Thanks Kamran for this. A review of the various titles you're reading might make for a useful contribution to the first round of publishing on the new sftp web magazine. Please let me know if you consider writing up something a bit more fleshed out than just a list. Happy to discuss off-list if you like. And others interested in similar (or different!) writing projects should start thinking through ideas for the new website. We're still a ways off from any kind of sustainable publishing schedule but we will hopefully have a web form for accepting pitches soon. Chris On Fri, Dec 29, 2017 at 2:01 PM, Kamran Nayeri <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > Dear Sigrid: > > Thanks for your response. Allow me to be more specific. I am interested > in technology and science as means of human attempt at mastery over > nature. For 290,000 years Homo sapiens thrived with a worldview that did > not have sharp lines of demarcation between "us" and the rest of nature. > About 10,000 years ago, that changed with the rise of the first farmers. > But early farmers systematically domesticated plants and animals hence a > new worldview emerged: anthropocentrism (human-centeredness). I am > interested in learning as much as I can about the use of technology and > science that has been used in history to dominate and control nature. In > my view, that is at the base of all class societies and the root-cause of > alienation from nature (hence social alienation). (I have written this up > in Part 2 > <http://knayeri.blogspot.com/2017/06/economics-socialism-and-ecology.html> > of my Economics, Socialism, and Ecology: A Critical Outline) To address the > present-day social and planetary crisis (one and the same from my > perspective), we must work our way out of this dilemma. Science for the > People would be a group of us that embraces a transition to a new science > and technology paradigm that works with nature and not to dominate and > control it for the human purpose at a cost to other species. > > I have received valuable recommendations from Chandler Davis, Phil Gasper, > and Prof. Lorraine Dostan (Director, Max Planck Institute for the History > of Science) who Chandler introduced to me. > > If you and others any suggested reading (I would eventually need to choose > a few as the list gets larger) I would be much obliged. > > Once I have more recommendation, I will share the suggested readings with > the entire list. > > Happy 2018. > > Kamran > > On Fri, Dec 29, 2017 at 4:50 AM, Sigrid Schmalzer < > [log in to unmask]> wrote: > >> The field is so vast... Which areas are you most interested in? >> >> If you want books on SftP or related subjects (history of science and >> political activism in the Cold War US), here are a few good ones: >> Kelly Moore, >> *Disrupting Science <https://press.princeton.edu/titles/8545.html> *Sarah >> Bridger, >> *Scientists at War >> <http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674736825> *Paul >> Rubinson, *Redefining Science* >> <https://www.umass.edu/umpress/title/redefining-science> >> and of course... the new Science for the People documentary collection >> available this week!! *Science for the People: Documents from America's >> Movement of Radical Scientists* >> <http://www.umass.edu/umpress/title/science-people> >> >> But of course there are lots of other subjects out there of interest. :) >> >> >> >> On 12/28/2017 12:08 PM, Kamran Nayeri wrote: >> >> Dear folks: >> >> Could anyone recommend really good literature review(s) or books on the >> history of science and technology? >> >> Thank you. >> >> Kamran >> >> >> -- >> Sigrid Schmalzer >> Professor, History Department >> University of Massachusetts Amherst >> >> *Red Revolution, Green Revolution: Scientific Farming in Socialist China* >> <http://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/R/bo22541357.html> >> (University of Chicago Press, 2016) >> >> Forthcoming from UMass Press in December, 2017: *Science for the People: >> Documents from America's Movement of Radical Scientists* >> <https://www.umass.edu/umpress/title/science-people> >> >> Forthcoming from Tilbury House Publishers in February, 2018: *Moth and >> Wasp, Soil and Ocean: Remembering Chinese Scientist Pu Zhelong* >> <https://tilburyhouse.com/book/education-and-teaching/by-subject/multicultural/moth-and-wasp-soil-and-ocean/> >> (picture book) >> > > > > -- > Kamran Nayeri >