Forms of knowledge : developing the history of knowledge /
The history of knowledge is a dynamic field of research with bright prospects. In recent years it has been established as an exciting, forward-looking field internationally, with a strong presence in the Nordic countries. Forms of Knowledge is the first publication by the Lund Centre for the History...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Otros Autores: | , , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Lund :
Nordic Academic Press,
[2020]
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction. Developing the history of knowledge (Johan Östling, David Larsson Heidenblad & Anna Nilsson Hammar)
- I Expanding The Field
- Chapter 1. Confessional knowledge: How might the history of knowledge and the history of confessional Europe influence each other? (Kajsa Brilkman)
- Chapter 2. Financial knowledge: A rich new venture for historians of knowledge (David Larsson Heidenblad)
- Chapter 3. My grandmother's recipe book and the history of knowledge (Peter K. Andersson)
- Chapter 4. An Ottoman imperial North: The routes and roots of knowledge in the Age of Tulips (Joachim Östlund)
- Chapter 5. 'Is there no one moderating Wikipedia?????': Impartiality, revisionism, and knowledge about the Armenian Genocide on Wikipedia (Maria Karlsson)
- Il Examining Key Concepts
- Chapter 6. The raw and the cooked: Information and knowledge in history (Laura Skouvig)
- Chapter 7. Phronesis as therapy and cure: Practical knowledge in early twentieth-century psychotherapy (Cecilia Riving)
- Chapter 8. What is conventional wisdom?: J.K. Galbraith and the acceptability of knowledge(Björn Lundberg)
- Chapter 9. Histories before history: Condorcet's temporal dimensions reconsidered as history of knowledge (Victoria Höög)
- Chapter 10. In the laboratory: Forms of knowledge as a methodological concept for the study of knowledge circulation (Karolina Enquist Källgren)
- Ill Setting Knowledgein Motion
- Chapter 11. A societal knowledge breakthrough: Knowledge of potatoes in Sweden, 1749-50 (Erik Bodensten)
- Chapter 12. Contested knowledge: UNESCO and the circulation of racial knowledge in post-war Sweden (Martin Ericsson)
- Chapter 13. Routes of knowledge: The transformation and circulation of knowledge in the UNESCO Courier, 1947-55 (Maria Simonsen)
- Chapter 14. A helpful Handbuch of émigrés: Herbert A. Strauss and the functions of 'acculturation' (Lise Groesmeyer)
- Chapter 15. Objects, interpretants, and public knowledge: The media reception of a Swedish future study (Karl Haikola)
- Concluding reflections. Standing on whose shoulders?: A critical comment on the history of knowledge (Staffan Bergwik & Linn Holmberg)
- About the authors