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  1. Socialist gerontology? Or gerontology during socialism? The Bulgarian case.Daniela Koleva & Ignat Petrov - 2023 - History of the Human Sciences 36 (3-4):178-201.
    This article focuses on the emergence and development of gerontology in communist Bulgaria, looking at the interplay of various circumstances: scientific and political, national and international. We ask if an apparently ideologically neutral field of knowledge such as gerontology may have had some intrinsic qualities imbued by the regimes of knowledge production under a communist regime. More specifically, we ask to what extent and in which ways the production of such specialized, putatively universal knowledge could be ideologically driven and/or politically (...)
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  • Programming the USSR: Leonid V. Kantorovich in context.Ivan Boldyrev & Till Düppe - 2020 - British Journal for the History of Science 53 (2):255-278.
    In the wake of Stalin's death, many Soviet scientists saw the opportunity to promote their methods as tools for the engineering of economic prosperity in the socialist state. The mathematician Leonid Kantorovich (1912–1986) was a key activist in academic politics that led to the increasing acceptance of what emerged as a new scientific persona in the Soviet Union. Rather than thinking of his work in terms of success or failure, we propose to see his career as exemplifying a distinct form (...)
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  • How Western Science Corrupts Class Consciousness: East Germany’s Presence at IIASA.Till Düppe - 2021 - Isis 112 (4):737-759.
    The International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in Laxenburg, Austria, was founded during the period of détente in 1972 to bring scientists from East and West together to research shared problems and thus to build a “bridge” between the two opposed systems. The underlying image of knowledge at the institute was in stark contrast to the intellectual culture established in East Germany. Contributing to our understanding of the history of Cold War knowledge transfer, this essay reconstructs East Germany’s ambivalent (...)
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