Zum Hauptinhalt springen
Umbreit Logo

Scientists or Spies?

Cover von Scientists or Spies?

The American Museum of Natural History in World War I Latin America, The Latin American Studies Book Series

Delson, Roberta Marx

Springer Verlag GmbH

128.39

(inklusive MwSt.)

Verfügbarkeit: Besorgungstitel, Festbezug

Zusatztext

In Scientists or Spies, Roberta Delson explores the intersection of three historical tropes: World War I, Science, and Pan Americanism, from the period leading up to and through the end of the War (1910-1919). During this time the boundary between science and politics rapidly dissolved in the United States and world-wide. Using this observation as a starting point, the book examines in depth the specific role played by the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) in the elision of science with politics. It reveals how the Museums staff scientists gathered intelligence during wartime in the Latin American nations in which they had previously conducted natural history research. The book is divided into eleven chapters which trace the growing involvement of the AMNH and its scientists in Latin American politics. The first five chapters of the book highlight the role of AMNH President Henry Fairfield Osborn in focusing on the evolutionary history of mammals in Latin America from the 1890s onward and then supporting the intelligence-gathering activities of his staff there as a way to continue fieldwork activity in wartime. This part of the book also documents the contemporaneous rise of scientific Pan-Americanism and the importance of the Second Pan American Scientific Congress of 1915. Chapters VI through X present case studies dealing with the specific experiences of scientists such as ornithologist Frank M. Chapman, ichthyologist Charles Eastman and archaeologist Herbert Spinden, among others, who operated as government intelligence agents in Latin America during World War I. The last chapter evaluates the results of the Museums short-lived experiment in permitting science to purposely overlap with politics and considers the implications of the Museums scientific involvement in Latin America. The book ends in the 1920s when AMNH research in Latin America was severely cut back in favor of expeditions to Asia, and the political involvement of the institution was curtailed.

Autorenportrait

Roberta Marx Delson (1945--2025) was a historian of Brazil, Latin America, the Caribbean, urbanism and the interface between science and politics. She received her Ph.D. from Columbia University for a study of urban planning in colonial Brazil, published in English in 1979 and in Portuguese in 1998. Among her later publications were papers on Brazilian town planning and its visual record, landscape conservation, the textile industry and indigenous dress, as well as broader works on 19th century sugar production, ethnicity and migration of global textile workers and an edited volume of documents concerning Caribbean history and economics. She taught history at Rutgers UniversityNewark, Princeton University, the U. S. Merchant Marine Academy and Drew University.

Weitere Details

Erschienen: 07.05.2026

Umfang: xlviii, 247 S., 30 s/w Illustr., 247 p. 30 illus.

Sprache: ENG

Einband: GEB

ISBN/EAN: 9783032181169

Umbreit-Nr.: 9002890

Der Umbreit-Newsletter

Jetzt anmelden und immer über Angebote, Neuigkeiten und Aktionen informiert bleiben.