This research was funded by the Arts & Humanities Research Council, grant AH/K001841/1.This essay examines the interplay between the meetings and publications of learned scientific societies during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, when journals were an established but not yet dominant form of scholarly communication. The practice of ‘making public’ research at meetings, long before actual ‘publication’ in society periodicals, enabled a complex of more-or-less formal sites of communication and discussion ahead of print. Using two case studies from the Royal Society of London – Jan Ingen-Housz in 1782 and John Tyndall in 1857/8 – we reveal how different individuals navigated and exploited the power structures, social activities and se...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
The research for this paper was funded by the Arts & Humanities Research Council, grant AH/K001841/1...
Funding information: For financial support, we thank the Arts & Humanities Research Council, whose g...
This essay examines the interplay between the meetings and publications of learned scientific societ...
This essay examines the interplay between the meetings and publications of learned scientific societ...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
This paper investigates the finances of the Royal Society and its Philosophical Transactions, showin...
In this paper, we consider the Royal Society's attitudes towards the copying, reprinting, and reuse ...
Scholarly communication is not just about communication. It is not the final stage of the publicatio...
As scientists question the recent dominance of the scientific journal, the varied richness of its pa...
[FIRST PARAGRAPH] It is now generally accepted that both the conception and practices of natural ...
This article examines the evolution of peer review and the modern editorial processes of scholarly j...
International audienceThis article examines the evolution of peer review and the modern editorial pr...
Drawing on research from their recently published and open access history of publishing at the Royal...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
The research for this paper was funded by the Arts & Humanities Research Council, grant AH/K001841/1...
Funding information: For financial support, we thank the Arts & Humanities Research Council, whose g...
This essay examines the interplay between the meetings and publications of learned scientific societ...
This essay examines the interplay between the meetings and publications of learned scientific societ...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
This paper investigates the finances of the Royal Society and its Philosophical Transactions, showin...
In this paper, we consider the Royal Society's attitudes towards the copying, reprinting, and reuse ...
Scholarly communication is not just about communication. It is not the final stage of the publicatio...
As scientists question the recent dominance of the scientific journal, the varied richness of its pa...
[FIRST PARAGRAPH] It is now generally accepted that both the conception and practices of natural ...
This article examines the evolution of peer review and the modern editorial processes of scholarly j...
International audienceThis article examines the evolution of peer review and the modern editorial pr...
Drawing on research from their recently published and open access history of publishing at the Royal...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
The research for this paper was funded by the Arts & Humanities Research Council, grant AH/K001841/1...
Funding information: For financial support, we thank the Arts & Humanities Research Council, whose g...