Literature DB >> 12964570

Engines for experiment: laboratory revolution and industrial labor in the nineteenth-century city.

Sven Dierig1.   

Abstract

This article brings together what until now have been separate fields of nineteenth-century history: the development of experimental physiology, the growth of mechanized industry, and the city, where their threads intertwined. The main argument is that the laboratory in the city employed the same technological and organizational approaches to modernize that the city used to industrialize. To bring the adoption of technology into focus, the article discusses laboratory research as it developed after the introduction of small-scale power engines. With its machines, the industrialized city provided not only the key metaphor of the nineteenth-century life sciences but also a key technology that shifted experimental practices in animal research from a kind of preindustrial craft to a more mechanized production of knowledge. With its "factory-laboratories," the late-nineteenth-century city became the birthplace for the first living, data-producing hybird---part animal and part machine.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12964570     DOI: 10.1086/649380

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Osiris        ISSN: 0369-7827            Impact factor:   0.548


  2 in total

1.  Cultures of death and politics of corpse supply: anatomy in Vienna, 1848-1914.

Authors:  Tatjana Buklijas
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 1.314

2.  Surgery and national identity in late nineteenth-century Vienna.

Authors:  Tatjana Buklijas
Journal:  Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci       Date:  2007-11-19
  2 in total

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