Commercial Visions: Science, Trade, and Visual Culture in the Dutch Golden Age

Voorkant
University of Chicago Press, 9 okt 2014 - 319 pagina's
In "Commercial Visions," Daniel Margocsy shows how entrepreneurial science has been with us since the Scientific Revolution. Product marketing, patent litigation, and even ghostwriting pervaded natural history and anatomy, the big sciences of the early modern era, and the growth of global trade during the Dutch Golden Age gave rise to a transnational network of such entrepreneurial science, connecting natural historians, physicians, and curiosi in such cities as Amsterdam, London, St. Petersburg, and Danzig. These practitioners were out to do business: they bought and sold exotica, preserved specimens, anatomical prints, and botanical atlases, and in their trade relied on particularly mercantile innovations, including postal networks, shipping, public transportation, and international banking. They also developed their own infrastructure for managing the long-distance monetary exchange of scientific knowledge and curiosities, while entrepreneurial rivalries, secrecy, and marketing strategies transformed the honorific, gift-based exchange system of the Republic of Letters into a competitive marketplace. Throughout this process, the Dutch naturalists contributed to the growth of modern science, imbuing its ethos and practices with financial undertones. "Commercial Visions "studies the interaction of commerce and science through the lens of recent scholarship on commodification, the circulation of knowledge, and the consumer revolution to argue that trade brought about a culture of scientific debate in the Netherlands that thoroughly influenced the visual epistemology of early modern science. Market competition pitted naturalists against each other, and compelled them to develop philosophical arguments to promote the representational claims of their imaging techniques. Margocsy s highly readable book will be warmly welcomed by anyone interested in early modern science, culture, and art.
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Inhoudsopgave

The Infrastructure of International Science
1
Chapter II Shipping Costs the Exchange of Specimens and the Development of Taxonomy
29
Forging Albertus Sebas Thesaurus
74
Scientific Publications as Marketing Tools
109
The Anatomical Debates of Frederik Ruysch and Govard Bidloo
135
Plates
149
The Invention of Color Printing
167
Chapter VII Peter the Great on a Shopping Spree
200
Acknowledgments
219
Abbreviations
223
Notes
225
Bibliography
267
Index
309
Copyright

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Over de auteur (2014)

Dániel Margócsy is assistant professor at Hunter College, City University of New York, and lives in New York.

Bibliografische gegevens