Just published in the Science Museum Group Journal - the @Met_Sci project article 'Spaces and Geographies of Metropolitan Science' https://t.co/2IReLMS3ne #histsci#histSTM
Artisans at the Tower of London! Experiment, life-writing and historical culture. Really pleased that my article is out with @CultSocHistory
Research part of the @Met_Sci project. Thank you @beckyfh for your support! @CUHistArchRel
https://t.co/hwrJil7Him
We've just published a new article online: Gerrit Verhoeven, 'Clockwise? Timekeeping in London in the Long Eighteenth Century (1724–1825)'
Read it here: https://t.co/HGLU563Tfj
Today’s the day! We are now live! Need anything from Manuscript studies to Late Medieval And Early Modern? Then @MEMSLibUKC is the right place for you! You can access our website via this link👇🏻:
https://t.co/Cgbqs2h2dg
How do you move a long-planned event online?
On the RHS blog today Dr Rebekah Higgitt @beckyfh shares the @Met_Sci team's experience of rapidly re-thinking a conference and delivering it virtually: https://t.co/JAC00PI78e
@RuthAhnert @MiyamotoBen @mia_out Will post when it’s up. I think live online tends to scare people and pre-record gives the speaker control and listener time to engage/rewind/listen again which is all beneficial (wish you could in real life!) But live elements, especially keynotes are great for sense of event
To have a free survey we are only allowed a limited number of responses. If these are filled up and you'd still like to respond, feel free to let us know your thoughts here or via metsci [a] https://t.co/EFX4Qjcfa5
For those who took part in our Science in the City virtual conference #SciCity - we have a survey intended to help us pass on useful feedback to anyone else organising such events. Let us know your thoughts: https://t.co/pxb1o60lhQ
Out now in @HistoricalJnl : my most recent article 'Publishing Nature in the Age of Revolutions: Joseph Banks, Georg Forster, and the Plants of the Pacific'. https://t.co/3I12bCAaAV
Hadn’t seen these before - the Hausbücher or Housebooks of the charitable Nuremberg Twelve Brethren Foundations (1425–1806). They include many depictions of artisanal work https://t.co/QgxEuIHnLE (also Wikipedia Commons https://t.co/LJ1uUZq6nX) #SciCity
The excellent Science in the City keynote lecture by @ps2270, 'Making and Knowing in Early Modern Europe' can now be viewed here: https://t.co/6PlYYwMVJl.
There is also an audio recording of the Q&A that followed #SciCity#histSTM#histsci#earlymodern
Science in the City 1500-1800 virtual conference
Papers are still available to watch or read online: links to pages for each session with embedded videos or links are posted in the Programme https://t.co/izw5oG8y36
#histsci#histSTM#earlymodern#twitterstorians#SciCity