Bibliography: Race, Gender, and Diversity in Science and Mathematics

Prepared by

Daniel King (Mathematics)

and

Karen Rader (Science, Technology, and Society)

 

In conjunction with the ACCORD Initiative 1999-2000

Sarah Lawrence College

One Mead Way

Bronxville, NY 10708

 

 

I.  Minorities in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering

 

 

Histories and General Overview

 

*Elazar Barkan, The Retreat of Scientific Racism: Changing Concepts of Race in Britain and The U.S. Between the World Wars (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992)

 

*Sandra Harding, ed. The Racial Economy of Science: Toward a Democratic Future (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1993)

 

*Claudia Henrion, Women in Mathematics (Bloomington:  Indiana University Press, 1997)

 

**Robin Horton, “African Thought and Western Science” in Bryan Wilson, ed., Rationality (NY: Harpers and Row, 19??), Chapter 7.

 

*Russell Jacoby and Naomi Glauberman, The Bell Curve Debate: History, Documents, Opinions (New York: Random House/Times Books, 1995)

 

*P. Kenschaft, “Black Women in Mathematics in the United States,” American Mathematical Monthly, 88 (Oct. 1981): 592-604.

 

V. Newell, ed., Black Mathematicians and Their Works (Ardmore PA: Dorrance and Company, 1980)

 

*Robert N. Proctor, Racial Hygiene: Medicine Under the Nazis (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1988)

 

**William Trent and John Hill, “The Contributions of Historically Black Colleges and Universities to the Production of African American Scientists and Engineers,” in W. Pearson Jr. and  A. Fechter, eds., Who Will Do Science? Educating the Next Generation (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 19??)

 

*H. J. Mozans, Women in Science (Notre Dame:  University of Notre Dame Press, 1991)

 

Biographies

 

**Amalie Kass, “Dr. Thomas Hidgkin, Dr. Martin Delany, and the ‘Return to Africa,” Medical History 27 (1983): 373-393.

 

*Kenneth R. Manning, Black Apollo of Science: The Life of  Ernest Everett Just (New York: Oxford University Press, 1983)

 

*Lynn M. Osen, Women in Mathematics (Cambridge:  MIT Press, 1974)

 

*T. Perl, Math Equals: Biographies of Women Mathematicians and Related Activities  (Menlo Park, CA:  Addison-Wesley, 1978)

 

Sociological Studies and Policy-oriented Research

 

Linda Dix, ed., Minorities: Their Under-representation and Career Differentials in Science and Engineering (Washington: NAS Press, 1987)

 

*Lynn H. Fox, Linda Brody, and Dianne Tobin, eds. Women and the Mathematical Mystique (Baltimore:  The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1980)

 

*Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray, The Bell-Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life (New York: Free Press/Simon and Schuster, 1994)

 

**Oliver W. Hill and W. Clinton Pettus, “Three Studies of Factors Affecting the Attitudes of Blacks and Females Toward the Pursuit of Science and Science-Related Careers,” Journal of Research in Science Teaching 27(4) (1990): 289-314.

 

 

II.  Science Education

 

Elementary and Secondary Schools:

 

Leone Burton, ed., Gender and Mathematics:  An International Perspective (Norwich:  Cassell Educational Limited, 1990)

 

**Ronald S. Ellis, “Impacting the Science Attitudes of Minority High School Youth,” School Science and Mathematics  93(8) (December 1993): 400-407.

 

*Elizabeth Fennema and Gilah C. Leder, eds., Matheamtics and Gender (New York:  Teachers College Press, 1990)

 

**David Trippe Garza, “Mathematics and Science Education: Reclaiming Minorities at the Elementary School Level,” in Securing Our Future: The Importance of Quality Education for Minorities (Policy Research Project Report Number 96, Lyndon Johnson School of Public Affairs, University of Texas, 1992).

 

Gabriele Kaqiser-Messmer, “Results of an Empirical Study into Gender Differences in Attitudes Towards Mathematics,” Educational Studies in Mathematics 25 (1993): 209-233.

 

**Avi Hofstein, Netta Maoz, and Moshe Rishpon, “Attitudes Towards School Science: A Comparison of Participants and Nonparticipants in Extracurricular Science Activities,” School Science and Mathematics 90(1) (January 1990): 13-22.

 

**Michael T. Nettles, “Precollegiate Development of Minority Scientists and Engineers,” in Linda Dix, ed., Minorities: Their Under-representation and Career Differentials in Science and Engineering (Washington: NAS Press, 1987).

