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E-grāmata: Urban Histories of Science: Making Knowledge in the City, 1820-1940

Edited by , Edited by (Institución Milą i Fontanals-CSIC, Barcelona)
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This book tells eleven Urban Histories of Science from nine cities - Athens, Barcelona, Budapest, Dublin, Glasgow, Helsinki, Lisbon, Naples and Buenos Aires - situated on the margins of Europe or even outside of it. With a focus on the time around the turn of the 20th century, it contains episodes dealing with astronomy and archaeology, zoology and geology, engineering, hygiene and city planning. Yet why delve into the scientific culture of cities, which are considered marginal in terms of their production in science, technology and medicine? This book turns the tables and shows what can only be learnt by studying the periphery. It is exactly the absence of celebrated academies of science and leading universities that enables historians to dig deeper into the urban culture of science. This book asks how scientific practices, debates and innovations are intertwined with the highly dynamic urban space around 1900. The authors analyze zoological gardens, research stations, observatories and international exhibitions, and also hospitals, panoramas, newspapers, back streets and private homes. They unfold the diversity of urban publics ranging from engineers, scientists and physicians to tuberculosis patients and fishermen. Looking at these nine cities is like glancing at a prism that produces different and even conflicting notions of modernity, torn between cosmopolitanism and the surge of nationalism, between aping the metropolis of London and Paris and insisting on their local identity. This book stresses the importance of concrete urban spaces for the production and appropriation of knowledge. What first may appear as mere variation or inferior copy of the metropolis emerges thus as a valuable object of study in its own right.
Figures and Maps
vii
Contributors ix
Preface xiii
Urban Histories of Science: How to Tell the Tale 1(15)
Oliver Hochadel
Agusti Nieto-Galan
1 Envisioning a New European Metropolis: Designing the National Observatory of Athens
16(21)
Maria Rentetzi
Spiros Flevaris
2 Institutionalizing the "Metropolis of Mechanics": Philosophical Engineering in the City of Glasgow c. 1820-c. 1875
37(22)
Ben Marsden
3 The Natural Sciences and Their Public at the Meetings of the Hungarian Association for the Advancement of Science in Budapest and Beyond, 1841-1896
59(21)
Katalin Straner
4 Copepods and Fisherboys: Advanced Marine Biological Research and Street Poverty in Naples c. 1890
80(22)
Katharina Steiner
5 Locating Dublin in the Late Nineteenth-Century Ether
102(20)
Tanya O'Sullivan
6 Second City of Science? Dublin as a Center of Calculation in the British Imperial Context, 1886-1912
122(19)
Juliana Adelman
7 From Capital City to Scientific Capital: Science, Technology, and Medicine in Lisbon as Seen through the Press, 1900-1910
141(23)
Ana Simoes
8 Collective Expertise behind the Urban Planning of Munkkiniemi and Haaga, Helsinki (c. 1915)
164(22)
Emilia Karppinen
9 On Hygiene in a Modern Peripheral City: Buenos Aires, 1870-1940
186(22)
Diego Armus
10 From Electricity to the Photo Archive: National Identity and the Planning of the Barcelona International Exhibition 1929
208(19)
Lucila Mallart
Index 227
Oliver Hochadel is based at the IMF-CSIC (Spanish National Research Council) in Barcelona.

Agustķ Nieto-Galan is Professor of History of Science at the Universitat Autņnoma de Barcelona.