CfP: Special Issue of the Journal History of Technology on “Technology in Latin American History”
Special Issue of the Journal History of Technology
on “Technology in Latin American History”
Expected: Volume 34, 2018
Journal: History of Technology (Bloomsbury Publishing, London) https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/series/history-of-technology/
Guest editors: Dr. David Pretel (Colegio de México) and Dr. Helge Wendt (Max Plank Institute for the History of Science)
Journal editor: Prof. Ian Inkster (SOAS, University of London)
The
purpose of this special collection is to offer a variety of critical
analyses of the history of technology in Latin America from colonial
times through the present day. Although research on the history of
technology in Latin America has undergone major advances in recent
years, we still lack a publication in English that brings together
articles on the region’s various countries. Meanwhile, studies that are
explicitly comparative and transcend a purely national approach remain
rare.
This special issue will bring together contributions from
researchers that examine the history of technology, considered in a
broad sense, from the colonial period through the post-independence era,
including twentieth-century history. We invite researchers to submit
papers on any country in Latin America, including the Caribbean. Both
general analysis and case studies will be considered. We are especially
interested in articles that go beyond national historiography. We
likewise welcome critical contributions that consider methodological,
theoretical and conceptual issues related to the history of technology
in Latin America.
This publication will accommodate any and all
contributions focusing on the history of technology in Latin America.
Possible topics to be addressed may include:
- The globalisation of technology and transnational knowledge networks.
- The history of technology in specific sectors, including case studies on mining, textiles, agriculture, transportation, communication, infrastructures, manufacturing, etc.
- Cultures of technology and innovation.
- Everyday technologies and technologies in use.
- Technology and industrialisation.
- Technology transfer and the circulation of knowledge.
- Resistance to technology, indigenous knowledge and the dynamics of appropriation.
- Technology and intellectual property rights.
- Energy transitions, environmental topics and technology since the beginning of the Anthropocene.
- Technology, colonialism and post-colonialism.
- Education, class structure and technological progress.
- The political context of technological development.
Submission of Papers
Abstracts (about 200–250 words, with a tentative title and reference to the special issue) can be sent to guest editors until 15 September 2017.
The deadline for submission of full papers is 15 March 2018.
Earlier
submissions are especially welcome. All papers submitted will be
assessed by an internal as well as an external referee.
The deadline for the submission of finished manuscripts (corrected and properly formatted) will be in August 2018.
Ten contributions will be selected for publication in Volume 34 (2018).
Please submit your abstracts and papers by email to: