Toronto Node

The Toronto Node is based at York University.  Anjan Chakravartty formerly of the University of Toronto has been the Associate Manager.

See HERE for past events at York ISTS

Directeurs de réseau



Bernie Lightman (York University), Anjan Chakravartty (UofT)

Biographies

NEWS: Dr. Lightman was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada

      

Dr.Lightman             

Bernard Lightman, Professor of Humanities, York University, is the current Society Editor of the History of Science Society and editor of Isis, the leading history of science journal, and oversees the production of the annual bibliography and the annual journal Osiris. Lightman is also editor of a monograph series titled "Science and Culture in Nineteenth-Century Britain" (Pickering and Chatto) and was the general editor of the four volume Dictionary of Nineteenth-Century British Scientists (Thoemmes Press, 2004). His publications include Origins of Agnosticism (Johns Hopkins, 1987), Victorian Faith in Crisis (Macmillan, 1990), Victorian Science in Context (University of Chicago Press, 1997), and Figuring it Out (co-edited with Ann Shteir, University Press of New England, 2006) Science in the Marketplace (co-edited with Aileen Fyfe, University of Chicago Press, 2007) Victorian Popularizers of Science (University of Chicago Press, 2007). Lightman has organized nine international conferences.

At York University he has been appointed to a number of administrative positions over the years, including Associate Dean of Arts, Acting Director of Academic Staff Relation, Coordinator of the interdisciplinary program Science and Society, and Director of the Graduate Program in Humanities. From 1997 to 1999 he was a regular contributor to the CBC Radio programme, Quirks and Quarks.

416.736.5164  Ext. 22028

» lightman@yorku.ca

 

                                                                                     

                                                                                            


Actualités et événements

Technoscience Salon
This is an open forum for interdisciplinary and playful intellectual exchange on questions of science, technology and biomedicine. The Salon is organized around a monthly theme and meets on the...
Charis Thompson: Politics of Care in Technoscience lecture
Video available HERE Podcast in processThe Politics of Care: Beyond Altruism and Anonymity in Biomedical DonationCharis Thompson (Berkeley) April 20, 4pm Harry Crowe Room 109 Atkinson College York...
The Politics of Care in Technoscience
The Politics of Care in TechnoscienceOrganizers: Aryn Martin, Natasha Myers & Ana Viseu Date: April 20-22, 2012 Location: York University, Toronto, Canada This is a closed event. Keynote is...
Technoscience Salon: Milieu
Monday, March 19,  4-6 p.m. :: MILIEUThis is a joint Technoscience Salon/ Subtle Technologies event Presenter :: Hannah Landecker (UCLA) Metabolism and Milieu: Eating as Inter-...
Technoscience Salon: Topology
Friday March 9, 4-6 p.m. :: TOPOLOGYPresenter :: Celia Lury (University of Warwick) Inventive Methods: Moving Knowledge Discussant :: Sha Xin Wei (Concordia University)...
Synthetic Biology at the Interface of Science and Policy
Situating Science is proud to support student blogger travel grants and student training for the Synthetic Biology at the Interface of Science and Policy conference Sept. 30th, 2011 at University...
Paradox: The Art of the Scientific Naturalists
“Paradox: The Art of the Scientific Naturalists” 4:00-5:30 pm; May 6, 2011. The Delaney Gallery (320 Bethune College), York University Public Lecture by George Levine, ...
Revisiting Evolutionary Naturalism: New Perspectives on Victorian Science and Culture. Node Workshop May 6 – 7th, 2011 York University
Revisiting Evolutionary Naturalism: New Perspectives on Victorian Science and Culture May 6 – 7th, 2011 York University, Toronto, Canada Ever since the 1970’s, when Robert Young and...
Intersections: New Approaches to Science and Technology in 20th C. China and India
April 8-10, 2011 York UniversityKeynote Lecture: Cohort Spaces: Reflections on Creating Knowledge About India and China Victoria Marshall, Assistant Professor of Urban Design at Parsons the New...
Access Denied: Medicine, Trust, and Experimental Treatments
Toronto: Science and its Publics National Lecture Series Presents Part 4: Access Denied: Medicine, Trust, and Experimental Treatments VIDEO AND STREAM (USE EXPLORER OR SAFARI ONLY) HERE Live...
Symbiogenesis in Gaia: Our Living Earth from Space
Lynn Margulis, Distinguished University Professor at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, will be presenting a lecture on 'Symbiogenesis and Gaia' at York University, January 31st 2011...
What is the Future of STS?
The Department of Science and Technology Studies and the Institute for Science and Technology Studies at York University will be hosting a panel discussion on the future of STS research in...
"Merchants of Doubt" An Interactive Presentation with Naomi Oreskes Thursday, September 30 12:30pm York University
Inaugural lecture for the new Institute for Science and Technology Studies, York University! See Poster for more.
Earth Science, Global Science. Node Workshop at York University Sept. 30-Oct. 2
All sciences are faced with some version of the problem of moving from the local observation to the general explanation. Yet from their foundations, the earth sciences have been uniquely...
New STS/HPS blog, The Bubble Chamber (UofT)
The Bubble Chamber is a blog written by historians and philosophers of science for discussing contemporary issues of science and society through the lens of historical context and critical analysis....

Recherche et développement

Post-Doctoral Position:

We are pleased to announce that we have hired Melinda Baldwin as the York SSHRC Cluster post-doctoral fellowship, who began in the fall of 2010.

Please see "Publications" for a list of her work as part of her fellowship

Melinda Baldwin is a graduate of Davidson College, where she earned her B.S. in 2004. She also holds an MPhil in History and Philosophy of Science from the University of Cambridge. After finishing her PhD at Princeton University, she joined the SSHRC cluster at York in the fall of 2010. Her dissertation, "Nature and the Making of a Scientific Community, 1869-1939," investigates the early history of the journal Nature, focusing on the journal's nineteenth-century rise to prominence in Britain, its treatment of scientific controversies such as spiritualism and radioactivity, and its impact on scientific internationalism in the twentieth century. Her broader research interests include the history of scientific communication, gender and science, and the history of chemistry.