Show
743 citations
related to History of the Human Sciences
Show
1 citations
related to History of the Human Sciences as a subject or category
Journal Abbreviation Hist. Hum. Sci.
Description History of Human Sciences is an international journal of peer-reviewed scholarly research, which provides an important forum for contemporary … More History of Human Sciences is an international journal of peer-reviewed scholarly research, which provides an important forum for contemporary research in the social sciences, in the humanities, and in human psychology and biology. It is especially concerned with research that reflexively examines its own historical origins and interdisciplinary influences in an effort to review current practice and to develop new research directions.
Article
Ina Linge
(2021)
The Potency of the Butterfly: The Reception of Richard B. Goldschmidt’s Animal Experiments in German Sexology Around 1920.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 40-70).
(/isis/citation/CBB132149292/)
Article
Tabea Cornel
(2020)
An Even-Handed Debate? The Sexed/Gendered Controversy Over Laterality Genes in British Psychology, 1970s–1990s.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 138-166).
(/isis/citation/CBB066955345/)
Article
Simon Jarrett
(2020)
Consciousness Reduced: The Role of the ‘Idiot’ in Early Evolutionary Psychology.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 110-137).
(/isis/citation/CBB530468279/)
Article
Brian P. Bloomfield; Karen Dale
(2020)
Limitless? Imaginaries of Cognitive Enhancement and the Labouring Body.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 37-63).
(/isis/citation/CBB999607463/)
Review
Gregory Hollin
(2020)
Review of "Tracing Autism: Uncertainty, Ambiguity, and the Affective Labor of Neuroscience".
History of the Human Sciences.
(/isis/citation/CBB598084835/)
Article
Susanne Schregel; Tineke Broer
(2020)
Introduction: Contested Narratives of the Mind and the Brain: Neuro/Psychological Knowledge in Popular Debates and Everyday Life.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 3-11).
(/isis/citation/CBB111968339/)
Article
Jonna Brenninkmeijer
(2020)
Conversion Disorder and/or Functional Neurological Disorder: How Neurological Explanations Affect Ideas of Self, Agency, and Accountability.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 64-84).
(/isis/citation/CBB778393839/)
Article
Tineke Broer; Martyn Pickersgill; Sarah Cunningham-Burley
(2020)
Neurobiological Limits and the Somatic Significance of Love: Caregivers’ Engagements with Neuroscience in Scottish Parenting Programmes.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 85-109).
(/isis/citation/CBB526089134/)
Article
Susanne Schregel
(2020)
‘The Intelligent and the Rest’: British Mensa and the Contested Status of High Intelligence.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 12-36).
(/isis/citation/CBB475498822/)
Article
Chris Millard; Felicity Callard
(2020)
Thinking in, with, across, and beyond cases with John Forrester.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 3-14).
(/isis/citation/CBB867149371/)
Article
Kim M. Hajek
(2020)
Periodical Amnesia and Dédoublement in Case-Reasoning: Writing Psychological Cases in Late 19th-Century France.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 95-110).
(/isis/citation/CBB193345504/)
Article
Erik Linstrum
(2020)
The Case History in the Colonies.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 85-94).
(/isis/citation/CBB625154341/)
Article
Jacy L. Young
(2020)
Thinking in Multitudes: Questionnaires and Composite Cases in Early American Psychology.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 160-174).
(/isis/citation/CBB385770594/)
Article
Julie Walsh
(2020)
Confusing Cases: Forrester, Stoller, Agnes, Woman.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 15-32).
(/isis/citation/CBB971156075/)
Article
Jeremy Trevelyan Burman
(2020)
On Kuhn’s Case, and Piaget’s: A Critical Two-Sited Hauntology (or, on Impact Without Reference).
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 129-159).
(/isis/citation/CBB181812401/)
Article
Maria Böhmer
(2020)
The Case as a Travelling Genre.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 111-128).
(/isis/citation/CBB149994883/)
Article
Michael J. Flexer
(2020)
If p0, Then 1: The Impossibility of Thinking Out Cases.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 175-197).
(/isis/citation/CBB601183479/)
Article
Matt ffytche
(2020)
Throwing the Case Open: The Impossible Subject of Luisa Passerini’s Autobiography of a Generation.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 33-46).
(/isis/citation/CBB207134190/)
Article
Shaul Bar-Haim
(2020)
Proving Nothing and Illustrating Much: The Case of Michael Balint.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 47-65).
(/isis/citation/CBB689739909/)
Article
Rachel Weitzenkorn
(2020)
Boundaries of Reasoning in Cases: The Visual Psychoanalysis of René Spitz.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 66-84).
(/isis/citation/CBB775645382/)
Be the first to comment!