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Geographies of Science

by Meusburger, Peter.
Authors: Livingstone, David.%editor. | Jöns, Heike.%editor. | SpringerLink (Online service) Series: Knowledge and Space, Klaus Tschira Symposia, 1877-9220 ; . 3 Physical details: XVII, 250p. online resource. ISBN: 9048186110 Subject(s): Geography. | Science %History. | Geography. | Geography (general). | History of Science. | Sociology, general.
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Comparative Approaches -- Landscapes of Knowledge -- Global Knowledge? -- Mobilities and Centers -- A Geohistorical Study of “The Rise of Modern Science”: Mapping Scientific Practice Through Urban Networks, 1500–1900 -- From Mediocrity and Existential Crisis to Scientific Excellence: Heidelberg University Between 1803 and 1932 -- Academic Travel from Cambridge University and the Formation of Centers of Knowledge, 1885–1954 -- Designing Knowledge Spaces -- Big Sciences, Open Networks, and Global Collecting in Early Museums -- Is the Atrium More Important than the Lab? Designer Buildings for New Cultures of Creativity -- Outer Space of Science: A Video Ethnography of Reagency in Ghana -- The Making of Geographies of Knowledge at World’s Fairs: Morocco at Expo 2000 in Hanover -- Science and the Public -- Geographies of Science and Public Understanding? Exploring the Reception of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in Britain and in Ireland, c.1845–1939 -- Testing Times: Experimental Counter-Conduct in Interwar Germany -- NGOs, the Science-Lay Dichotomy, and Hybrid Spaces of Environmental Knowledge -- Regulatory Science and Risk Assessment in Indian Country: Taking Tribal Publics into Account.

This collection of essays aims to further the understanding of historical and contemporary geographies of science. It offers a fresh perspective on comparative approaches to scientific knowledge and practice as pursued by geographers, sociologists, anthropologists, and historians of science. The authors explore the formation and changing geographies of scientific centers from the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries and critically discuss the designing of knowledge spaces in early museums, in modern laboratories, at world fairs, and in the periphery of contemporary science. They also analyze the interactions between science and the public in Victorian Britain, interwar Germany, and recent environmental policy debates. The book provides a genuine geographical perspective on the production and dissemination of knowledge and will thus be an important point of reference for those interested in the spatial relations of science and associated fields. The Klaus Tschira Foundation supports diverse symposia, the essence of which is published in this Springer series (www.kts.villa-bosch.de).

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