Show
94 citations
related to Science and film
Show
94 citations
related to Science and film as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
Article
Nadeem Toodayan; Denis G. Robertson; Neil E. Anderson; et al.
(2024)
‘A divine right to photograph’: E. Graeme Robertson’s (1903–1975) historical motion pictures of National Hospital staff in 1933.
Journal of the History of the Neurosciences
(pp. 419-436).
(/isis/citation/CBB465465299/)
Article
Bonnie Evans; Janet Harbord
(2024)
Film, observation and the mind.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 3-11).
(/isis/citation/CBB588794000/)
Article
Seth Barry Watter
(2024)
The discovery of synchrony: By means of the projector as a scientific instrument.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 138-165).
(/isis/citation/CBB878286116/)
Article
Scott Curtis
(2024)
Behavior takes form: Tracing the film image in scientific research.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 63-86).
(/isis/citation/CBB413401200/)
Article
Des O’Rawe
(2024)
Contrary to reason: Documentary film-making and alternative psychotherapies.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 166-183).
(/isis/citation/CBB323627324/)
Article
Felix E. Rietmann
(2024)
Mother-blaming revisited: Gender, cinematography, and infant research in the heyday of psychoanalysis.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 87-116).
(/isis/citation/CBB480837886/)
Article
Janet Harbord
(2024)
The visualization of autism: Filming children at the Maudsley Hospital, London, 1957–8.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 117-137).
(/isis/citation/CBB562371011/)
Article
Jeremy Blatter
(2024)
Reanimating experimental psychology: Media archaeology, Hugo Münsterberg, and the ‘Testing the Mind’ film series.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 41-62).
(/isis/citation/CBB131331230/)
Article
Bonnie Evans
(2024)
The origins of film, psychology and the neurosciences.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 12-40).
(/isis/citation/CBB141382002/)
Article
Bonnie Evans
(2024)
Child development, film evidence, and epidemiological sciences: Elwyn James Anthony and the 1957 Zurich International Congress of Psychiatry.
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 62-84).
(/isis/citation/CBB332455142/)
Article
Sarine Waltenspül
(2024)
Geschichtsvergessene Digitalisierung. Nationalsozialistische Provenienzen wissenschaftlich-technischer Filme aus der Sammlung des IWF (Digitalization of forgotten History. National Socialist Provenances of Scientific and Technical Films from the IWF Collection).
Technikgeschichte: Beiträge zur Geschichte der Technik und Industrie
(pp. 139-174).
(/isis/citation/CBB200952008/)
Article
Harry Yi-Jui Wu
(2023)
Impersonal Presence: Kazuo Hara’s Sennan Asbestos Disaster and Minamata Mandala.
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
(pp. 521-527).
(/isis/citation/CBB427393109/)
Book
Richard Francaviglia
(2023)
Cinematic Journeys in Latin America: Geography Through the Lens of Exploration and Discovery Films.
(/isis/citation/CBB097700386/)
Article
Cora Stuhrmann
(2023)
Sociobiology on Screen. The Controversy Through the Lens of Sociobiology: Doing What Comes Naturally.
Journal of the History of Biology
(pp. 365-397).
(/isis/citation/CBB369791311/)
Article
Mieneke te Hennepe
(2023)
Van Leeuwenhoek – the film: remaking memory in Dutch science cinema 1925–c.1960.
British Journal for the History of Science
(pp. 329-349).
(/isis/citation/CBB589353405/)
Book
Fernando Vidal
(2022)
Performing Brains on Screen.
(/isis/citation/CBB532029818/)
Book
Terence McSweeney; Stuart Joy
(2022)
Contemporary American Science Fiction Film.
(/isis/citation/CBB609301833/)
Article
Laura Tisdall
(2021)
‘We have come to be destroyed’: The ‘extraordinary’ child in science fiction cinema in early Cold War Britain.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 8-31).
(/isis/citation/CBB482473638/)
Article
Katie Joice
(2021)
Mothering in the frame: Cinematic microanalysis and the pathogenic mother, 1945–67.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 105-131).
(/isis/citation/CBB979389001/)
Article
Tim Snelson
(2021)
From In Two Minds to MIND: The circulation of ‘anti-psychiatry’ in British film and television during the long 1960s.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 53-81).
(/isis/citation/CBB630163888/)
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