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  1. Fun and fear: The banalization of nuclear technologies through display.Jaume Sastre-Juan & Jaume Valentines-Álvarez - 2019 - Centaurus 61 (1-2):2-13.
    How do nuclear technologies become commonplace? How have the borders between the exceptional and the banal been drawn and redrawn over the last 70 years in order to make nuclear energy part of everyday life? This special issue analyzes the role of fun and display, broadly construed, in shaping the cultural representation and the material circulation (or non-circulation) of nuclear technologies. Four case studies, covering the United States, Great Britain, Portugal, Spain, and Ukraine from the 1950s to the 2000s, explore (...)
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  • From garden biotech to garage biotech: amateur experimental biology in historical perspective.Helen Anne Curry - 2014 - British Journal for the History of Science 47 (3):539-565.
    This paper describes the activities of amateur plant breeders and their application of various methods and technologies derived from genetics research over the course of the twentieth century. These ranged from selection and hybridization to more interventionist approaches such as radiation treatment to induce genetic mutations and chemical manipulation of chromosomes. I argue that these activities share characteristics with twenty-first-century do-it-yourself (DIY) biology (a recent upswing in amateur experimental biology) as well as other amateur science and technology of the twentieth (...)
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  • “Banishing the atom pile bogy”: Exhibiting Britain's first nuclear reactor.Alison Boyle - 2019 - Centaurus 61 (1-2):14-32.
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