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SCIENCE AND SOCIETY Globalizing the History of Science, Technology & Medicine History Department – Rutgers University 01:506:251 Spring 2017 Professor James Delbourgo [email protected] Class Hours: Mon & Weds 4:30-5:50 Frelinghuysen A6 Office Hours: Van Dyck (College Ave) 104 Weds 1.30-4pm & by appointment Teaching Assistant: Mr. Paul Sampson [email protected] Second Grader: Mr. Chris Blakley [email protected] Course Description How did modern science, medicine and technology become dominant through globalization? This class takes a global approach to the development of science, medicine and technology. The early modern period of global history has long been seen as the era when the world assumed its current form. One dominant story about the rise of modernity focuses on science, medicine and technology: how Europeans developed experimental techniques of unprecedented power for knowing and exploiting nature. A second origins story identifies modernity with the collision of cultures produced by European imperialism, bringing Americans, Africans, Asians and Europeans into contact as never before, and spawning new worldviews ranging from cosmopolitanism to Orientalism and racism. But how did these two processes of modernization relate: how were science, medicine and technology transformed by globalization and the movement of peoples – and how were cultural identities transformed by science? We examine how knowledge traveled through global networks stretching from Asia to the Middle East, Europe and America, exploring how science created new attitudes to nature (and the roots of our current ecological crisis) and new globalized social identities still with us today. All Readings Available via Sakai We will work from a selection of essays and extracts listed on Sakai under Resources by last name of the author: https://sakai.rutgers.edu/portal. (Essays listed below with a weblink are not on Sakai.) There are no set books to purchase and no books on library reserve for this course. Lecture outlines will be posted after relevant lectures for the purposes of review. Electronics Policy In order to foster the best possible conditions for learning, thought and engagement, the class policy is that no laptops, tablets, phones or other electronic devices are permitted in class. All students are asked to abide by this policy and help create a distraction-free environment – for which your help is appreciated. Please bring paper (or a journal) and pen to take notes by hand. Writing notes by hand remains a highly effective method for translating class discussions into one’s own thoughts on any given subject –beginning the process of writing and reflection that will generate material for discussion, written assignments and exam answers. Lectures and Readings Lectures combine discussions of the readings with attention to the larger themes of the course beyond any single reading. Students should complete readings before coming to class and are encouraged to review them afterwards. These are in general short to allow for more time for reflection. It is crucial to take some form of notes as you read, even brief ones, preferably annotations in which you begin to formulate your own thinking. Bear in mind the prompt under each unit heading as you read. You will not need to consult any extra materials beyond the syllabus to complete the assignments. Questions and comments are encouraged in lectures. But active verbal participation is expected in discussions, for which you should bring your notes on relevant readings or, especially in the case of primary source material, a hard copy of the assigned readings. For these occasional sessions, marked “DISCUSSION,” we will break into two groups, one of which will work with Prof Delbourgo in FH A6, the other with Paul Sampson in Scott Hall (CAC) Room 204. Attendance Attendance of both lectures and discussions is expected and attendance will be taken from 30 January via a sign-in sheet. Please arrive promptly but make sure you sign at the end if late. Students will be penalized 3% on the final grade for the course for every unexcused absence beyond three absences. An excused absence must be documented with a note, medical or otherwise. Office hour visits are warmly encouraged. Both the professor and teaching assistant are eager to help you enjoy the course as much as possible, discuss class material and help you with any problems. Don’t be shy! For best results email in advance to set up an appointment. 