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  1. Tremoring transits: railways, the Royal Observatory and the capitalist challenge to Victorian astronomical science.Edward J. Gillin - 2020 - British Journal for the History of Science 53 (1):1-24.
    Britain's nineteenth-century railway companies traditionally play a central role in histories of the spread of standard Greenwich time. This relationship at once seems to embody a productive relationship between science and capitalism, with regulated time essential to the formation of a disciplined industrial economy. In this narrative, it is not the state, but capitalistic private commerce which fashioned a national time system. However, as this article demonstrates, the collaboration between railway companies and the Royal Greenwich Observatory was far from harmonious. (...)
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  • Managing the observatory: discipline, order and disorder at Greenwich, 1835–1933.Scott Alan Johnston - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Science:1-21.
    This article presents a case study of life and work at the Royal Observatory at Greenwich which reveals tensions between the lived reality of the observatory as a social space, and the attempts to create order, maintain discipline and project an image of authority in order to ensure the observatory's long-term stability. Domestic, social and scientific activities all intermingled within the observatory walls in ways which were occasionally disorderly. But life at Greenwich was carefully managed to stave off such disorder (...)
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  • Making Kew Observatory: the Royal Society, the British Association and the politics of early Victorian science.Lee T. Macdonald - 2015 - British Journal for the History of Science 48 (3):409-433.
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