Switch to: References

Citations of:

Long-distance corporations, big sciences, and the geography of knowledge

In Sandra G. Harding (ed.), The postcolonial science and technology studies reader. Durham: Duke University Press (2011)

Add citations

You must login to add citations.
  1. What's in a Name? Place, Peoples and Plants in the Danish-Halle Mission, c. 1710–1740.Kelly Joan Whitmer - 2013 - Annals of Science 70 (3):337-356.
    Summary This paper explores the collecting practices of German Protestant missionaries who lived in southern India (c. 1710–1740) as part of the Danish-Halle mission. Asked by their patrons to describe local plants, in situ, these individuals did not respond by carefully studying and describing the plants themselves. Despite being in a position to do this work, instead they chose mostly to engage local residents in conversations about the cultures of the plants in question. These conversations revolved around the origins and (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • ‘Exceeding the Age in Every Thing’: Placing Sloane’s Objects.James Delbourgo - 2009 - Spontaneous Generations 3 (1):41-54.
    That objects of knowledge get moved across boundaries is well known. But how they get moved often goes unexamined. Modes of movement cannot be ignored when considering objects’ historical signi?cance. Put differently, how geographies are negotiated is central to the constitution of knowledge objects. This essay offers a brief assessment of the competing agencies at work in the global collections of the Enlightenment naturalist Sir Hans Sloane (1660–1753). While discussing broadly the relationship between collecting and power in Sloane’s career, the (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • The Spatial Turn: Geographical Approaches in the History of Science.Diarmid A. Finnegan - 2008 - Journal of the History of Biology 41 (2):369-388.
    Over the past decade or so a number of historians of science and historical geographers, alert to the situated nature of scientific knowledge production and reception and to the migratory patterns of science on the move, have called for more explicit treatment of the geographies of past scientific knowledge. Closely linked to work in the sociology of scientific knowledge and science studies and connected with a heightened interest in spatiality evident across the humanities and social sciences this 'spatial turn ' (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   34 citations  
  • From Lake Nyassa to Philadelphia: a geography of the Zambesi Expedition, 1858–64.Lawrence Dritsas - 2005 - British Journal for the History of Science 38 (1):35-52.
    This paper is about collecting, travel and the geographies of science. At one level it examines the circumstances that led to Isaac Lea's description in Philadelphia of six freshwater mussel shells of the family Unionidae, originally collected by John Kirk during David Livingstone's Zambesi Expedition, 1858–64. At another level it is about how travel is necessary in the making of scientific knowledge. Following these shells from south-eastern Africa to Philadelphia via London elucidates the journeys necessary for Kirk and Lea's scientific (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Knowledge Production in Non-European Spaces of Modernity: The Society of Jesus and the Circulation of Darwinian Ideas in Postcolonial Ecuador, 1860–1890.Ana Sevilla & Elisa Sevilla - 2015 - International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 29 (3):233-250.
    This article is based on a perspective on circulation of knowledge that allows the consideration of science as the result of the encounter between diverse communities. We tell a story that constantly changes places, scales, and cultures in order to stress the importance of networks as an alternative to the centre/periphery trope, which entangles world histories of science. The result is a picture much more complex and intertwined than the one suggested by these simplifying dichotomies. We focus on a case (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation