Introduction: The Scientific Imagination in South Africa; 1. Scientific Imagination and Local Knowledge at the Cape in the Eighteenth Century; 2. Scientific Governance and Colonial Institutions, c.1800–1870; 3: Technological Innovation and the Scientific Imagination in Mining and Agriculture, 1870–1902; 4. Science, Reconstruction, and the Imagining of the First 'New' South Africa, 1902–1929; 5. The Commonwealth of Knowledge, 1930–1948; 6. The Republic of Science, 1948–1990; 7. Big Science and Indigenous Knowledge: Post-Apartheid South Africa and the African Renaissance; Afterword.
An innovative three hundred year exploration of the social and political contexts of science and the scientific imagination in South Africa.
William Beinart is Emeritus Professor, St Antony's College, University of Oxford and former Director of the African Studies Centre. His publications include The Rise of Conservation in South Africa (2003), Environment and Empire (2007) with Lotte Hughes, Prickly Pear: A Social History of a Plant in the Eastern Cape (2011) with Luvuyo Wotshela, African Local Knowledge & Livestock Health (2013) with Karen Brown and Rights to Land (2017) with Peter Delius and Michelle Hay. Saul Dubow is Smuts Professor of Commonwealth History at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of books, edited collections, and articles about nineteenth and twentieth-century South African history including Scientific Racism in Modern South Africa (1995), A Commonwealth of Knowledge (2006), South Africa's Struggle for Human Rights (2012), and Apartheid 1948–1994 (2014). He is the editor of Science and Society in Southern Africa (2000).
'Viewed locally and globally, the history of science in South
Africa is an astonishing mix of achievement and conflict that is
difficult for even experts to understand. At last, two of the
region's finest historians have produced a synthetic account that
makes this fascinating story intelligible to amateurs and
specialists alike.' Keith Breckenridge, University of the
Witwatersrand
'In exploring fields of scientific knowledge developed in and about
South Africa, The Scientific Imagination provides a welcome,
exciting, and fresh synthesis of South African history. Clearly
written and expertly integrated, acclaimed historians William
Beinart and Saul Dubow recover and reconceptualise neglected themes
in our past while suggesting fascinating new historiographical
directions.' Jane Carruthers, University of South Africa
'In this magisterial account of the place of South Africa in the
global history of science, William Beinart and Saul Dubow have once
again demonstrated why they are the leading historians of South
Africa. As they point out, the scientific endeavor in South Africa
has always been political, from the early days of European forays
into the region in the fifteenth-century to the dawn of a nonracial
democracy in 1994. Written in that learned and lucid style that
defines their work, this will set the standard by which future
accounts of the history of science in South Africa are judged.'
Jacob Dlamini, Princeton University
'… this innovative, erudite, and well-written history is of
considerable interdisciplinary interest, not just as a wide-ranging
reference book for the long history of South African science but
also as a guide to the complexity of the relationship between the
state and the different disciplines of science.' Peter Limb, The
Journal of Interdisciplinary History
'A far-reaching analysis of the place of science in South African
history and culture … an excellently written and documented
volume.' A. M. Lucas, Archives of Natural History
'The authors set out to demonstrate that historians of science
would do well to study South Africa closely and that scholars of
South Africa should pay more attention to the history of sciences.
They provide overwhelming evidence to back both points in an
impressive book that deserves to be widely read and studied. An
outstanding achievement.' Casper Andersen, American Historical
Review
'Their new book is a pleasure to read; it is well paced and
organised, and highly informative despite covering a good deal of
ground. The chapters are imaginatively named and framed in their
main contexts. It is a tour de force of accessible and meaningful
history. For South Africans who believe that the past is a
reasonable guide to the future, I would say it is essential
reading.' Wieland Gevers, Journal of Science
'The Scientific Imagination makes an important contribution to
ongoing debates in the global history of science. Challenging the
'flattening' tendencies of the discipline, which often overlooks
the power differences between different knowledge producing agents,
the authors highlight 'fluidity and hybridity where this can be
demonstrated, yet remain alert to power differentials in knowledge
systems and to blockages in exchange' (p. 24). As such, the book's
analysis of historical scientific practices constitutes an
excellent exemplar for historians seeking to examine how both local
conditions and global forces shaped the production, use and
reception of scientific knowledge in colonial and postcolonial
contexts.' Gianamar Giovannetti-Singh, The British Journal for the
History of Science
'Highly recommended.' J. O. Gump, Choice
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