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  1. Social Science as a “Weapon of the Weak”: Max Weinreich, the Yiddish Scientific Institute, and the Study of Culture, Personality, and Prejudice.Leila Zenderland - 2013 - Isis 104 (4):742-772.
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  • The History of Science as Unending Steeplechase: A Dialogue.Alexandre Métraux - 2013 - Science in Context 26 (4):649-664.
    Preliminary remark:The following conversation began as a series of written email exchanges. Due to technical reasons, this exchange had to be interrupted at some point. Rather than rewriting the text that had obtained from scratch, I continued the conversation, turning the real “other” of the dialogue into an imagined one. Heartfelt thanks to Oren Harman, the guest editor of this topical issue, for continuing support and for having taken the risk of designing this unusual topical issue ofScience in Contextwith me. (...)
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  • On Emanuel Ringelblum's New Research Program for the History of Jewish Medicine: Introductory Remarks.Guy Finkelstein & Alexandre Métraux - 2010 - Science in Context 23 (4):571-580.
    When Emanuel Ringelblum was born on November 21, 1900, in Buczacz, the small, multilingual and multi-ethnic Galician town was to be found on the far northeastern part of the Austrian Empire. As a mail stamp on a Correspondenz-Karte or Karta korrespondencyja of 1890 shows, the place was officially spelled in accordance with its Polish orthography. However, it was called Butschtasch in German, Bichuch in Yiddish, and still differently in Ukranian. After World War I, it was for a short while part (...)
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