 

**Arthur J. Reynolds, “The Middle Schooling Process: Influences on Science and Mathematics Achievement From the Longitudinal Study of American Youth,” Adolescence 26 (101)

 

*Janet Shibley Hyde, Elizabeth Fennema, and Susan J. Lamon, “Gender Differences in Mathematics Performance:  A Meta-Analysis,” Psychological Bulletin, 107(2) (1990):  139-155.

 

College and University:

 

**Alexander W. Astin and Helen S. Astin, “Undergraduate Science Education: The Impact of Different College Environments on the Educational Pipeline in the Sciences” (Final Report of NSF Grant # SPA-8955365), Los Angeles: Higher Education Research Institute of the Graduate School of Education, 199?)

 

**Mary M. Atwater and Bonita Alick, “Cognitive Development and Problem-Solving of Afro-American Students in Chemistry,” Journal of Research in Science Teaching 27(2) (1990): 157-172.

 

**J.W. Carmichel, Jacqueline T. Hunter, Deidre D. Labat, John P. Sevenair, and Sr. Joanne Bauer, “An Educational Pathway into Biology- and Chemistry-Based Careers for Black Americans,” Journal of College Science Teaching 17 (April 1988): 370-74, 405.

 

**Sue A. Maple and Frances K. Stage, “Influences on the Choice of Math/Science Major by Gender and Ethnicity,” American Educational Research Journal 28(1) (Spring 1991): 37-60.

 

**Marsha Lakes Matyas, “Investing in Human Potential: Policies and Programs in Higher Education,” in W. Pearson Jr. and  A. Fechter, eds., Who Will Do Science? Educating the Next Generation (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 19??).

 

 

III.  Multiculturalism in Science

 

 

*Marcia Ascher, Ethnomathematics:  A Multicultural View of Mathematical Ideas (Chapman & Hall/CRC, 1991).

 

**Jerry Gaston, “The Benefits of Black Participation in Science,” in W. Pearson and H.K. Bechtel, ed., Blacks, Science, and American Education (New Brunswick: Rutgers UP, 1989).

 

*Sandra Harding, Is Science Multicultural? Postcolonialism, Feminisms, and Epistemologies (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1998).

 

*George Ghevarughese Joseph, “Foundations of Eurocentrism in Mathematics,” Race and Class, 28(3) (1987): 13-28.

 

**Shirley M. Malcom, Yolanda S. George, and Virginia V. Van Horne, “Science and Diversity: A Compelling National Interest,” in The Effect of Changing Policy Climate on Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Diversity (ed. By Malcom, George, and Van Horne, Washington: AAAS, 1996).

 

D. Nelson, G. Joseph, and J. Williams, Multicultural Mathematics (Oxford:  Oxford University Press, 1993)

 

*Arthur P. Powell, Ethnomathematics:  Challenging Eurocentrism in Mathematics Education (Albany:  State University of New York Press, 1997).

 

 

IV. Non Western Science – History and Policy

 

Chinese Science

 

*Steven J. Bennett. “Chinese science: Theory and practice” in Philosophy East and West 1978, 28: 439-453.

 

Steven J. Bennett “Chinese topographical thinking” in Boston University Journal 1978, 26(1): 14-27

 

Steven J Bennett. “Patterns of sky and earth: A Chinese science of applied cosmology” in Chinese Science 1978, 3: 1-26.

 

*Gregory Blue. “Joseph Needham, heterodox Marxism, and the social background to Chinese science” in Science and Society 1998, 62: 195-217.

 

*Derk Bodde.“Chinese thought, society, and science: The intellectual and social background of science and technology in pre-modern China”(Honolulu : Univ. of Hawaii Press, 1991.)

 

Peter Buck. “Science, revolution, and imperialism: Current Chinese and Western views of scientific development”in Proc. XIV Int. Congr. Hist. Sci. 1974 (pub. 1975), 4: 55-81.

 

Chun-Shu Chang. Premodern China: A bibliographical introduction (Ann Arbor : Univ. of Michigan Center for Chinese Studies,1971)

 

Cheng-yih Chen. Science and Technology in Chinese Civilization. (Singapore, World Scientific, 1987).

 

Cheng-Yih Chen. Early Chinese work in natural science: A re-examination of  the physics of motion, acoustics, astronomy and scientific thoughts (Hong Kong : Hong Kong Univ. Press, 1996).