2 Assignments 10% Attendance and verbal contribution to discussions 15% Short take-home paper on Islamic Caliphates 20% Midterm: Mexico and China 15% Short take-home paper on Japan 40% Final: Europe and India Academic Integrity You should ensure that any written work you submit for evaluation is the result of your own thought and writing and that it reflects your own work and not that of another student. Copying work – plagiarism – and/or failure to complete any assignment will result in an F for the course. Students needing academic adjustments or accommodations because of a documented disability must present relevant documentation to this effect as soon as possible. SCHEDULE PART 1: WHAT IS THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE? Weds 18 Jan Introduction and Welcome Where in the world do you want to go and why? What’s the connection between science, technology and globalization? Word Association: “Chocolate.” Mon 23 Jan The ‘Scientific Revolution’ & ‘Modern Western Science’ What is the classic narrative of the history of science and who invented it? What do we mean by “modern western science”? Marwa Elshakry, “When Science Became Western: Historiographical Reflections,” Isis 101 (2010): 98-109 Weds 25 Jan Networks: From the Lab to the Field How does Bruno Latour use networks to understand science as a form of labor across distance via the notion of translation? How do networks help us see science as a global phenomenon? Bruno Latour, Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers Through Society (Harvard University Press, 1987), pp. 215-223 only PART 2: CALIPHATE & OTTOMAN SCIENCES 3 Mon 30 Jan Science in the Islamic Caliphates How did knowledge of the natural world flourish in the medieval Islamic Caliphates? How did their science relate to religion and what is the significance of their translation culture? James McClellan and Harold Dorn, Science and Technology in World History (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999), pp. 103-115 Jim Al-Khalili, The House of Wisdom: How Arabic Science Saved Ancient Wisdom and Gave us the Renaissance (Penguin, 2010), “Note on the term ‘Arabic Science,’” pp. xxv-xxix, and pp. 35-48 Weds 1 Feb Islam and Science: Polemics What is the debate about Islamic science during the period of the Caliphates? What difference did learning about Islamic science make to Derek Black? And what kind of ‘scientist’ was the alchemist Jābir (and who was ‘Geber’)? George Saliba, review of Toby Huff, The Rise of Early Modern Science: Islam, China and the West (Cambridge University Press, 1993), published in 1999: http://baheyeldin.com/history/georgesaliba-1.html Eli Saslow, “The White Flight of Derek Black,” Washington Post, October 15, 2016: https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/the-white-flight-of-derek-black/2016/10/15/ed5f906a8f3b-11e6-a6a3-d50061aa9fae_story.html?utm_term=.3f7410835d93 Al-Khalili, “The Lonely Alchemist,” House of Wisdom chapter on Jābir ibn Hayyān, pp. 52-66 Mon 6 Feb DISCUSSION: JĀBIR IBN HAYYĀN IN TRANSLATION What kind of alchemist was Jābir and why were the English interested in translating him? Jābir ibn Hayyān, The Book of the Monk, in Franz Rosenthal (ed.), The Classical Heritage in Islam (Routledge, 1992), pp. 248-251 ‘Geber’ in The Works of Geber (London, 1686): Richard Russell, “From the Translator to the Reader” (4 pp.) and TOC only; William Salmon, Medicina Practica, or the Practical Physician (London, 1707), TOC, preface paragraphs 26-36 and plates preceding p. 335 only Weds 8 Feb Knowing the World? Ottoman Geography To what extent were Ottoman geographers curious about the world beyond their own empire and why is this question important? Compare how Burns and Casale approach Ottoman sciences: which is better and why? How do different maps shape our perceptions of the world? William Burns, The Scientific Revolution in Global Perspective (Oxford UP, 2015), pp. 153-159 Giancarlo Casale, The Ottoman Age of Exploration (Oxford UP, 2010), pp. 180-203 * SHORT PAPER on JĀBIR DUE IN CLASS MON 13 FEB * 4 PART 3: AMERICA Mon 13 Feb America before Columbus How did native peoples make knowledge in pre-contact Central and South America? What are the strengths and weaknesses of Montellano’s account of “empirical Aztec medicine”? And what does chocolate taste like? McClellan and Dorn, Science and Technology in World History, pp. 155-167 Bernard Ortiz de Montellano, “Empirical Aztec Medicine,” Science 188 (1975): 215-220 An Aztec Herbal: The Classic Codex of 1552 [Codex Badianus], trans. and ed. William Gates (1939; Dover, 2000): xxxvii-lxiv & end-papers Weds 15 Feb Columbian Exchange: Chocolate as Natural History How did Spanish colonization transform the natural environments of the Atlantic world? How did knowledge about chocolate travel from the Mayans and Aztecs to the Spanish? Compare Norton’s approach to native knowledge with Montellano’s. Alan Taylor, American Colonies (Penguin, 2001), pp. 39-49 Marcy Norton, Sacred Gifts, Profane Pleasures: A History of Tobacco and Chocolate in the Atlantic World (Cornell University Press, 2008), pp. 121-140 Mon 20 Feb Mexico: Creole American Sciences How did Spanish-Americans use native sources to produce their own Creolized and Baroque forms of knowledge? What does Cañizares mean by “patriotic epistemology” and what are both the stakes and costs in vindicating Spanish science? Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra, “Spanish America: From Baroque to Modern Colonial Science,” in Roy Porter (ed.), Cambridge History of Science, Vol. 4 (Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 718738 Weds 22 Feb DISCUSSION: AZTECS & HERNÁNDEZ How did Hernández collect knowledge about Mexico through interacting with the Aztecs? The Mexican Treasury: The Writings of Dr. Francisco Hernández, ed. Simon Varey (Stanford University Press, 2000), selections PART 4: EAST ASIA 5 Mon 27 Feb China: Celestial Inventors & Barbarian Outsiders What was early modern China’s stance regarding the wider world and how did it organize its pursuit of scientific knowledge? What is the significance of discussions of Chinese “inventiveness”? McClellan and Dorn, Science and Technology in World History, pp. 117-140 Weds 1 Mar Jesuit Missionaries & Qing Imperialists How did religion and science converge in Qing interactions with Jesuit missionaries? How did the Qing aim to govern the new peoples and lands of their empire through cartography and ethnography? How does early modern history still shape contemporary Chinese science? Laura Hostetler, “Qing Connections to the Early Modern World: Ethnography and Cartography in Eighteenth-Century China,” Modern Asian Studies 34 (2000): 623-662 Chris Buckley and Adam Wu, “China Hunts for Scientific Glory, and Aliens, With New Telescope,” New York Times, September 26, 2016: http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/26/world/asia/china-telescope-fast-space-seti.html “FAST: The World’s Largest Telescope” (2016): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SRV3rnULO0 Mon 6 Mar DISCUSSION: CHINA AND COURSE REVIEW TO DATE Qianlong Emperor’s Letter to King George III (1793) Weds 8 Mar MIDTERM 13-15 March SPRING BREAK Mon 20 Mar Japan: Isolation or Traffic? What are ‘go-betweens’ and how does the relationship between the Dutchman Kaempfer and the Japanese Eisei help us understand both the larger forces and personal motivations that made knowledge circulate? How are today’s museums a legacy of early modern globalization? Yu-Ying Brown, “Japanese Books and Manuscripts,” in Arthur MacGregor (ed.), Sir Hans Sloane: Collector, Scientist, Antiquary, Founding Father of the British Museum (British Museum, 1994), pp. 278-90 Engelbert Kaempfer, Japan Today, originally published, London, 1727: selections from Beatrice Bodart-Bailey (ed.), Kaempfer’s Japan: Tokugawa Culture Observed (University of Hawai‘i Press, 1999), pp. 234-235, 187-190, 360-368 Weds 22 Mar Dutch Technology in Japanese Culture 6 How does the reception of Dutch technology challenge standard notions of ‘technology transfer’? How was the Japanese reception of foreign technology translated into their own cultural terms? And why are Japanese robots different from western ones? Timon Screech, The Lens within the Heart: The Western Scientific Gaze and Popular Imagery in Later Edo Japan (University of Hawai‘i Press, 2002), pp. 166-211 “Robot-Staffed Hotel Opens in Japan,” CBS This Morning 2015: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVVk0b9DX8Q * SHORT PAPER on JAPAN DUE IN CLASS MON 27 MAR * PART 5: EUROPE AND ITS COLONIES Mon 27 Mar Colonial Botany and the Atlantic Slave Trade How did the science of botany rely on the business of trade, including the slave trade? How did Africans in diaspora become effective herbalists and healers and how much of what they did can we reconstruct? How do the histories of slavery and science relate? Londa Schiebinger, Plants and Empire: Colonial Bioprospecting in the Atlantic World (Harvard UP, 2004), pp. 23-44 Susan Scott Parrish, “Diasporic African Sources of Enlightenment Knowledge,” in James Delbourgo and Nicholas Dew (eds.), Science and Empire in the Atlantic World (Routledge, 2007), pp. 281-310 Weds 29 Mar Europe’s “New Science”: Old v New Narratives How did big-picture European understandings of the natural world change during the 17th century and why? What are the strengths and weaknesses of the classic scientific revolution story and what would count as a better story? Burns, Scientific Revolution in Global Perspective, pp. 57-74 Mario Biagioli, “The Scientific Revolution is Undead,” Configurations 6 (1998): https://muse-jhu-edu.ezp-prod1.hul.harvard.edu/article/8138 Mon 3 Apr DISCUSSION: SCIENCE, SLAVERY AND GENDER How were women and enslaved Africans part of the globalization of early modern science? JoAnna Klein, “A Pioneering Woman of Science Reemerges after 300 Years,” NYT 23 Jan 2017: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/23/science/maria-sibylla-merian-metamorphosis-insectorumsurinamensium.html?smid=pl-share&_r=0 Maria Sibylla Merian, Letter to Johann Volkammer, 1702 7 Portuguese Inquisition Transcript testimony of Domingos Álvares in James Sweet, Domingos Álvares: African Healing and the Intellectual History of the Atlantic World (University of North Carolina Press, 2011), pp. 172-176 Weds 5 Apr Global Newton How did the science of Isaac Newton, allegedly an isolated scientific genius, depend on colonial networks? What is an “information order”? How did his work in physical science use similar methods to natural history and