—why bother? Does Leibniz ever focus on “union”, anyway? It is not before 1713 that Leibniz gets rid of certain metaphysical concerns which, although secondary for him, were present to his mind since the time of his 1708 answer to Tournemine, who had bespoken a “real union” between the soul and the body (GP VI, 595-9…[Read more]
-
Jonathan Basile deposited Who’s Afraid of AAARG? The Crisis of Academic Publishing and the Uncertain Future of the Humanities in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoThis essay situates the file-sharing website AAARG (primarily used to share academic texts in the humanities) in the context of the economics of the contemporary academy. Contingent employment prevents access to research libraries, while reduced library budgets and the exploitative practices of publishing conglomerates such as Elsevier limit…[Read more]
-
Jonathan Basile deposited On Exactitude in Maps in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoPublished 5/4/2016: A deconstruction of distant reading and a close reading of Jorge Luis Borges’ “On Rigor in Science.” The undecidability of the political and conceptual borders of the story challenges the possibility of any absolutist and orientalist cartographic project (such as Moretti’s literary mapmaking). Implications for the digital…[Read more]
-
Jonathan Basile deposited How the Other Half-Lives: Life as Identity and Difference in Bennett and Schrödinger in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoThis essay deconstructs Jane Bennett’s and Erwin Schrödinger’s theories of life to demonstrate the untenability of defining life on the basis of either identity (relation to self) or difference (relation to other). Because the living thing is undecidably self and other, its traditional bond to the self-relation of teleology is untenable. Yet reli…[Read more]
-
Rachel Rafael Neis deposited Interspecies and Cross-species Generation: in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoThis article treats late ancient rabbinic texts (ca. 1st-early 3rd cents. CE), reading them as biology, and following their ideas about the limits and possibilities of reproductive and species variation. I read sources from the tractates of Niddah, Kil’ayim, and Bekhorot, in the Mishnah and Toseta, as expressions of a science of generation, or a b…[Read more]
-
Chaokang Tai deposited Anton Pannekoek: Ways of Viewing Science and Science in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months agoIntroduction to the book Anton Pannekoek: Ways of Viewing Science and Society
-
Chaokang Tai deposited The Milky Way as Optical Phenomenon: Perception and Photography in the Drawings of Anton Pannekoek in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months agoOne of Anton Pannekoek’s main scientific projects was to provide a representation of the appearance of the Milky Way – an object he believed to be an optical illusion. This paper elucidates how Pannekoek thought the Milky Way appearance was formed by a combination of human psychology and physiology, and why he attributed such significance to it.…[Read more]
-
Chaokang Tai deposited Anton Pannekoek: Ways of Viewing Science and Science in the group
Science Studies and the History of Science on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months agoAnton Pannekoek (1873-1960), prominent astronomer and world-renowned socialist theorist, stood at the nexus of the revolutions in politics, science and the arts of the early twentieth century. His astronomy was uniquely visual and highly innovative, while his politics were radical. Anton Pannekoek: Ways of Viewing Science and Society collects…[Read more]
- Load More