 

Guofu Chen. “The Materials for the Study of Ancient Chinese Science and Technology Contained in the Taoist Canon”in Ziran Kexue Shi Yanjiu v. 2, no. 3, 1983, p. 216-24.

 

Fan Dainian and Robert S. Cohen (eds). Chinese studies in the history and philosophy of science and technology. ( Dordrecht : Kluwer Academic, 1996.

  Series: Boston studies in the philosophy of science ; 179).

 

Shi-ran Du.“Science during the Ming and Qing dynasties”in Parola pas Vol. 51, fasc. 3 (1996), p.238-240.

 

James Fetzer.“Alfred Thayer Mahan and East Asia: An Evaluation”.in American Neptune v. 54, Winter 1994, p. 11-17.

 

James Zheng Gao. Meeting Technology's Advance: Social Change in China and Zimbabwe in the Railway Age.(Westport, Ct. : Greenwood, 1997).

 

Jin Guantao. The Evolution of Chinese Science and Technology. Time, Science, and Society in China and the West (Amherst: Univ. Massachusetts Press, 1986)

 

 

Brian Harvey. The Chinese space program, from conception to future capabilities

(Chichester, Eng. : Wiley, in association with Praxis; New York : Wiley, 1998).

 

Peng Yoke Ho.“Chinese science: The traditional Chinese view”in Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies  [London University] 1991, 54: 506-519.

 

Daniel J. Hoffheimer. “Science and symbolism in Chinese astronomy”in Synthesis: The [Harvard] University Journal in the History and Philosophy of Science 1974, 1(4): 24-34.

 

 Richard Hyatt. Chinese herbal medicine: Ancient art and modern science.

With therapeutic repertory by Robert Feldman (New York : Schocken, 1978).

 

Institute of the History of Natural Sciences, Chinese  Academy of Sciences, Ancient China's technology and science. (Beijing : Foreign Languages Press, 1983).

 

John J Kao. .Three millennia of Chinese psychiatry  (New York : Institute for Advanced Research in Asian Science and Medicine, 1979). 

 

Hashimoto  Keizô, Catherine Jami, and Lowell Skar.East Asian science: Tradition and beyond. Papers from the 7th International Conference on the History of Science in

East Asia, Kyoto, 2-7 August, 1993. (Osaka, Japan : Kansai Univ. Press, 1995).

 

 *Yung Sik Kim. “Natural knowledge in a traditional culture: Problems in the study of the history of Chinese science” in Minerva: Review of Science, Learning and Policy 1982, 20: 83-104.

 

Wolfgang König. Technological Development, Society and State: Western and Chinese Civilizations in Comparison.(Singapore, World Scientific, 1991).

 

Xiaoqing C. Lin. “Social science and social control” in Chinese Science 1997, 14: 71-89.

 

 G.E.R Lloyd, Adversaries and authorities: Investigations into ancient Greek and Chinese science. ( Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1996).

 

Robert Maddin ed. The Beginning of the Use of Metals and Alloys: Papers From

the  Second International Conference on the Beginning of theUse of Metals and Alloys, Zhengzhou, China, 21-26 October 1986.(Cambridge, Mass., MIT Press, 1988).

 

John S. Major.”Myth, cosmology and the origins of Chinese science”in Journal of Chinese Philosophy 1978, 5: 1-20.

 

Shigeru Nakayama. “Grading Chinese science studies: A report on the Kyoto

Symposium on Chinese science” in Chinese Science 1991, 10: 57-65.

 

*Joseph Needham. “Time and history in China and the West”in Leonardo: International Journal of the Contemporary Artist 1977, 10(3): 233-236.

 

*Willard J. Peterson Fang I-chih: Western learning and the "investigation of things"

 (New York : Columbia Univ. Press, 1975).In: unfolding of neo-Confucianism. (Studies in Oriental culture,10) / W.T. de Bary (ed.) p.369-411.

 

Manfred Porkert. The theoretical foundations of Chinese medicine: Systems of correspondence (Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, 1974).

 

Sarah A Queen. From chronicle to canon: The hermeneutics of the Spring and Autumn according to Tung Chung-shu.( Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1996).

 

Sal P Restivo, “Joseph Needham and the comparative sociology of Chinese and modern science”in Research in Sociology of Knowledge, Sciences, and Art 1979, 2: 25-51.

