PAPERS OF JOSEPH HENRY V8

PAPERS OF JOSEPH HENRY V8
Author: Joseph Henry
Publisher: Smithsonian Books (DC)
Total Pages: 616
Release: 1999-01-17
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

This volume provides a fascinating view of an increasingly confident public figure who worked unstintingly to gain international acknowledgement of American scientific achievement but also popular support for research in a wide array of disciplines.

The Papers of Joseph

The Papers of Joseph
Author: Joseph Henry
Publisher: Smithsonian Books (DC)
Total Pages: 554
Release: 1972
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

This fifteen-volume series collects the personal papers of Joseph Henry, who was the first secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, a founder of the American scientific community, and a pioneer experimental physicist in electricity in magnetism. The first five volumes were published under the editorship of Nathan Reingold.

Frontiers of Science

Frontiers of Science
Author: Cameron B. Strang
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 376
Release: 2018-06-13
Genre: History
ISBN: 1469640481

Cameron Strang takes American scientific thought and discoveries away from the learned societies, museums, and teaching halls of the Northeast and puts the production of knowledge about the natural world in the context of competing empires and an expanding republic in the Gulf South. People often dismissed by starched northeasterners as nonintellectuals--Indian sages, African slaves, Spanish officials, Irishmen on the make, clearers of land and drivers of men--were also scientific observers, gatherers, organizers, and reporters. Skulls and stems, birds and bugs, rocks and maps, tall tales and fertile hypotheses came from them. They collected, described, and sent the objects that scientists gazed on and interpreted in polite Philadelphia. They made knowledge. Frontiers of Science offers a new framework for approaching American intellectual history, one that transcends political and cultural boundaries and reveals persistence across the colonial and national eras. The pursuit of knowledge in the United States did not cohere around democratic politics or the influence of liberty. It was, as in other empires, divided by multiple loyalties and identities, organized through contested hierarchies of ethnicity and place, and reliant on violence. By discovering the lost intellectual history of one region, Strang shows us how to recover a continent for science.

PAPERS OF JOSEPH HENRY V1

PAPERS OF JOSEPH HENRY V1
Author: Joseph Henry
Publisher: Washington : Smithsonian Institution Press, distributed by Braziller, New York
Total Pages: 554
Release: 1972
Genre: Físics
ISBN:

The Republic of Color

The Republic of Color
Author: Michael Rossi
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 330
Release: 2019-08-30
Genre: Science
ISBN: 022665172X

The Republic of Color delves deep into the history of color science in the United States to unearth its origins and examine the scope of its influence on the industrial transformation of turn-of-the-century America. For a nation in the grip of profound economic, cultural, and demographic crises, the standardization of color became a means of social reform—a way of sculpting the American population into one more amenable to the needs of the emerging industrial order. Delineating color was also a way to characterize the vagaries of human nature, and to create ideal structures through which those humans would act in a newly modern American republic. Michael Rossi’s compelling history goes far beyond the culture of the visual to show readers how the control and regulation of color shaped the social contours of modern America—and redefined the way we see the world.