prototyping participation over presentation: "the children's darwin" &...
As my academic department considers how to widen our outreach to undergrads with the proposed introduction in 2011 of a major in the history of science, technology, and medicine, I've been trying to...
View Articlea child's-eye view of charles darwin
Last year was the 150th anniversary celebration of the publication of Charles Darwin's Origin of Species (and the 200th anniversary of his birth), with lots of hoopla in the form of academic...
View Articlechild-sized depictions of charles darwin to grow on
The overwhelming number of recently-published children's picture books about Charles Darwin -- across a diversity of publishers and authors -- choose to feature his voyage aboard the Beagle, leading...
View Articlehollow heads? science, fantasy, and what's as plain as the earth beneath our...
Newton's Principia Mathematica is rarely remembered today for having sparked speculation that we all go about our days traveling across the shell of what is a hollowed out planet -- but the devoted...
View Articlethe space race and the dark side of the moon: saying good-bye to roger boisjoly
In class last week we were talking about what it means to live our lives in an age of science by looking at everyday ways in which assumptions about science and technology become part of the "common...
View Articleeveryday humanities vs. humanities a la russe
[Originally posted at my DayofDH 2014 blog; part 2 coming up here next week.]One of the aspects for me of a day of reporting on and reflecting about digital humanities while doing digital humanities is...
View Articledoes the 'doomsday clock' keep the right time?
[originally published in 2007] One of the most famous images from the dawn of the nuclear era is back in the news: it is no longer seven minutes to midnight, but five, according to the board of...
View Articlethe space race and the dark side of the moon: saying good-bye to roger boisjoly
In class last week we were talking about what it means to live our lives in an age of science by looking at everyday ways in which assumptions about science and technology become part of the "common...
View Articleeveryday humanities vs. humanities a la russe
[Originally posted at my DayofDH 2014 blog; part 2 coming up here next week.]One of the aspects for me of a day of reporting on and reflecting about digital humanities while doing digital humanities is...
View Articledoes the 'doomsday clock' keep the right time?
[originally published in 2007] One of the most famous images from the dawn of the nuclear era is back in the news: it is no longer seven minutes to midnight, but five, according to the board of...
View Articlewondering about wonder
As a new mother, one of the things I found odd about baby books and such was an overwhelming emphasis on farm animals. Now, I’ve got nothing against farm animals, but it did strike me as interesting...
View Articlehollow heads? science, fantasy, and what's as plain as the earth beneath our...
Newton's Principia Mathematica is rarely remembered today for having sparked speculation that we all go about our days traveling across the shell of what is a hollowed out planet -- but the devoted...
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