 

Laurence A Schneider. “Using the Rockefeller Archives for research on modern Chinese natural science”in Chinese Science 1986, 7: 25-31.

 

Denis Fred Simon. Science and Technology in Post-Mao China. (Cambridge, Council on East Asian Studies, Harvard Univ:Harvard Univ. Press, 1989).

 

Nathan Sivin. Chinesische Wissenschaft: Ein Vergleich der Ansätze von Max Weber and Joseph Needham (Frankfurt am Main : Suhrkamp, 1983).

 

Nathan Sivin.“A directory of scholars in East Asia engaged in research on traditional Chinese science”in Chinese Science 1983, 6: 33-58.

 

Nathan Sivin. “Next steps in learning about science from the Chinese Experience” in          

 Proc. XIV Int. Congr. Hist. Sci. 1974 (pub. 1975), 1: 10-18.

 

Nathan Sivin.“On the word "Taoist" as a source of perplexity, with special reference to the relations of science and religion in traditional China” in History of Religions 1978, 17: 303-330.

 

 Nathan Sivin. “Over the borders: Technical history, philosophy, and the social sciences” in Chinese Science 1991, 10: 69-80.

 

 Nathan Sivin. Science and medicine in Chinese history (Berkeley : Univ. of California Press, 1990).

 

Nathan Sivin. “A supplemental bibliography of traditional Chinese science: Introductory books and articles in western languages” in Chinese Science 1986, 7: 33-41.

 

Nathan Sivin. “Why the Scientific Revolution did not take place in China--or didn't it? “(Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1984). In: Transformation and tradition in the sciences: Essays in honor of I. Bernard Cohen / Everett Mendelsohn (ed.) p.531-554.

 

Paul B. Trescott.“Scottish political economy comes to the Far East: The Burton-Chambers "Political economy" and the introduction of Western economic ideas into Japan and China” in History of Political Economy 1989, 21: 481-502.

 

Shuping Yao. “Chinese intellectuals and science: A history of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS)” in Science in Context 1989, 3: 447-473.

 

 *P. Young “The sociology of time: Histories and historians in the cultures of the West and of China” in Leonardo: International Journal of the Contemporary Artist, 1976, 9(3): 205-208.

 

 

Egyptian Science

 

Ferdinando Abbri.. “ Ancient Egyptian science” [book review].in  Science and technology in Chinese civilization and Nuncius A. 11, fasc. 2 (1996), p.792-794..

 

Marshall Clagett. Ancient Egyptian science: A source book. Volume 2: Calendars, clocks, and astronomy ( Philadelphia : American Philosophical Society, 1995).

 

Marshall Clagett. “Computer-generated hieroglyphs”in Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 1987, 131 197-223.

 

 Marshall Clagett. Ancient Egyptian science : a sourcebook.(Philadelphia : American philosophical society, 1989)

 

Marshall. Clagett. Ancient Egyptian science: A source book. Vol. 1: Knowledge and order. Tome 1-2 (Philadelphia : American Philosophical Society, 198).

 

*Sergio Donadoni. “Ancient Egyptian science [book review]” in Impact of Science on Society 1990, 40: 349-355

 

Erik Hornung.“Ancient Egyptian science [book review]”. In Nuncius A. 7, fasc. 1 (1992), p.223-225.

 

David A King. A catalogue of the scientific manuscripts in the Egyptian National Library.(Cairo : General Egyptian Book Organization in collaboration with the American Research Center in Egypt and the  Smithsonian Institution, 1981-1986).

 

David W Kingery. Ceramics and Civilization III: High Technology Ceramics--Past, Present and Future.(Westerville, Oh., American Ceramic Society, 1986).

 

*Robert Palter. "Black Athena", Afro-centrism and the history of science”’in

History of Science 1993, 31: 227-287.

 

 

Indian Science

 

W.H. Abdi [ed.]. “Interaction between Indian and central Asian science and  technology in medieval times”. Volume 1: General ideas and methodology, astronomy, mathematics, and physical concepts. Volume 2: Medicine,technology, arts and crafts, architecture, and music.(New Delhi : Indian National Science Academy, 1990).

 

Basu Aparajito. “Chemical research in India (1876-1918)”in Annals of Science 1995, 52: 591-600.

 

Durgaprasad Bhattacharya.“A Survey of Bengali Writings on Science and Technology,1800-1950” in Indian Journal of History of Science v. 24, Jan. 1989, p. 8-66.

