Remigration als transnationaler Wissensaustausch? Studien zu Geistes-, Natur-, Sozial-, Rechts- und Wirtschaftswissenschaften sowie Medizin. Die Wissenschaftsemigration nach 1933 ist vor allem eine Verlustgeschichte: Mit den Menschen, die durch den Nationalsozialismus ins Exil gezwungen wurden, gingen Beziehungen und Netzwerke, Wissen, Bibliotheken und Schulen für das geistige Leben in Deutschland verloren. Viele versuchten, weiterhin wissenschaftlich zu arbeiten. Nur wenige kehrten nach der NS-Zeit zurück. Welche Erfahrungen, Theorien und Methoden brachten diese Remigranten mit? Inwiefern entfalteten sie Einfluss auf die Entwicklung ihrer Disziplin? Und welchen Anteil hatten Exil und Remigration bei der Internationalisierung der Wissenschaften? Diese Fragen standen im Zentrum einer interdisziplinären Konferenz der Herbert und Elsbeth Weichmann Stiftung. Die Autorinnen und Autoren reflektieren die wissenschaftliche Entwicklung ausgewählter Fächer in Deutschland nach 1945 und präsentieren kritische Überlegungen zum Wissenstransfer durch Exil und Remigration. Mit Beiträgen von: Mitchell Ash, Doerte Bischoff, Marita Krauss, Irmela von der Lühe, Karin Orth, Matthias Pasdzierny, Barbara Picht, Heinz Rieter, Oliver Römer, Frank Schale, Sebastian Schirrmeister, Sabine Schleiermacher, Margrit Seckelmann, Annette Vogt. Remigration as a transnational exchange of knowledge? Studies in humanities, natural sciences, social sciences, law and economics as well as medicine. The academic emigration after 1933 is above all a history of loss: With the people who were forced into exile by National Socialism, relationships and networks, knowledge, libraries and schools for intellectual life in Germany were lost. Many tried to continue to work scientifically. Only a few returned after the Nazi era. Which experiences, Theories and methods did these remigrants bring with them? How did they influence the development of their discipline? And what part did exile and remigration play in the internationalization of science? These questions were the focus of an interdisciplinary conference organized by the Herbert and Elsbeth Weichmann Foundation. The authors reflect on the scientific development of selected subjects in Germany after 1945 and present critical considerations on the transfer of knowledge through exile and remigration. With contributions by: Mitchell Ash, Doerte Bischoff, Marita Krauss, Irmela von der Lühe, Karin Orth, Matthias Pasdzierny, Barbara Picht, Heinz Rieter, Oliver Römer, Frank Schal, Sebastian Schirrmeister, Sabine Schleiermacher, Margrit Seckelmann, Annette Vogt.
...More
Article
Armstrong, John;
(2012)
The “Common-Health” and Beyond: New Zealand Medical Specialists and the International Medical Network, 1945--85
(/isis/citation/CBB001200717/)
Book
Fleck, Christian;
(2010)
A Transatlantic History of the Social Sciences: Robber Barons, the Third Reich and the Invention of Empirical Social Research
(/isis/citation/CBB001250210/)
Book
Daniela Finzi;
Shapira, Elana;
(2020)
Freud and the Émigré: Austrian Émigrés, Exiles and the Legacy of Psychoanalysis in Britain, 1930s-1970s
(/isis/citation/CBB648365157/)
Article
Gerstenberger, Debora;
(2014)
Gilberto Freyre: um teórico da globalização?
(/isis/citation/CBB001420710/)
Book
Bennett, Brett M.;
Hodge, Joseph Morgan;
(2011)
Science and Empire: Knowledge and Networks of Science across the British Empire, 1800--1970
(/isis/citation/CBB001211176/)
Article
Bernd Holdorff;
(2016)
Emigrated Neuroscientists from Berlin to North America
(/isis/citation/CBB637024824/)
Article
Na, Hye Sim;
(2013)
The Influence of Korean Nurses' Immigration into Germany on the Nursing Culture and Policy of the Countries: A Transnational Perspective
(/isis/citation/CBB001212577/)
Article
Rodriguez, Julia;
(2013)
Beyond Prejudice and Pride: The Human Sciences in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Latin America
(/isis/citation/CBB001321227/)
Article
Steve Hochstadt;
(2016)
Demography and Demographers in Modern Germany: Social Science and Ideology across Political Regimes
(/isis/citation/CBB823898083/)
Article
Presas i Puig, Albert;
(2008)
On a Lecture Trip to Spain: The Scientific Relations between Germany and Spain during the Entente Boycott (1919--1926)
(/isis/citation/CBB000831685/)
Article
Rebeca Fernández Rodríguez;
(2023)
Language, Science and Globalization in the Eighteenth Century
(/isis/citation/CBB980504645/)
Article
Francesca Antonelli;
(2022)
Madame Lavoisier and the others: women in Marie-Anne Paulze-Lavoisier's network (1771–1836)
(/isis/citation/CBB704688080/)
Article
Mordechai Feingold;
(2022)
The Age of Academies
(/isis/citation/CBB303367292/)
Article
Julian Pooley;
(2020)
‘Handwriting is often the Index of the Mind’: Mapping Scientific Networks through the Collections of John Nichols and His Family of Printers, Antiquaries and Autograph Hunters
(/isis/citation/CBB732835170/)
Article
Pauline Spychala;
(2020)
Mobility of scholars and sciences between Bohemia, Hungary, Poland, and France in the 14th–15th centuries: the contribution of prosopography to the history of sciences
(/isis/citation/CBB813834058/)
Article
Takuya Miyagawa;
(2023)
For 'Centres of Calculations?': 'Colonial meteorology' in nineteenth century Japan
(/isis/citation/CBB099792772/)
Book
Thomas Preveraud;
(2018)
Circulations savantes entre l'Europe et le monde: XVIIe-XXe siècle
(/isis/citation/CBB625183281/)
Book
Maria Teresa Borgato;
Christine Phili;
(2022)
In Foreign Lands: The Migration of Scientists for Political or Economic Reasons
(/isis/citation/CBB097240058/)
Article
Naranjo Orovio, C.;
Puig-Samper, M. Á.;
(2007)
Las redes de la ciencia: la JAE en el exilio
(/isis/citation/CBB000831522/)
Thesis
Ganguli, Ina;
(2011)
Labor Markets in Transition: Science and Migration after the Collapse of the Soviet Union
(/isis/citation/CBB001567304/)
Be the first to comment!