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  1. Biocircularities: New Formations of Embodied Time.Karen Jent & Branwyn Poleykett - 2023 - Body and Society 29 (2):3-19.
    In this introduction to the special section ‘Biocircularities: New Formations of Embodied Time’, we introduce the concept of ‘biocircularity’. Drawing on case studies from Senegal, Australia and the United States, we argue that (bio)circularities provides a new tool to understand transformations of embodiment and embodied time in response to rapid technoscientific, social and environmental change. We situate the potential of biocircularity by distinguishing the approach from cycles and ‘looping’. We lay out why we think biocircularity is an important concept now, (...)
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  • Circulation as a Visual Practice.Katharina Steiner & Lukas Engelmann - 2023 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 46 (2-3):143-157.
    This special issue looks at some of the ways that images are adopted, co‐opted, and adapted in the life sciences and beyond. It brings together papers that investigate the role of visualization in scientific knowledge‐production with contributions that focus on the distribution and dissemination of knowledge to a broader audience. A commentary provides a critical perspective. In this editorial we introduce circulation as a practice to better understand scientific images. Along two themes, we highlight connections across the papers. First, the (...)
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  • Landscapes of Time: Building Long‐Term Perspectives in Animal Behavior.Erika Lorraine Milam - 2022 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 45 (1-2):164-188.
    Berichte zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Volume 45, Issue 1-2, Page 164-188, June 2022.
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  • Timeless spaces: Field experiments in the physiological study of circadian rhythms, 1938–1963.Kristin D. Hussey - 2023 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 45 (2):1-25.
    In the middle of the twentieth century, physiologists interested in human biological rhythms undertook a series of field experiments in natural spaces that they believed could closely approximate conditions of biological timelessness. With the field of rhythms research was still largely on the fringes of the life sciences, natural spaces seemed to offer unique research opportunities beyond what was available to physiologists in laboratory spaces. In particular, subterranean caves and the High Arctic became archetypal ‘natural laboratories’ for the study of (...)
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  • Inspiring imagination – embarrassing analogies: coping with the causes of cytoplasmic streaming.Ariane Dröscher - 2023 - Intellectual History Review 33 (4):703-725.
    In 1817, the German botanist Ludolph Christian Treviranus (1779–1864), while working on cytoplasmic streaming, exclaimed “What a matter for new observations and what an expectation for a more profo...
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