 

Paola Gemme. “Rewriting the Indian tale: Science, politics, and the

evolution of Ann S. Stephens's Indian romances”in Prospects: An Annual of American Cultural Studies 1994, 19: 375-387.

 

David A. King, George Saliba(eds.)From deferent to equant: A volume of studies in the history of science in the ancient and medieval Near East in honor of E.S. Kennedy.

 (New York : New York Academy of Sciences, 1987).

 

Deepak Kumar ed. Science and Empire: Essays in Indian Context (1700-1947). (Delhi, Anamika Prakashan , 1991).

 

Joan Leopold. “British application of the Aryan theory of race to India, 1850-1870”in English Historical Review 1974, 89: 578-610.

 

*David Pingree.“The Indian and pseudo-Indian passages in Greek and Latin astronomical and astrological texts”in Viator: Medieval and Renaissance Studies 1976, 7: 141-195.

 

“Proceedings of the Symposium on al-Biruni and Indian science held in New Delhi on November 8-9, 1971” in Indian Journal of History of Science 1975, 10: 89-277.

 

A Rahman. (ed.) Science and technology in Indian culture: A historical perspective

(New Delhi : National Institute of Science, Technology & Development Studies, 1984.)

 

C. N. R Rao. Science in India: 50 years of the Academy.(New Delhi : Indian National Science Academy, 1985).

 

Satpal Sangwan. Technology and imperialism in the Indian context: The case of steamboats, 1819-1839 ( New York : St. Martin's Press, 1991).

               

 Satpal Sangwan. Technology and Imperialism in the Indian Context: The Case

of Steamboats, 1819-1839.Science, Medicine and Cultural Imperialism – (New York, St.

Martin's, 1991 p. 60-74).

 

Satpal Sangwan. Science, Technology and Colonization: The Indian Experience,

1757-1857.( Delhi, Anamika Prakashan, 1991).

 

Satpal Sangwan. “Indian response to European science and technology, 1757-1857”in

 British Journal for the History of Science 1988, 21: 211-232.

 

S.N. Sen, K.S. Shukla(eds.) History of astronomy in India (New Delhi : Indian National Science Academy, 1985.)

 

S.N. Sen. “Factors in the development of scientific research in India between 1906 and 1930”in Indian Journal of History of Science 1992, 27: 379-387.

 

S.N. Sen. Scientific and technical education in India, 1781-1900 (New Delhi : Indian National Science Academy, 1991).

 

 Kripa Shankar Shukla. “A critical study of the "Laghumanasa" of Manjula” (New Delhi : Indian National Science Academy, 1990).

 

Jayanta Sthanapati.“History of Magnetic Studies in India 1850-1980: A Bibliography” in

 Indian Journal of History of Science v. 31, no. 2,supplement, March 1996, p. 205-302.

 

B.V. Subbarayappa. In pursuit of excellence: A history of the Indian Institute of Science

 (New Delhi : Tata McGraw-Hill, 1992).

 

B.V. Subbarayappa “ Modern science in India: A legacy of British imperialism?” in

 Eur. Legacy 1996, 1: 132-136.

 

Pramod B.Thaker. “Philosophical foundations in ancient Indian medicine: Science, philosophy, and ethics in "Caraka-samhita"” in Dissertation Abstracts International 1996, 56: 4003-A.

 

Shivesh C Thakur. “Science in Antiquity: The Indian perspective” in J.D. North and J. J. Roche (eds.), Light of nature: Essays ... presented to A. C. Crombie  (Dordrecht : Nijhoff, 1985.): 405-420.

 

Vagbhata, “Rasa ratna samuccaya”. Edited with English translation and notes by Damodar Joshi  in Indian Journal of History of Science 1987, 22: supplement (pages?)

 

 

Native American Science

 

G. Armitage “The Shlagintweit Collections”in Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society 1992, 11: 2-8.

 

*Anthony Aveni. [ed] Native American Astronomy (Austin : Univ. Texas Press, 1977).

 

*Anthony Aveni, “Native American Astronomy”in Physics Today 1984, 37(6): 25-32.

 

Anthony F. Aveni, Gordon Brotherston.  [eds.]“Calendars in Mesoamerica and Peru: Native American computations of time. Proceedings of the 44th International Congress of Americanists”,( Manchester, 1982 Oxford : B.A.R., 1983).

 

Anthony F. Aveni.“Meaning in native American astronomy texts” in Transforming texts: Classical images in new contexts Robert P. Metzger (ed.) (Lewisburg, N.J. : Bucknell Univ. Press; London : Associated University Presses, 1993): 41-53.