why is this important for the history of science as a whole? Simon Schaffer, “Newton on the Beach: The Information Order of Principia Mathematica,” History of Science 47 (2009): 243-276 PART 6: ORIENTALISM TO POSTCOLONIALISM TO TODAY Mon 10 Apr India: The Mughal Empire What scientific and medical traditions flourished in India both prior to and after European contact? How did different peoples and traditions interact in the making of French traveler L’empereur’s work on Indian botany? What role do pictures play in scientific knowledge? McClellan and Dorn, Science and Technology in World History, pp. 141-149 Kapil Raj, “Surgeons, Fakirs, Merchants, and Craftspeople: Making L’Empereur’s Jardin in Early Modern South Asia,” in Londa Schiebinger and Claudia Swan (eds.), Colonial Botany: Science, Commerce, and Politics in the Early Modern World (Univ. Pennsylvania Press, 2004), pp. 252-269 Weds 12 Apr Orientalism: Culture and Imperialism How did Orientalism cast European knowledge as the future and Indian knowledge as the past and why did this idea take such aggressive form in the late 18th century? Why did the British start translating ancient Indian texts like the Bhagavad Gita? Michael Adas, Machines as the Measure of Men: Science, Technology, and Ideologies of Western Dominance (Cornell UP, 1992), pp. 95-108, 166-177 Charles Wilkins, The Bhagvat-Geeta (London, 1785), pp. 1-26 only Mon 17 Apr Newton in India Why did Tafazzul Hussain Khan translate Newton into Arabic and how did the British interpret the significance of this translation in relation to Orientalism? How did their views express their own sense of identity and sense of historical time? Simon Schaffer, “The Asiatic Enlightenments of British Astronomy,” in Schaffer, et al. (eds.), The Brokered World, 2009, pp. 49-62 only; & see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YeKWqoiMo3Y Weds 19 Apr The Globe in 1800: A Mechanical or Revolutionary World? 8 What was Humboldtian science and how did it combine both instruments and the human body, both scientific discipline and artistic cultivation, as a way to understand the world as a whole? Did electric eels suggest nature was mechanical and predictable or alive and uncontrollable? John Tresch, “¡Viva la República Cósmica! Or the Children of Humboldt and Coca-Cola,” in Bruno Latour and Peter Weibel (eds.), Making Things Public: Atmospheres of Democracy (MIT Press, 2005), pp. 352-356 James Delbourgo, “The Electrical Machine in the American Garden,” in Delbourgo and Dew, Science and Empire in the Atlantic World, pp. 265-275 only Alexander von Humboldt, Personal Narrative of a Journey to the Equinoctial Regions of the New Continent (1814-1825): chap. 14 only on electric eels Mon 24 Apr Modern without Western?: Postcolonialism What is ‘postcolonialism’ and what is meant by the notion of ‘alternative modernities’? How did Gandhi and Nehru articulate different visions of India as a modern nation based on science, medicine and technology? Was it desirable or possible to become modern without becoming western? Warwick Anderson, “Postcolonial Technoscience,” Social Studies of Science 32 (2002): 643-658 Gyan Prakash, Another Reason: Science and the Imagination of Modern India (Princeton UP, 1999), pp. 190-226 Weds 26 Apr Nationalism vs. Globalization: Hindutva and Science Today How do the histories of imperialism, Orientalism and postcolonialism help us to understand the polemics surrounding ‘Hindutva’ (Hindu cultural nationalism) and science and technology in India today? Background: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2015/01/04/indians-invented-planes-7000years-ago-and-other-startling-claims-at-the-science-congress/ https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jun/07/india-paris-climate-deal-barack-obama-narendramodi Debate about the Murty Indian Classical Library of Harvard University Press: http://www.murtylibrary.com/why-a-classical-library-of-india.php https://www.change.org/p/mr-n-r-narayana-murthy-and-mr-rohan-narayan-murty-removal-of-profsheldon-pollock-as-mentor-and-chief-editor-of-murty-classical-library http://thewire.in/24450/swadeshi-indology-and-the-destruction-of-sanskrit/ Meera Nanda, “Hindutva’s Science Envy,” Frontline (Sept. 2016) and response in Hindu Post: http://www.frontline.in/science-and-technology/hindutvas-science-envy/article9049883.ece http://www.hindupost.in/society-culture/meera-nandas-freudian-slip-reveals-hinduphobia/ Mon 1 May FINAL DISCUSSION AND COURSE CONCLUSION 9 Why does globalizing the history of science matter? Steven Weinberg, “Eye on the Present: The Whig History of Science,” New York Review of Books, 17 December 2015 Stuart Theobald, “How we can Decolonize Science,” News24, October 23, 2016: http://www.news24.com/Opinions/Voices/how-we-can-decolonise-science-20161021 Dan Roodt, “Blacks and Liberals want to Abolish Science,” American Renaissance, October 26, 2016, website, including video: http://www.amren.com/news/2016/10/blacks-and-liberals-want-to-abolish-science/ * SCHEDULED FINAL EXAM * 10