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  1. The costs of being a restless intellect: Julian Huxley's popular and scientific career in the 1920s.Steindór J. Erlingsson - 2009 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 40 (2):101-108.
    Julian Huxley’s contribution to twentieth-century biology and science popularisation is well documented. What has not been appreciated so far is that despite Huxley’s eminence as a public scientific figure and the part that he played in the rise of experimental zoology in Britain in the 1920s, his own research was often heavily criticised in this period by his colleagues. This resulted in numerous difficulties in getting his scientific research published in the early 1920s. At this time, Huxley started his popular (...)
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  • Introduction: Communicating Science: National Approaches in Twentieth-Century Europe.Arne Schirrmacher - 2013 - Science in Context 26 (3):393-404.
    In a recent book on The Publics of Science; Experts and Laymen Through History, Agustí Nieto-Galan introduced his subject of a history of public science, covering the times from the Scientific Revolution to the twenty-first century, with reference to Sigmund Freud. In one of his essays of cultural critique, Freud had, so to speak, put culture itself on his couch, and this session also featured talk about science and technological application. Civilization and Its Discontents identified a factor of disillusionment in (...)
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  • Stories of stones and bones: disciplinarity, narrative and practice in British popular prehistory, 1911–1935.Amanda Rees - 2016 - British Journal for the History of Science 49 (3):433-451.
    This paper explores how three central figures in the field of British prehistory – Sir Arthur Keith, Sir Grafton Elliot Smith and Louis Leakey – deployed different disciplinary practices and narrative devices in the popular accounts of human bio-cultural evolution that they produced during the early decades of the twentieth century. It shows how they used a variety of strategies, ranging from virtual witness through personal testimony to tactile demonstration, to ground their authority to interpret the increasingly wide range of (...)
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  • Rómulo de Carvalho’s Work on the Popularization of Science During Salazarism.Arthur Galamba - 2013 - Science & Education 22 (10):2659-2677.
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  • The costs of being a restless intellect: Julian Huxley’s popular and scientific career in the 1920s.Steindór J. Erlingsson - 2009 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 40 (2):101-108.
  • Directing Public Interest: Danish Newspaper Science 1900-1903.Casper Andersen & Hans H. Hjermitslev - 2009 - Centaurus 51 (2):143-167.
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