 

 *Barbara A Babcock.Daughters of the desert: Women anthropologists and the

native American Southwest, 1880-1980. An illustrated catalogue (Albuquerque : Univ. of New Mexico Press, 1988).

 

*Robert E. Bieder. Science encounters the Indian, 1820-1880: The early years of American ethnology / Robert E. Bieder. (Norman : Univ. Oklahoma Press, 1986)

 

 

Derek Bousé.“Culture as nature: How native American cultural antiquities became part of the natural world” in Public Historian 1996, 18(4): 75-98.

 

 John C. Brandt. “The 1054 supernova and Native American rock art” in Archaeoastronomy: Supplement to Journal for the History of Astronomy 1979, 1: 1-38.

 

*Michael P Closs.(ed) Native American mathematics.(Austin : Univ. of Texas Press, 1986)

            

Jerry W. Elson, “Tri Cultures of New Mexico”in Rangelands v. 14, Oct. 1992, p. 261-64.

 

Timothy G. Haller.“The Legislative Battle over the California-Nevada Interstate

Water Compact: A Question of Might versus Native American Right” in Nevada Historical Society Quarterly v. 32, Fall 1989, p.198-221.

 

Robin H. Jarrell,  “Native American women and forced sterilization, 1973-1976”in Caduceus: A Museum Quarterly for the Health Sciences 1992, 8: 45-58.

 

*Peter Nabokov. Native American Architecture. (New York, Oxford Univ. Press, 1989)

 

Nancy J Parezo, ed. Hidden scholars: Women anthropologists and the Native American Southwest (Albuquerque : Univ. of New Mexico Press, 1993).

 

Kenneth Lee Peterson. “Man's Impact on the Landscape: A Prehistoric Example from

the Dolores River Anasazi, Southwestern Colorado”in Journal of the West v. 26, July 1987, p. 4-16.

 

Bernard W. Powell, “Were These America's First Ecologists?”in Journal of the West v. 26, July 1987, p. 17-25.

 

*Bruce G. Trigger.“Archaeology and the image of the American Indian” in

 American Antiquity 1980, 45: 662-678.

 

*Marta Weigle. The Great Southwest of the Fred Harvey Company and the Santa Fe Railway.  (Phoenix : Univ. of Arizona Press, for Heard Museum, 1996).

 

Jane M. Young, “Pity the Indians of Outer Space: Native American Views of the Space Program” in Western Folklore October 1987, p. 269-79, 46

 

 

Imperialism and Science

 

*Anis Alam.“Science and imperialism” in Race and Class 1978, 19: 239-251.

 

David Arnold, The Problem of Nature: Environment, Culture, and European Expansion (Cambridge, Mass. : Blackwell, 1996).

 David Arnold [ed] Imperial Medicine and Indigenous Societies (Manchester : Manchester Univ. Press; New York : St. Martin'sPress, 1988).

 

*Howard. Bailes. “Technology and imperialism: A case study of the Victorian army in Africa” in Victorian Studies 1980, 24: 82-104.

 

 Poonam Bala. Imperialism and medicine in Bengal: A socio-historical perspective

 (Newbury Park, Calif. : Sage, 1991)

         

Beck Boyde, “Imperialism and professionalization: Dominion registration and Canadian physicians during the Boer War” in  Scientia Canadensis: Journal of the History of Canadian Science, Technology, and Medicine 1984, 8: 3-19.

 

Morag Bell, Robin A. Butlin and Michael Heffernan (eds.) Geography and imperialism, 1820-1940. (Manchester : Manchester Univ. Press; New York : St. Martin's Press, 1995.)

 

Shlomo Biderman and Ben-Ami Scharfstein (eds.)    Rationality in question: On Eastern and Western views of rationality (Leiden: Brill): p.165-189.

 

Harun, H. Bin. Medicine and imperialism: A study of the British colonial medical establishment, health policy, and medical research in the Malay Peninsula, 1786-1918 (Published: 1988).

 

Patrick Brantlinger. "Pensée sauvage" at the MLA: Victorian cultural imperialism then and now” in Victorian Newsletter 1990, 77: 1-5.

 

 *R.A Buchanan. “The diaspora of British engineering” in Technology and Culture 1986, 27: 501-524.

 

David Cahan. “Pride and prejudice in the history of physics: The German speaking world, 1740-1945”in Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences 1988, 19: 173-191.

