New Books in Science, Technology, and Society

Britt Rusert, "Fugitive Science: Empiricism and Freedom in Early African American Culture" (NYU Press, 2017)

Dec 9, 2021
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1
Introduction
00:00 • 4min
2
How Did You Find Your Way to Graduate School?
04:08 • 3min
3
The Black Studies Department at Duke A
07:10 • 3min
4
Fugitive Science - Is There a Personal Motivation?
10:08 • 5min
5
Book Review - Blake's Ar Delaneys
14:56 • 1min
6
A Blake or the Huts of America, Chapter Four
16:21 • 2min
7
What Is the Role of Speculation in Black Science?
18:34 • 2min
8
Speculative Science
20:07 • 5min
9
Is It Easier for Science to Be Used for Political Purposes?
25:05 • 2min
10
Is There a Connection Between Imagination and Experimentation?
26:58 • 3min
11
K P M G Risk Services - Slash Trust
29:39 • 2min
12
What Is Fugitive Science?
31:11 • 2min
13
The Re Interpretation of Thomas Jefferson's Notes
33:14 • 2min
14
The History of the Hierarchy of Races
35:09 • 3min
15
Bannaker's Response Is Like the Origin of Fugitive Science
38:02 • 4min
16
The Genealogy of Fugitive Science, by Yv Tey
42:02 • 3min
17
Speculative Fiction and the Status of Enslavement in a Transnational Context
45:15 • 3min
18
Are You a Woman of African American Descent?
48:30 • 6min
19
A, Caley, Is Your Methodological Approach to the Human Vision Most Portable to Other Scholars of Science?
54:01 • 5min
20
What's the Point of the Book?
58:57 • 5min
21
Social Media and the Pandemic
01:03:40 • 3min