Osiris, Volume 33: Science and Capitalism: Entangled Histories

The historical relationship between science and capitalism has long stood as a central question in science studies, at least since its foundations in the 1930s. Taking inspiration from the recent surge of scholarly interest in the “history of capitalism,” as well as from renewed attention to political economy by historians of science and technology, this Osiris volume revisits this classic quandary, foregrounding the entanglements between these two powerful and unruly historical forces and tracing the diverse ways they mutually shaped each other. Key attention is paid to the practices of knowledge work that enable both scientific and capitalistic action and to the diversity of global sites and circuits in which science/capitalism have been performed. The assembled papers excavate an array of tangled nodes at the science/capitalism nexus, spanning from the seventeenth century to the twenty-first, from Nevada to Central Asia to Japan, from microbiology to industrial psychology to public health.

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Osiris, Volume 33: Science and Capitalism: Entangled Histories

The historical relationship between science and capitalism has long stood as a central question in science studies, at least since its foundations in the 1930s. Taking inspiration from the recent surge of scholarly interest in the “history of capitalism,” as well as from renewed attention to political economy by historians of science and technology, this Osiris volume revisits this classic quandary, foregrounding the entanglements between these two powerful and unruly historical forces and tracing the diverse ways they mutually shaped each other. Key attention is paid to the practices of knowledge work that enable both scientific and capitalistic action and to the diversity of global sites and circuits in which science/capitalism have been performed. The assembled papers excavate an array of tangled nodes at the science/capitalism nexus, spanning from the seventeenth century to the twenty-first, from Nevada to Central Asia to Japan, from microbiology to industrial psychology to public health.

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Osiris, Volume 33: Science and Capitalism: Entangled Histories

Osiris, Volume 33: Science and Capitalism: Entangled Histories

Osiris, Volume 33: Science and Capitalism: Entangled Histories

Osiris, Volume 33: Science and Capitalism: Entangled Histories

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Overview

The historical relationship between science and capitalism has long stood as a central question in science studies, at least since its foundations in the 1930s. Taking inspiration from the recent surge of scholarly interest in the “history of capitalism,” as well as from renewed attention to political economy by historians of science and technology, this Osiris volume revisits this classic quandary, foregrounding the entanglements between these two powerful and unruly historical forces and tracing the diverse ways they mutually shaped each other. Key attention is paid to the practices of knowledge work that enable both scientific and capitalistic action and to the diversity of global sites and circuits in which science/capitalism have been performed. The assembled papers excavate an array of tangled nodes at the science/capitalism nexus, spanning from the seventeenth century to the twenty-first, from Nevada to Central Asia to Japan, from microbiology to industrial psychology to public health.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226466132
Publisher: University of Chicago Press Journals
Publication date: 10/21/2018
Series: Osiris , #33
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
File size: 10 MB

About the Author

Lukas Rieppel is the David and Michelle Ebersman Assistant Professor of History at Brown University. William Deringer is the Leo Marx Career Development Assistant Professor of Science, Technology, and Society at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Eugenia Lean is associate professor in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures at Columbia University.

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION

Introduction: The Entangled Histories of Science and Capitalism

Lukas Rieppel, Eugenia Lean, and William Deringer

 

Sciences and Economies in the Scientific Revolution: Concepts, Materials, and Commensurable Fragments

Harold J. Cook

 

Feeding Desire: Generative Environments, Meat Markets, and the Management of Sheep Intercourse in Great Britain, 1700–1750

Emily Pawley

 

ENTANGLED INFRASTRUCTURES

Sugar Machines and the Fragile Infrastructure of Commodities in the Nineteenth Century

David Singerman

 

Starting up Biology in China: Performances of Life at BGI

Hallam Stevens

 

ENTANGLED CALCULATIONS

Compound Interest Corrected: The Imaginative Mathematics of the Financial Future in Early Modern England

William Deringer

 

Proving Future Profit: Business Plans as Demonstration Devices

Martin Giraudeau

 

Lies, Damned Lies, and (Bourgeois) Statistics: Ascertaining Social Fact in Midcentury China and the Soviet Union

Arunabh Ghosh

 

ENTANGLED ONTOLOGIES

The Microbial Production of Expertise in Meiji Japan

Victoria Lee

 

“Safe Driving Depends on the Man at the Wheel”: Psychologists and the Subject of Auto Safety, 1920–55

Lee Vinsel

 

Comstock Capitalism: The Law, the Lode, and the Science

Paul Lucier

 

Organizing the Marketplace

Lukas Rieppel

 

“Scientific Crude” for Currency: Prospecting for Specimens in Stalin’s Siberia

Julia Fein

 

ENTANGLED CIRCUITS

Making the Chinese Copycat: Trademarks and Recipes in Early Twentieth-Century Global Science and Capitalism

Eugenia Lean

 

Microbiology and the Imperatives of Capital in International Agro-Biodiversity Preservation

Courtney Fullilove

 

Smoke Ring: From American Tobacco to Japanese Data

Sarah Milov

 

Notes on Contributors

 

Index

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