 

Paul Crook. “Social Darwinism and British 'new imperialism': Second thoughts”. in

Eur. Legacy 1998, 3: 1-16.

 

*Alfred W. Crosby. Ecological imperialism: The biological expansion of Europe,

900-1900 (Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1986).

 

 *Alfred W. Crosby. “Ecological imperialism: The overseas migration of western Europeans as a biological phenomenon” in Texas Quarterly 1978, 21(1): 10-22.

 

 *Alfred W. Crosby. Germs, Seeds, and Animals: Studies in Ecological History.

(Armonk, N.Y., M. E. Sharpe, 1994).

 

Clarence B Davis.Railway Imperialism. (Westport, Conn., Greenwood, 1991).

 

Robin Dennell. “Progressive gradualism, imperialism, and academic fashion: Lower Paleolithic archaeology in the 20th century” in Antiquity 1990, 64: 549-558.

 

 F.V. Emery. “Geography and imperialism: The role of Sir Bartlé Frere (1815-84)” in

Geographical Journal 1984, 150: 342-350

 

Laura Fishman.“French views of native American women in the early modern period: The Tupinamba of Brazil”in Terrae Incognitae 1994, 26: 9-25.            

 

*Roderick Floud. The Economic History of Britain since 1700. Vol. 2: 1860-1939.(Cambridge and New York, Cambridge Univ. Press, 1994).

 

Diane Frost ed.Ethnic Labour and British Imperial Trade: A History of Ethnic Seafarers in the UK.(London and Portland, Ore. : F. Cass, 1995).

 

 Paul Greenhalgh. Ephemeral vistas: The expositions universelles, great exhibitions, and world's fairs, 1851-1939 (Manchester : Manchester Univ. Press; New York : St. Martin's Press, 1988).

 

Richard H. Grove. Ecology, Climate and Empire: Colonialism and Global Environmental History, 1400-1940.(Concord, Mass. : Paul and Company ; Cambridge, Eng. : White Horse, 1997).

 

 Richard H. Grove.  Green Imperialism: Colonial Expansion, Tropical Island Edens and the Origins of Environmentalism, 1600-1860. (Cambridge and New York, Cambridge Univ. Press, 1995).

 

Donna J Guy. “Medical imperialism gone awry: The campaign against legalized prostitution in Latin America”in Science, medicine and cultural imperialism Teresa Meade and Mark Walker (eds.) p.75-94. (New York : St. Martin's Press, 1991).

.

Daniel R. Headrick. The Invisible Weapon: Telecommunications and International Politics, 1851-1945.(Oxford and New York, Oxford Univ. Press, 1991).

.

*Daniel R. Headrick. The Tentacles of Progress: Technology Transfer in the Age of Imperialism, 1850-1940. (New York, Oxford University Press, 1988).

 

*Daniel R Headrick. The tools of empire: Technology and European imperialism in the 19th century  (New York : Oxford Univ. Press, 1981).

 

 *Daniel R Headrick. “The tools of imperialism: Technology and the expansion of European colonial empires in the 19th century” in Journal of Modern History 1979, 51: 231-263.

 

 Dennis Hodgso. “Ideological currents and the interpretation of demographic trends: The case of Francis Amasa Walker” in Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 1992, 28: 28-44.

 

Sally Ledger. “In darkest England: The terror of degeneration in "fin-de-siècle" Britain in Literature and History 1995, 4(2): 71-86

 

 Marilyn Little. “Imperialism, colonialism and the new science of nutrition: The Tanganyika experience, 1925-1945”in Social Science and Medicine 1991, 32: 11-14.

 

Steven. Lubar.“In the Footsteps of Perry: The Smithsonian Goes to Japan” in Public Historian v. 17, Summer 1995, p. 25-60.

 

John M. MacKenzie. The empire of nature: Hunting, conservation, and British imperialism (Manchester : Manchester Univ. Press; New York : St. Martin's Press, 1988).

 

John M MacKenzie, (ed.). Imperialism and the natural world  (Published: Manchester : Manchester Univ. Press, 1990).

 

Roy MacLeod. “Science, progressivism, and 'practical idealism': Reflections on efficient imperialism and federal science in Australia, 1895-1915”in Scientia Canadensis: Journal of the History of Canadien  Science, Technology, and Medicine 1994, 17: 7-25.

