Introduction. How Should History of Technology Be Written? Challenges of a Global History of Technology

2021 ◽  
Vol 88 (2) ◽  
pp. 175-179
Author(s):  
Martina Heßler
2021 ◽  
Vol 88 (2) ◽  
pp. 202-206
Author(s):  
Alejandra Osorio Tarazona ◽  
David Drengk ◽  
Animesh Chatterjee

Transfers ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 20-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesca Bray ◽  
Barbara Hahn ◽  
John Bosco Lourdusamy ◽  
Tiago Saraiva

Crops are a very special type of human artifact, living organisms literally rooted in their environments. Crops suggest ways to embed rootedness in mobility studies, fleshing out the linkages between flows and matrices and thus developing effective frameworks for reconnecting local and global history. Our focus here is on the movements, or failures to move, of “cropscapes”: the ever-mutating ecologies, or matrices, comprising assemblages of nonhumans and humans, within which a particular crop in a particular place and time flourishes or fails. As with the landscape, the cropscape as concept and analytical tool implies a deliberate choice of frame. In playing with how to frame our selected cropscapes spatially and chronologically, we develop productive alternatives to latent Eurocentric and modernist assumptions about periodization, geographical hierarchies, and scale that still prevail within history of technology, global and comparative history, and indeed within broader public understanding of mobility and history.


2021 ◽  
Vol 88 (2) ◽  
pp. 185-190
Author(s):  
Kati Lindström ◽  
Alicia Gutting ◽  
Per Högselius ◽  
Siegfried Evens ◽  
Achim Klüppelberg ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Durba Mitra

During the colonial period in India, European scholars, British officials, and elite Indian intellectuals—philologists, administrators, doctors, ethnologists, sociologists, and social critics—deployed ideas about sexuality to understand modern Indian society. This book shows how deviant female sexuality, particularly the concept of the prostitute, became foundational to this knowledge project and became the primary way to think and write about Indian society. The book reveals that deviant female sexuality was critical to debates about social progress and exclusion, caste domination, marriage, widowhood and inheritance, women's performance, the trafficking of girls, abortion and infanticide, industrial and domestic labor, indentured servitude, and ideologies about the dangers of Muslim sexuality. British authorities and Indian intellectuals used the concept of the prostitute to argue for the dramatic reorganization of modern Indian society around Hindu monogamy. The book demonstrates how the intellectual history of modern social thought is based in a dangerous civilizational logic built on the control and erasure of women's sexuality. This logic continues to hold sway in present-day South Asia and the postcolonial world. Reframing the prostitute as a concept, the book overturns long-established notions of how to write the history of modern social thought in colonial India, and opens up new approaches for the global history of sexuality.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 144
Author(s):  
Barry Pateman

Review of Peter Cole, David Struthers, and Kenyon Zimmer, Wobblies of the World. A new edited collection on the global history of the Industrial Workers of the World.  


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document