A collection of essays written by members of the Archives of the Sciences Working Group at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Science in the Archives: Pasts, Presents, Futures leads the reader on an exploration of the history of data preservation, data management, and information organization in the sciences. This review examines the themes connecting the essays and considers how researchers and historians of science understand the meaning of archives
The standard narrative in the history of the life sciences focuses on the rise of exper-imentalism s...
My PhD submission is made up of a constellation of three elements that form a body of textual materi...
As a name, “Anthropocene” would seem to signal that this geologic epoch is both because of humans an...
Book Review: Science in the Archives: Pasts, Presents, Futures. Edited by Lorraine Daston (Chicago: ...
"Science in the Archives" reveals affinities and continuities among the sciences of the archives, ac...
Archival Futures is the most recent addition to the body of literature on archival futurism. Consist...
In this article, I focus on digital scientific archives which are made up of the leftovers of scienc...
This book review analyzes two books which address archival history and practices through an internat...
This paper explores ways archival professionals can approach archiving scientific data through exami...
How can archivists analyse science archives? Science archives are like DNA for the human body: uniqu...
Social science data are an unusual part of the past, present, and future of digital preservation. T...
What is the history of science? How has it changed over the course of the twentieth century? And wha...
The University of Chigaco Press 2017 published an interesting book: Science in the Archives, edited ...
"Methodological approach view on collecting science archives: the « metaprotocole » as new point of ...
The 1st Annual Conference on Digital Preservation for the Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (DPA...
The standard narrative in the history of the life sciences focuses on the rise of exper-imentalism s...
My PhD submission is made up of a constellation of three elements that form a body of textual materi...
As a name, “Anthropocene” would seem to signal that this geologic epoch is both because of humans an...
Book Review: Science in the Archives: Pasts, Presents, Futures. Edited by Lorraine Daston (Chicago: ...
"Science in the Archives" reveals affinities and continuities among the sciences of the archives, ac...
Archival Futures is the most recent addition to the body of literature on archival futurism. Consist...
In this article, I focus on digital scientific archives which are made up of the leftovers of scienc...
This book review analyzes two books which address archival history and practices through an internat...
This paper explores ways archival professionals can approach archiving scientific data through exami...
How can archivists analyse science archives? Science archives are like DNA for the human body: uniqu...
Social science data are an unusual part of the past, present, and future of digital preservation. T...
What is the history of science? How has it changed over the course of the twentieth century? And wha...
The University of Chigaco Press 2017 published an interesting book: Science in the Archives, edited ...
"Methodological approach view on collecting science archives: the « metaprotocole » as new point of ...
The 1st Annual Conference on Digital Preservation for the Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (DPA...
The standard narrative in the history of the life sciences focuses on the rise of exper-imentalism s...
My PhD submission is made up of a constellation of three elements that form a body of textual materi...
As a name, “Anthropocene” would seem to signal that this geologic epoch is both because of humans an...