This collection focuses on different expeditions and their role in the process of knowledge acquisition from the eighteenth century onwards. It investigates various forms of scientific practice conducted during, after and before expeditions, and it places this discussion into the scientific context of experiments. In treating expeditions as experiments in a heuristic sense, we also propose that the expedition is a variation on the laboratory in which different practices can be conducted and where the transformation of uncertain into certain knowledge is tested. The experimental positioning of the expedition brings together an ensemble of techniques, strategies, material agents and social actors, and illuminates the steps leading from observation to facts and documentation. The chapters show the variety of scientific interests that motivated expeditions with their focus on natural history, geology, ichthyology, botany, zoology, helminthology, speleology, physical anthropology, oceanography, meteorology and magnetism.
1. Expeditions as Experiments: An Introduction by Marianne Klemun and
Ulrike Spring. -
2. An Idea Ahead of its Time: Jean-Jacques Rousseaus Mobile
Botanical Laboratory by Alexandra Cook. -
3. Experiments and Evolving
Frameworks of Scientific Exploration: Jean-André Peyssonnels Work on Coral
by Jan Vandersmissen. -
4. Japanese Ichthyological Objects and Knowledge
Gained in Contact Zones by the Krusenstern Expedition by Yuko Takigawa. -
5.
Naturalists at Work: Expeditions, Collections and the Creation of Epistemic
Things by Kurt Schmutzer. -
6. Mary Barbers Expedition Journal: An
Experimental Space to Voice Social Concerns by Tanja Hammel. -
7.
Materialising the Aurora Borealis: Carl Weyprecht and Scientific
Documentation of the Arctic by Ulrike Spring. -
8. Going Deeper Underground:
Social Cooperation in Cave Expeditions of the Early Twentieth Century by
Johannes Mattes. -
9. A Mutual Space? Stereo Photography on Viennese
Anthropological Expeditions (190545) by Katarina Matiasek. -
10. Traditions,
Networks, and Deep-Sea Expeditions After 1945 by Peder Roberts. -
11. It Had
to Be Us: Geological Practice, Scientific Authority and Politics in the
Expedition to Goa (196061) by Teresa Salomé Mota
Marianne Klemun is Professor of Modern History and, from 2006 to 2012, Vice Dean of the Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies at the University of Vienna, Austria. Her publications include (as Guest Editor) Moved Natural Objects: Spaces in Between in HOST - Journal of History of Science and Technology, Vol. 5 (2012).
Ulrike Spring is Associate Professor of History at the Department of Social Sciences at Sogn og Fjordane University College, Norway, and Researcher in the project 'Making Sense of the Aurora' at the Department of History and Religious Studies at UiT The Arctic University of Norway.