Perspectives on Science
En podcast av Consortium for History of Science, Technology and Medicine
119 Avsnitt
-
Replay—Presidents of HSS, SHOT, and AAHM (September 2020)
Publicerades: 2021-10-07 -
Eric Hintz — American Independent Inventors in an Era of Corporate R&D
Publicerades: 2021-09-29 -
Lucas Richert — Break On Through: Radical Psychiatry and the American Counterculture
Publicerades: 2021-09-22 -
Teasel Muir-Harmony — Operation Moonglow
Publicerades: 2021-09-16 -
Rachel Walker — Race & Popular Science in Early America
Publicerades: 2021-09-09 -
Neeraja Sankaran — A Tale of Two Viruses
Publicerades: 2021-09-02 -
Replay—Melanie Kiechle's Smell Detectives: An Olfactory History of Nineteenth-Century Urban America
Publicerades: 2021-08-26 -
Alberto Martínez — Burned Alive: Bruno, Galileo, and the Inquisition
Publicerades: 2021-08-03 -
From the Archives — Shopping for Health: Medicine and Markets in America
Publicerades: 2021-07-16 -
From the Archives — Immortal Life: The Promises and Perils of Biobanking and the Genetic Archive
Publicerades: 2021-06-24 -
Sciences Of The Mind with Courtney Thompson and Alicia Puglionesi
Publicerades: 2021-06-17 -
From the Archives — Trust in Science: Vaccines
Publicerades: 2021-06-10 -
Behind the Scenes: Black Holes | The Edge of All We Know
Publicerades: 2021-06-04 -
Abe Gibson — Feral Animals in the American South
Publicerades: 2021-05-27 -
From the Archives — Kavita Sivaramakrishnan on COVID-19
Publicerades: 2021-05-12 -
Bert Hansen — "Overlooked Images of Medicine" in America's New Mass Media of the Late 19th Century
Publicerades: 2021-04-28 -
Stephen Kenny on Racial Science
Publicerades: 2021-04-16 -
Wendy Gonaver — The Peculiar Institution and the Making of Modern Psychiatry
Publicerades: 2021-04-07 -
Warwick Anderson on Racial Science
Publicerades: 2021-03-29 -
Christa Kuljian on Racial Science
Publicerades: 2021-03-18
A new public events series from the Consortium for History of Science, Technology and Medicine brings historical perspective to contemporary issues and concerns. In the public forums, historians and other specialists speak about culturally relevant topics in front of a live audience at Consortium member institutions. Forum subjects range from medical consumerism to public trust in science and technology. Videos of these events are also available at chstm.org. In podcast episodes, authors of new books in the history of science, technology, and medicine respond to questions from readers with a wide variety of backgrounds and expertise. These conversations illuminate the utility and relevance of the past in light of current events.
