Literature DB >> 31098839

Subscribing to Specimens, Cataloging Subscribed Specimens, and Assembling the First Phytogeographical Survey in the United States.

Kuang-Chi Hung1.   

Abstract

Throughout the late 1840s and the early 1850s, Harvard botanist Asa Gray (1810-1888) and his close friend George Engelmann (1809-1884) of St. Louis engaged themselves with recruiting men who sought to make a living by natural history collecting, sending these men into the field, searching for institutions and individuals who would subscribe to incoming collections, compiling catalogs, and collecting subscription fees. Although several botanists have noted Gray and Engelmann's bold experiment as having introduced America to a mode by which European naturalists had devised to organize scientific expeditions, historians of science have not taken the "subscription mode" seriously. I argue that it was specifically by undertaking the labor of cataloging species and charging subscription fees for the cataloged species that Gray established himself as a metropolitan botanist. One crucial consequence of Gray's rising profile was that he acquired sufficient "cataloging power" to secure his status as an authoritative cataloger of species, and as a kind of "mint" or "storehouse" (McOuat in Br J Hist Sci 34(1):1-28, 2001a) who produced well-pruned lists of American species to enable transactions between American and European botanists. But this essay is not focused on the Europeanization of American taxonomy. Drawing on work by scholars who place emphasis on how new forms of knowledge get produced when knowledge travels, my focus here is the evolution of the subscription mode when Gray and Engelmann adapted it to American natural history. My conclusion examines what historian of science Vanessa Heggie (Isis 105(2):318-334, 2014) identifies as the "danger of category dominance" in today's historiography of science and shows how a kind of "assemblage thinking" may help historians cope with this danger.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Asa Gray; Assemblage; Biogeography; Botany; George Engelmann; Scientific Survey; Subscription

Year:  2019        PMID: 31098839     DOI: 10.1007/s10739-019-9565-z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hist Biol        ISSN: 0022-5010            Impact factor:   1.326


  15 in total

1.  From cutting nature and its joints to measuring it: new kinds and new kinds of people in biology.

Authors:  G McOuat
Journal:  Stud Hist Philos Sci       Date:  2001-12       Impact factor: 1.429

2.  Species, rules and meaning: the politics of language and the ends of definitions in 19th century natural history.

Authors:  G R McOuat
Journal:  Stud Hist Philos Sci       Date:  1996-12       Impact factor: 1.429

3.  Science in the pub: artisan botanists in early nineteenth-century Lancashire.

Authors:  A Secord
Journal:  Hist Sci       Date:  1994-09       Impact factor: 0.892

4.  Collection and collation: theory and practice of Linnaean botany.

Authors:  Staffan Müller-Wille
Journal:  Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci       Date:  2007-09-07

5.  From farm and family to career naturalist: the apprenticeship of Vernon Bailey.

Authors:  Robert E Kohler
Journal:  Isis       Date:  2008-03       Impact factor: 0.688

6.  'The vagaries of a Rafinesque': imagining and classifying American nature.

Authors:  Jim Endersby
Journal:  Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci       Date:  2009-08-06

7.  The money trail: a new historiography for networks, patronage, and scientific careers.

Authors:  Casper Andersen; Jakob Bek-Thomsen; Peter C Kjoergaard
Journal:  Isis       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 0.688

8.  The professional and the scientist in nineteenth-century America.

Authors:  Paul Lucier
Journal:  Isis       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 0.688

9.  A life more ordinary: the dull life but interesting times of joseph dalton hooker.

Authors:  Jim Endersby
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2011       Impact factor: 1.326

10.  Redefining the X axis: "professionals," "amateurs" and the making of mid-Victorian biology, a progress report.

Authors:  A Desmond
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 0.818

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