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  1. Reel Nature: America's Romance with Wildlife on Film.Gregg Mitman - 2000 - Journal of the History of Biology 33 (2):385-387.
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  • The Emergence of a Visual Language for Geological Science 1760—1840.Martin J. S. Rudwick - 1976 - History of Science 14 (3):149-195.
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  • (1 other version)Making Visible.M. Norton Wise - 2006 - Isis 97 (1):75-82.
    ABSTRACT An overview of some of the main modes of making images of natural objects and processes, as they have appeared in the history of science, leads to two main conclusions. First, the dichotomies that have traditionally distinguished, for example, art from science, museums from laboratories, and geometrical from algebraic methods have produced a poverty of understanding of visualization. It is at the intersections of these dichotomies where much of the creative work of science occurs, and it is into those (...)
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  • (1 other version)Pictures of Evolution and Charges of Fraud.Nick Hopwood - 2006 - Isis 97 (2):260-301.
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  • (1 other version)Pictures of Evolution and Charges of Fraud: Ernst Haeckel’s Embryological Illustrations.Nick Hopwood - 2006 - Isis 97 (2):260-301.
    Comparative illustrations of vertebrate embryos by the leading nineteenth‐century Darwinist Ernst Haeckel have been both highly contested and canonical. Though the target of repeated fraud charges since 1868, the pictures were widely reproduced in textbooks through the twentieth century. Concentrating on their first ten years, this essay uses the accusations to shed light on the novelty of Haeckel’s visual argumentation and to explore how images come to count as proper representations or illegitimate schematics as they cross between the esoteric and (...)
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  • (1 other version)Making Visible.M. Norton Wise - 2006 - Isis 97 (1):75-82.
    ABSTRACT An overview of some of the main modes of making images of natural objects and processes, as they have appeared in the history of science, leads to two main conclusions. First, the dichotomies that have traditionally distinguished, for example, art from science, museums from laboratories, and geometrical from algebraic methods have produced a poverty of understanding of visualization. It is at the intersections of these dichotomies where much of the creative work of science occurs, and it is into those (...)
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  • (1 other version)Essay review: The history of scientific illustration.Charlotte M. Porter - 1995 - Journal of the History of Biology 28 (3):545-550.
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  • Charles Darwin as a Celebrity.Janet Browne - 2003 - Science in Context 16 (1-2):175-194.
    ArgumentSeveral recent works in sociology examine the manufacture of public identities through the notion of celebrity. This paper explores the imagery of Charles Darwin as a nineteenth-century scientific celebrity by comparing the public character deliberately manufactured by Darwin and his friends with images constructed by the public as represented here by caricatures in humorous magazines of the era. It is argued that Darwin’s outward persona drew on a subtle tension between public and private. The boundaries between public and private were (...)
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