 

Shula Marks “What is colonial about colonial medicine? And what has happened to imperialism and health?” in Social History of Medicine 1997, 10: 205-219.

 

 James E. McClellan III,  Colonialism and science: Saint Dominique in the Old Regime (Baltimore : Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1992).

 

*Teresa Meade. “Cultural Imperialism in Old Republic Rio de Janeiro: The Urban Renewal and Public Health Project” in Science, Medicine and Cultural Imperialism (New York, St. Martin's , 1991) p. 95-119.

 

Teresa Meade and Mark Walker. Science, medicine and cultural imperialism

( New York : St. Martin's Press, 1991).

 

Timo Myllyntaus.“Electrical imperialism or multinational cooperation? The  role of big business in supplying light and power to St. Petersburg before 1917”in Business and Economic History 1997, 26(2): 540-549.

 

Lynn. Nyhart.  “Biology and imperialism.”in Journal of the History of Biology 1995, 28: 533-543.

 

Robert. Olby. “Social imperialism and state support for agricultural research in Edwardian Britain”in Annals of Science 1991, 48: 509-526.

 

David E  Omissi. Air Power and Colonial Control: The Royal Air Force, 1919-1939.

 (New York, Manchester Univ. Press St. Martin's, 1990).

 

 *Paolo Palladino.“Science and imperialism” in Isis: International Review devoted to the History of Science and its Cultural Influences 1993, 84: 91-102.

 

Om Prakash “The Transfer of Science and Technology between Asia and

Europe.”in Itinerario v. 14, no. 2, 1990, p. 15-21.

 

 Lewis Pyenson.“Astronomy and imperialism: J. A. C. Oudemans, the topography

of the East Indies, and the rise of the Utrecht Observatory,1850-1900” in

 Historia Scientiarum: International Journal of the History of Science Society of Japan 1984, 26: 39-81.

 

 *Lewis Pyenson. Cultual imperialism and exact sciences: German expansion overseas, 1900-1930 (New York : Lang, 1985).

 

*Lewis Pyenson.“Cultural imperialism and exact sciences: German expansion overseas, 1900-1930”in History of Science 1982, 20: 1-43.

 

Lewis Pyenson. Pure learning and political economy: Science and European

expansion in the age of imperialism (Amsterdam : Rodopi, 1989.)

 

Lewis Pyenson,. Why science may serve political ends: Cultural imperialism and the mission to civilize New trends in the history of science / R.P.W. Visser (et al., eds.) p.209-278.

 

Paul B. Rich. “Racial ideas and the impact of imperialism in Europe”in Eur. Legacy 1998, 3: 31-44.

 

 Peter Riviere. “From science to imperialism: Robert Schomburgk's Humanitarianism” in

 Archives of Natural History 1998, 25: 1-8.

 

*Woodruff D. Smith. “Complications of the Commonplace; Tea, Sugar, and Imperialism” in Journal of Interdisciplinary History v. 23, Autumn 1992, p. 259-78.

 

Robert A. Stafford. “Scientist of Empire : Sir Roderick Murchison, scientific exploration and Victorian imperialism” (Cambridge New York : Cambridge university press, 1989).

 

Jeffrey C. Stone,“Imperialism, colonialism, and cartography” in Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 1988, 13: 57-64.

 

Elias H. Tuma “Suez Canal: Another Dimension in the European Network” in

 Journal of European Economic History v. 24, Winter 1995, p. 619-34.

 

Walter J Vanast,  “'Ignorant of any rational method': European assessments of indigenous healing practices in the North American Arctic,” in Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 1992, 9: 57-69.

 

Sheldon Watts. Epidemics and history: Disease, power, and imperialism (New Haven : Yale Univ. Press, 1997).

 

Richard A. Webster. Industrial imperialism in Italy, 1908-1915 ( Berkeley : Univ. California Press, 1975).

 

October 19, 1999

   

 

 

Notes/Key for SLC Students:

 

“*”       =            Items thus marked are available through the SLC Library – so go there

first.  [Additional copies may be available for loan from the personal

collections of Dan King and/or Karen Rader – contact teacher.]

 

“**”     =            Items thus marked are available for loan from the personal collections

                        of Dan King and/or Karen Rader.  Contact instructor if you wish to obtain

copies of these materials.

 

Items with neither marking will need to be obtained via Interlibrary Loan – contact an SLC librarian for details.  BE SURE TO ALLOW AT LEAST TWO WEEKS TO OBTAIN COPIES!